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Three takeaways from the Columbia University president’s testimony on antisemitism

by

Ken Cedeno/Reuters

Columbia University President Nemat “Minouche” Shafik testifies before a House Education and the Workforce Committee hearing on “Columbia University’s Response to Antisemitism,” on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, April 17, 2024.

New York
CNN
 — 

For nearly four hours, another Ivy League school president faced a congressional grilling over antisemitism on campus.

Columbia University President Minouche Shafik tried to avoid the firestorm of controversy that pushed out two of the three university presidents who testified on Capitol Hill in December.

Shafik, who was traveling during that last hearing, had the advantage of time to avoid some, though not all, of the landmines.

Here are three takeaways from today’s hearing.

Shafik was better prepared for the question that tripped up the leaders of Harvard, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Pennsylvania in December: whether calls for the genocide of Jews violate university rules.

While the other university presidents provided lawyerly answers that went viral, Shafik and her three Columbia colleagues all unequivocally stated that such calls would violate the code of conduct at Columbia.

However, on some more specific issues, Shafik waffled and struggled to give clear answers, giving her critics considerable fodder along the way.

For instance, the Columbia president was asked by Rep. Lisa McClain whether mobs shouting “from the river to the sea” or “long live the intifada” qualify as antisemitic comments.

At first, Shafik said she finds such comments offensive.

Pressed by McClain about whether these chants are antisemitic, Shafik said: “I hear them as such. Some people don’t.”

Only after David Schizer, the co-chair of Columbia’s task force on antisemitism, indicated it would qualify as antisemitism did Shafik agree.

A similar situation played out when it comes to disciplining professors.

“On my watch, for faculty who make remarks that cross the line in terms of antisemitism, there will be consequences,” Shafik said during the hearing.

Shafik said tenured professor Joseph Massad, who called the October 7 attacks “awesome” in an online piece the next day, had been “spoken to” by members of his department.

However, Shafik walked back her answer on his removal as chair of an academic committee though she did confirm he was under investigation for discriminatory remarks.

“I do condemn his statement. I am appalled by what he said,” Shafik said in response to a question from Rep. Tim Walberg. “He has been spoken to.”

In an emailed response to CNN, Massad said that his chairmanship of the commitee was simply coming to the end of the one-year appointment and that he was unaware of any probe prior to today’s hearing.

Shafik said a professor who expressed support for Hamas on social media following October 7, Mohamed Abdou, is grading his students’ papers but will “never teach at Columbia again, and that will be on his permanent record.”

And Shafik said one professor, Columbia Business School assistant professor Shai Davidai, is under investigation for harassment.

Davidai called Shafik a “coward” in a fiery speech last year criticizing the university president for failing to quiet “pro-terror” voices at the school.

The same professor has more than 50 complaints against him, Shafik said. Columbia University confirmed Davidai is under investigation.

Davidai said to CNN that he has never spoken against students by name, only “pro-Hamas” student organizations and professors.

“They’re investigating me for the entire reason this hearing was held in the first place. Columbia is investigating me for my social media tweets and only my social media tweets,” he said.

Abdou did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Of course, none of this is a trivial matter for Columbia students, including those who attended the hearing, chanted outside the hearing and spoke out during a press conference beforehand.

One undergraduate student, Eden Yadegar, accused Columbia leaders during the press conference of sitting “idly by as a tsunami of antisemitism,” including harassment, intimidation and threats of physical violence, “flooded every aspect of campus life.”

Shafik made clear during the hearing that Columbia officials “will not tolerate antisemitic threats, images and other violations.”

However, Shafik acknowledged that Columbia officials have “much more work to do” as they seek to balance protecting free speech with ensuring all students feel safe.

Contributing: CNN’s Elisabeth Buchwald.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

United Access Commits to Accessibility with its Newly

by

Columbia, MO, April 16, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — April 17, 2024, Columbia MO — United Access in Columbia, Missouri has relocated to 2100 Lake Ridgeway Road, Columbia, Missouri as of April 15, 2024, to better serve our customers. The new location is just one mile north on I-70 with easy access off 63 HWY, less than four miles away from the previous location at 618 Jackson Street.  

“We’re thrilled to announce the relocation of our Columbia store, a space where accessibility is not an afterthought but the foundation of our design,” said United Access President Chad Blake. “This move marks a significant step in our journey towards the Gold Standard of Accessibility in our store facilities.”  

