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Missouri Board of Ed votes to gradually return Normandy, Riverview Gardens to local governance

Entrance to Normandy High School campus
Google Maps screen capture
The gates of Normandy High School, one of the institutions in the Normandy School District.

Missouri鈥檚 State Board of Education voted Tuesday to gradually transition two St. Louis-area school districts back to local governance.

At a meeting in Jefferson City, the state board voted to allow Riverview Gardens School District and Normandy Schools Collaborative to add two new locally elected board members to their respective school boards.

Both districts are provisionally accredited, and their governing boards are currently made up of members who were appointed by the state.

鈥淭he community鈥檚 voice is critical to the improvement and progress of a school district,鈥 Normandy Superintendent Marcus C. Robinson said in a statement. 鈥淭his change will allow even more diversity of thought from our community and help us better meet the needs of students and families.鈥

Tuesday was also the for school board in Missouri, and Department of Elementary and Secondary Education Commissioner Margie Vandeven told the state board the timing was critical.

鈥淚t makes today鈥檚 discussion and decision really important as filing opens today, that we鈥檙e able to make sure that word gets out and that there are high-, high-quality candidates who are willing to step into these really important positions,鈥 Vandeven said.

Prospective school board members must file their candidacy by Dec. 28. Voters will select the new members April 5.

Other actions

The board also voted to remove the University of Missouri鈥檚 authority to sponsor three charter schools: Genesis School and Lee A. Tolbert Academy in Kansas City and La Salle Charter School in St. Louis.

The board discussed the many ways it said MU had not met state standards for charter school sponsorship. The schools will not close but will instead be sponsored by the Missouri Public Charter School Commission. The board also removed MU鈥檚 ability to sponsor additional charter schools.

The state board also laid out its legislative priorities for next year鈥檚 session. Its first priority is teacher recruitment and retention, and members specifically want to address that by raising the starting teacher salary to $35,000 per year from $25,000 by the 2024 school year.

鈥淥ur eight border states have made headway in addressing teacher pay in recent years, while Missouri has remained stagnant,鈥 State Board of Education President Charlie Shields said in a statement. 鈥淒ESE is working to implement a wide variety of recruitment and retention strategies, but we must have legislative support to ensure Missouri students continue to have the best educators possible in their classrooms.鈥

Board members also talked about the need to tie salaries to inflation.

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Kate Grumke covers the environment, climate and agriculture for 漏 2024 外网天堂 and Harvest Public Media.