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with its focus on cost-cutting at the again due to term limits. School board elections are held every two years, with the number of open seats each election varying from three to four. Since a historic “fl ip” in 2019, when three union-backed candidates won, members aligned with the union have held a 5-2 majority. The two board members not backed by the union, Cobián and O’Brien, will be leaving this year. The three union-backed members elected in 2019 — Tay Anderson, Scott Baldermann, and Brad Laurvick — will remain on the board for another two years. If even just one of four open seats this year is won by a unionendorsed candidate, union-backed members will retain their majority. In past elections, union-backed candidates have faced off against candidates favored by education reform organizations, which are more supportive of independent charter schools and school choice than the union. Board members are elected to four-year terms, and the next four years in Denver Public Schools will be important. The new board members will oversee a relatively new superintendent, Alex Marrero, who took the top job in July. The board will also write a new strategic plan for the district after the previous one, the Denver Plan 2020, expired last year. The board will make decisions on critical issues facing the district, including whether to close or consolidate small schools as enrollment continues to decline. And it will oversee ongoing efforts to improve education for Black students in Denver and to redefine school safety and discipline after the removal of police officers from some middle and high schools.

In addition, the board will be responsible for signing off on how to spend millions of dollars in federal coronavirus relief money, approving new autonomous charter or innovation schools, and reviewing existing ones. Decisions about charter and innovation schools have long been controversial. That’s likely to continue, though charter expansion has slowed in recent years.

Denver Public Schools is Colorado’s largest school district, serving about 90,000 students. About 52% of students are Hispanic, 25% are white, 14% are Black, and 3% are Asian. More than 60% qualify for subsidized meals, and 36% are learning English as a second language.

The district’s annual budget is about $1.2 billion, and it employs about 15,000 people.

Past Denver school board elections have been contentious and expensive, even though serving

their business, I’m sure Wall Street are being adversely affected. It will business. This opinion piece is from on the board is a volunteer position. Spending by candidates and outside groups in the last Denver school board election, in 2019, topped $2 million. Ballots will be mailed to voters Oct. 8. The deadline for voting is Nov. 2.

This story is from Chalkbeat Colorado, a nonprofi t news site covering educational change in public schools. Used by permission. For more, and to support Chalkbeat, visit co.chalkbeat.org.

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State had no fatal crashes over Labor Day weekend, CDOT reports

STAFF REPORT

Colorado normally sees several highway deaths over the long Labor Day weekend each year, but not this year, the Colorado Department of Transportation reports.

According to preliminary CDOT data released Sept. 9, the state avoided any fatal crashes this year over the fi nal holiday weekend of the summer.

“This marks the fi rst time in recent history that no deaths occurred on state roads over Labor Day weekend,” a CDOT release said.

That’s despite the fact that

Labor Day weekend is usually one of the deadliest holiday periods of the year on Colorado roads. Over the last 15 years, Labor Day weekend road fatalities have ranged from three in 2022 to 16 in 2016, CDOT said. Overall, there were 412 traffi c fatalities on Colorado roads at the A legal newspaper of general circulation time of CDOT’s Sept. 9 report, a in Denver, Colorado, the Herald-Dispatch 6% decrease from this time last year. Of those, 153 were related to Market St., Suite 202, Denver, CO 80202. impaired driving, the Colorado State Patrol reported. For 15 years of CDOT statistics on fatal holiday crashes across Colorado, go online to tinyurl.POSTMASTER: Send address change to: com/HolidayFatalCrashes.

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