After conducting surveys and listening to customer feedback, United Access has crafted a space that is inclusive and more inviting for all. The new facility contains a variety of innovative features to enhance the in-store experience for customers with diverse mobility needs.  

The United Access Gold Standard of Accessibility  

To design the store’s layout and interior, United Access partnered with renowned accessibility consultant, speaker, and advocate Ryan Hudson-Peralta, who brings over three decades of experience in championing accessibility and inclusion. As the founder of Look Mom No Hands and Equal Accessibility LLC, his expertise played a crucial role in helping United Access provide customers with a more inclusive experience. “Collaborating with United Access on the design of the Columbia store has been a fantastic experience. They genuinely demonstrate compassion and commitment to crafting the perfect space for their clients.” said Hudson-Peralta. 

One of the standout features of the new United Access store is the power-operated entry door with a wider opening to accommodate larger wheelchairs. This helps ensure customers can more easily enter and exit the store, providing more seamless travel to and from the accessible parking. The spacious showroom features a roll-under reception desk, a digital display and wall-mounted brochure holders to maintain an obstacle-free environment. An extra-wide hallway with corner guards was included to facilitate movement to the service bays.  

For added convenience, the store features an enclosed family room where customers may wait while their vehicle is serviced. In addition to a TV and refreshments, visitors will find a powered adjustable-height table to accommodate customers in a variety of wheelchair sizes who may need a workspace or need to charge their devices. Chairs and other furniture were selected for stability and easy access for wheelchair transfers and ambulatory visitors alike. 

In addition, the store is also equipped with an ADA-compliant customer restroom featuring touchless amenities including sinks, toilets, soap dispensers, and paper towels. Many details were carefully considered with accessibility in mind, from the placement and style of the fixtures to the direction of the door swing. The layout helps customers with mobility and dexterity limitations use the restroom facilities more independently and comfortably. United Access plans to continue upgrading accessibility features in the upcoming months.  

A Mobility Guide Through Life’s Transitions 
 
Best of all, this new facility is staffed by the same great team that will ensure customers continue to receive the excellent service they deserve, both in our Columbia store and in locations nationwide.

In 2022, United Access marked its 25th year of providing guidance to our customers and their families. Starting with just one store, the dealership now has 48 locations. “It is a privilege to carry on the tradition established by the May family in 1997 both in our Columbia store and in our stores across the country,” added Blake. “Our goal remains to guide customers to the mobility product that provides greater independence for each individual’s specific needs.”

With these innovative features, the new United Access store in Columbia, Missouri is setting a new standard for accessible store design. By prioritizing accessibility and inclusivity in every aspect of its layout and amenities, the store helps customers shop more comfortably and confidently. Whether you need a wheelchair accessible vehicle, wheelchair lifts and ramps, vehicle transfer seats, a mobility scooter or wheelchair, or driving aids, the new United Access store is ready to welcome you with open doors and innovative features that cater to customers’ specific needs.  

United Access is an accredited member of the National Mobility Equipment Dealer Association (NMEDA) adhering to the Quality Assurance Program (QAP) to ensure safe, certifiable vehicle mobility modifications. 

 

### 

About United Access: United Access is the second largest retailer of wheelchair accessible vehicles, equipment and mobility products in the United States. Part of the BraunAbility Arch Retail family of brands, United Access partners with leading manufacturers to offer the best and safest products, including new and used accessible wheelchair vans, trucks and SUVs, wheelchair and scooter lifts, vehicle hand controls, scooters, turning transfer seats and more. Visit unitedaccess.com to learn more. 

 

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

MU Remembers: An evening of tribute to lives lost | Higher Education

by

On Friday afternoon, MU’s Jesse Hall transformed into a sanctuary of remembrance. Students, staff, faculty and community members filled the space; each person united in their purpose to honor the memory of those lost in the MU community within the past year.

Amid the collective presence, 19 chairs stood conspicuously empty — a tribute to each individual who, over the past year, departed from the community.

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The MU Remembers ceremony begins Friday at Jesse Hall. Students, faculty and staff who died in the past year were honored with white chairs and yellow flowers as family and friends sat around the cluster of chairs.


Ellie Frysztak/Missourian

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Melissa Hagemann, left hugs Connie Rushing

Melissa Hagemann, left, hugs Connie Rushing after the ceremony Friday. After the procession, friends and family of Kennedy Carter, a recently passed MU student, joined together for a group photo and chanted “Kennedy! Kennedy!” to honor her.


Ellie Frysztak/Missourian

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Attendants converse following the MU Remembers ceremony

Attendees converse following the MU Remembers ceremony Friday at Jesse Hall in Columbia. Nineteen total MU students, faculty and staff were honored in the rotunda.


Ellie Frysztak/Missourian

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Caden Rushing, 15, gives Felix Rushing, 3, a piggyback ride

Caden Rushing, 15, gives Felix Rushing, 3, a piggyback ride after the MU Remembers ceremony Friday outside of Jesse Hall in Columbia. The Rushings wore colorful t-shirts that say “Ken” in the style of the Barbie logo to honor Kennedy Carter, an MU student who recently died in order to raise money for the scholarship fund in her name. “We’re halfway to the goal,” Gary Endres, Carter’s grandfather, said. “Mizzou has been good with us.”


Ellie Frysztak/Missourian

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Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Where did Columbia, Missouri get its name?

by

Before Columbia got its name, there was Smithton.

The settlement was founded when 34 Smithton Land Co. trustees purchased almost 3,000 acres of land, according to previous Missourian reporting. This was in either 1818 or 1819, depending on what history book you read.

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Bird’s-eye view of downtown Columbia, taken from a building on the University of Missouri campus looking down Seventh Street toward the Boone County Courthouse.


Courtesy of the State Historical Society of Missouri

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Columbia

Aerial view of Columbia, looking west from Rosemary Lane, one block east of College Avenue.


Courtesy of the State Historical Society of Columbia

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Visit Columbia Sign

A sign advertising “Visit Columbia” with an image of MU’s Jesse Hall and Columns, mentions Columbia College and Stephens College. 


Courtesy of the State Historical Society of Missouri

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Downtown Columbia

A view of downtown Columbia shows businesses along Broadway: Hays Hardware, J.J. Newberry Store, Midwest Loans, Dick Barnett’s and Uptown Theater.


Courtesy of the State Historical Society of Missouri

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Water Tower

View of Columbia’s water tower, from the entrance to the Columbia Cemetery.


Courtesy of the State Historical Society of Missouri

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Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Banks Made Big Climate Promises. A New Study Doubts They Work.

by

Two and half years ago, bankers and investors attended the United Nations climate summit in Glasgow, an annual event normally dominated by activists and policymakers. It was considered a milestone as the financial sector agreed to put its might into tackling climate change.

Hundreds of banks, insurers and asset managers vowed to plow $130 trillion in capital into reducing carbon emissions and financing the energy transition as they introduced the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero. But a recent study, published by the European Central Bank, disputed the effectiveness of those promises.

“Our results cast doubt on the efficacy of voluntary climate commitments for reducing financed emissions, whether through divestment or engagement,” wrote economists from the central bank, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Columbia Business School who analyzed lending by European banks that had signed on to the Net-Zero Banking Alliance, the banking group of the Glasgow initiative.

The researchers found that since 2018 the banks had reduced lending 20 percent to sectors they had targeted in their climate goals, such as oil and gas and transport. That seems like progress, but the researchers argued it was not sufficient because the decline was the same for banks that had not made the same commitment.

“It’s not OK for the net-zero bank to act exactly like the non-net-zero bank, because we need that to scale up financing,” said Parinitha Sastry, an assistant professor of finance at Columbia Business School and one of the paper’s authors. “We want there to be a behavioral change.”

Expectations for banks from policymakers and climate activists are high. Every year trillions of dollars need to be invested in clean energy if the world is to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, according to the International Energy Agency. Most of that cost will need to be financed privately, and banks are the key facilitators in those deals.

Many banks clamored to make net-zero pledges around the summit in Glasgow, known as COP26. But as pressure builds to lower emissions, climate activists are concerned about waning commitments from banks because of mounting political pressure, demand for cheap energy and shifting geopolitical alliances.

The researchers used data from the European Central Bank on lending from more than 300 European banks. Of those, about 10 percent had joined the Net-Zero Banking Alliance. They tended to be larger and lend more to high-carbon sectors like mining, particularly outside the eurozone.

The economists found that banks in the alliance did not change the interest rates on loans to firms with high emissions and that the companies that received the loans were not more likely to set decarbonization targets. In fact, all banks acted the same regardless of the methods available to them to reduce emissions, including divesting from high emitters, increasing investment to green activities and engaging with firms to cut their own emissions, Ms. Sastry said

“It’s hard to really say from this evidence that the net-zero commitments are leading to changes in behavior by banks,” she said.

The Net-Zero Banking Alliance, which is backed by the United Nations, is among the strictest of the voluntary climate groups that banks can join. Members have committed to setting emissions targets for 2030, with interim targets for 2050, as well as promises to publish their emissions data annually.

In response to the report, the alliance said it was too early to judge their effectiveness. Members have only just begun to deliver transition plans and other progress reports, Sarah Kemmitt, the secretariat lead for the alliance, said in a statement.

“We believe it is premature to draw conclusions on whether the commitments N.Z.B.A. members banks choose to make have resulted in reductions in their financed emissions,” she said.

The banking group and similar financial coalitions have been confronting a series of challenges, especially in the face of growing backlash against green and other socially responsible initiatives in the United States. The Net-Zero Banking Alliance has been accused of watering down the commitments to appease Wall Street banks, its largest members. The alliance for insurers lost about half its members last year, and Climate Action 100+, a group for investors, suffered departures of prominent members this year.

But for some, the groups are not stringent enough.

GLS, a German bank, pulled out as a founding member of the Net-Zero Banking Alliance last year after a report by European nonprofit groups said the largest banks in the alliance had funneled $270 billion into fossil fuel expansions since they joined.

“What sense does it make to be in an alliance like that?” said Antje Tönnis, a spokeswoman for GLS. “Plus, it is a fair bit of work. Reporting is involved but doesn’t have any consequences.”

Another founding member, Triodos Bank in the Netherlands, said it hoped to strengthen the commitments.

The alliance’s “updated guidelines are not strict enough and provide banks with too much leeway,” Jacco Minnaar, the bank’s chief commercial officer, said in a statement. But he acknowledged that they had improved. “We are convinced we will have the most impact within this global commitment,” he said.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Boone County residents to vote Tuesday on possible property tax break for seniors

by

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

On Tuesday, voters in Boone County will be able to vote on whether the Boone County Commission can give seniors a property tax break.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, almost 14% of Boone County residents are 65 or older. While the proposition would aid senior citizens, entities that rely on taxes for funding are wondering how it could affect their operations.

Gale Blomenkamp with the Boone County Fire Protection District said the exact financial impact is still unclear, but any removal of tax dollars is going to impact tax-supported organizations.

“Any time that there’s a tax cut for the citizens–which is a good thing in my opinion–that also impacts the supporting agencies that are providing services to them,” Blomenkamp said. “So, there’s got to be some sort of balance.”

If this proposition is passed, Boone County Presiding Commissioner Kip Kendrick said the county will begin working publicly on a policy to address both parties.

“The intent of the Commission is to make sure that a policy that is written goes to the seniors who need it the most, while also being mindful of the impact on taxing jurisdictions,” Kendrick said.

He said stipulations could include only being applied to properties with a value of $300,000 or less according to their assessment file, and creating an end date to determine if tweaks are needed.

Kendrick said Proposition One is on the ballot in response to Missouri Senate Bill 190, which passed last year. That bill allows counties to grant a property tax credit to eligible taxpayers in its county. As of right now, he said 11 counties in the state have adopted the measure.

“We placed this question on the ballot in order to really get a broader conversation started about it,” Kendrick said. “It’s a pretty big tax policy issue, and we didn’t feel comfortable making that decision in a vacuum.”

Columbia Public Schools Spokesperson Michelle Baumstark said CPS believes the county is trying to be proactive by planning to set provisions, but said any limitation on these property taxes will have an effect on district revenue.

“As currently written, and with no local limitations or rules set through a local ballot measure, Columbia Public Schools, for example, estimates that the tax freeze could cost anywhere between 10% and 20% of district revenue, which potentially could amount to $3 million to $6 million,” Baumstark wrote in an email.

She said the exact financial impact won’t be known until there is exact information on the proposition.

However, Rep. Cheri Toalson Reisch (R-Hallsville) said the county needs to help it senior citizens, claiming districts wouldn’t lose any money since the freeze would apply to future tax increases.

“I know of people in this county that need the help just keeping their own home,” Toalson Reisch said. “These exaggerated figures that these school districts have come out with are just that.”

Hallsville School District Spokesperson Kari Yeagy said despite this, the tax freeze would still hurt public schools.

“Schools, like businesses and residents, face escalating fuel, utility and supply costs,” Yeagy said in an email. “While seniors in our county–particularly those with limited means–would benefit from relief, Missouri’s public schools suffer from severe underfunding.”

The executive director of the Daniel Boone Regional Library, Margaret Conroy, said in an email the library expects to lose over $100,000 of its $14.8 million annual budget if this proposition passes, but won’t know for sure until it’s implemented.

“Over 90% of the library’s funding comes from property tax, so any reduction in tax revenue would have an adverse effect on our annual operating budget and thus our services,” Conroy said.

The official language on the ballot states, “Shall the County of Boone exempt senior citizens from certain increases in the property tax liability due on such senior citizens’ primary residence?”

All parties agree there needs to be clarification on the issue, and Toalson Reisch is gathering signatures for an initiative petition to be put on the ballot in November to do just that. She said her petition would take out “certain” to include the word “all.”

“I fear they will only freeze county portions and not others,” Toalson Reisch said.

Kendrick said no taxing jurisdictions are going to be exempt, and they chose to use the word “certain” because discussions are still being had about the bill at the state level.

“We felt it was important to add the words “certain increases in property tax liability” within the question in order for us to be able to capture some of the movement that we were going to see in Jefferson City,” Kendrick said.

Meanwhile, the Missouri House of Representatives this week passed a bill that clarifies who would be eligible for the senior citizen tax breaks. A news release says requirements would include being 62 or older, owning a homestead, maintaining liability for property taxes and having no delinquent taxes owed to the county.

That bill now heads to the Senate.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

House GOP advances $50 billion Missouri budget, rejecting dozens of Democrat amendments

by

JEFFERSON CITY — The Missouri House spent nine hours Tuesday debating the $50.7 billion state budget with Republicans voting down most ideas from Democrats to add to the spending plan, even amendments that would restore cuts to Gov. Mike Parson’s proposals.

There were fights over higher education funding, child care subsidies and where Missouri should deploy the National Guard — to the Texas-Mexico border or to cities within the state where officials want help controlling crime.

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Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans’ Hospital | VA Columbia Missouri Health Care

by

Common conditions: tinnitus, vertigo, hearing loss, vestibular conditions, swallowing conditions

We diagnose and treat conditions affecting your hearing, speech or balance. These include hearing loss, tinnitus (noise or ringing the ears) & dizziness—also speech, language, voice or swallowing disorders.

Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans’ Hospital


1st Floor

Contact us to schedule, reschedule, or
cancel your appointment. If a referral is required, you’ll need to contact your
primary care provider first.

Our Audiology and Speech Pathology clinic provides diagnostic and rehabilitative services, VA compensation and pension examinations, and screening for employee hearing conservation. We offer a full range of audiology and speech pathology services like:

  • Hearing and balance evaluations
  • Selection, management, and repair of hearing aids and assistive listening device assessments
  • Evaluation, programming, and management of cochlear implants and bone-anchored implants
  • Evaluation and treatment for auditory processing disorder
  • Services that help with speech, language, fluency, voice, cognitive communication, swallowing, stuttering, and laryngectomy (surgical removal of the larynx, which contains your vocal cords)

Learn more about VA hearing aids

Appointments are scheduled for all our services. 

We will do our best to accommodate patients who come by for a same day appointment or to check hearing aids/devices. There is no guarantee that a same day appointment will be possible, depending on staffing levels and treatment space available.

We do not take drop off hearing aids or devices.  Please schedule an appointment with the clinic if you need to have them serviced.   

Ordering Batteries and Supplies

Mail in battery/supply request or blue card to Denver Acquisition & Logistics Center (DALC).

Phone request to DALC: 303-273-6200

Option 1 for the automated Battery Re-order line

Customer Service Agent for all other re-supply items

Order online at eBenefits  (Batteries Only)

Repair and Established Clinics Only:

Please contact the Columbia VA Audiology Clinic to inquire about the clinics available at the following locations. Please note, days and hours may vary depending on staffing and available space at the individual clinics.

Kirksville VA Outpatient Clinic

1510 North Crown Drive Kirksville, MO 63501

Marshfield VA Outpatient Clinic

1240 Banning Street Marshfield, MO 65706

Mexico VA Outpatient Clinic

3460 South Clark Street Mexico, MO 65265 

Sedalia VA Outpatient Clinic

3320 West 10th Street Sedalia, MO 65301

St. James VA Outpatient Clinic

207 Matlock Drive St. James, MO 65559

Services Offered

  • Hearing Exams
  • Hearing Aid and Assistive Device Orientations
  • Tinnitus Management Counseling
  • Vestibular Assessment (Dizzy/Balance)
  • Bone-Anchored Hearing Device Evaluations

***Please Contact the Columbia Audiology clinic if you are inquiring about any special testing, as it may not be offered at all locations. 

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Columbia Board of Education candidate interview: Alvin Cobbins

by

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

ABC 17 News is interviewing candidates for key races in the April election.

The interviews will air on ABC 17 News leading up to the April 2 election and will be posted online as they air.

ABC 17 News: Why are you running and what are your qualifications?

Alvin Cobbins: I am retired. And I do one day a week home health care, and the most of my time is spent volunteering in the community. I’m a facilitator for jobs and workforce development. And I take it serious.

I think that the board is a good board as it is already constructed. But one of the things that I want to bring to the board is I want to bring togetherness to the board, I want to bridge the gap. And I know we hear a lot of that. But I truly want to reach out to teachers, educators, parents, grandparents, community folks, bring them all together. So we can sit down and resolve issues so that we can have a continuous, very strong and vibrant school board.

ABC 17 News: What is your assessment of current district leadership?

Cobbins: I think that … in that gap, there is a little bit of trust, in what I’m hearing from teachers and parents out in the community and other folks is that trust comes in the confrontation. And that little taste of confrontation, it will hinder resolving issues, because of cussin’ and blaming and back and forth. But if you go in with the understanding of “we have an issue that we want to solve it,” it’s better.

And then the other thing that I want to mention that I attended something … the Worley Street Roundtable, and that is exactly, they are doing the thing that I will bring to the board is getting everybody at the table — administration, parents, teachers, in bringing them together and resolving issues. And I saw that I got a confirmation from the Worley Street Roundtable last Sunday. And that’s what they did. And it was very effective. So that’s what I will bring.

ABC 17 News: What can the district do to improve performance?

Cobbins: I think that early-grade literacy is one of those things that if we do that, because Dr. Yearwood harps on that all the time about, if a child does not read and comprehend at a third-grade level by the end of that year, that they will struggle throughout their years in public high schools in all schools, basically. But I do think that getting a grip and getting a hold onto the early-grade literacy is one of the things that we can do now, that will that will help our children understand. Because you know, what, if you can read and comprehend well, at a third-grade level, that means that you have a taste of success and you want to keep maintaining that success.

Young folks, that’s how they learn and grow, by being successful at something and it’s more apt to last longer, maybe even through the 12th grade, before they get a you know, a change in attitude and all of those things. So I think that is just one of the things that we need to focus on, I would like to see us do it to help with our attendance in school.

What can the district do about discipline problems?

I tell you, what I saw and what I’ve been hearing in the community is some way, somehow the board has to come up with policies and we have to come up with something that will hold our children accountable. In particular in our high schools and middle schools.

Just as we hold teachers accountable, we have to hold our children accountable also. It’s one of the foundations that I’m running on — getting more parents involved in the school systems, getting grandparents involved in the school system, getting all of the community advocates, the community volunteers, but all of those agencies that communities are involved with, getting them involved in the schools, because right now, there’s a lot of disciplinary problems going on.

But the one thing that I do think that is not helping the public school system is the idea of “put in all of the children who have disciplinary problems into one school.” And I’ve heard that out from time to time, but I don’t believe that you can take a problem in one school, transfer those to another school, what do you think is going to happen? The problem goes with the person. So I reject that idea of doing it like that. I think that if there’s a problem in this school, we need to resolve it here at the school, or we could just as easily go to the school that’s not having that problem, and ask them, what are they doing? And then maybe we can copy and mimic and bring that to our school where we are having the issues.

The thing that I am hearing is that we want to take a school, and by putting in all of the, let’s say, the unruly children, and to that school, you’re given that school a bad name. And in particular, when we understand that the proportion of the violence and the ruckus that we’re having in the school, are attributed to Blacks and minorities. And then if you say, to me, that you want everybody from this school to be sent to, let’s say, Douglass High School, I think that that’s wrong. And I will not go for that, simply because Douglass is a prestigious high school. And I would not go for it for any schools. Hickman, Rock Bridge, Battle, because don’t run away from your problems, don’t move your problems, fix your issues.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Is the Missouri House of Representatives too big? One state lawmaker thinks so.

by



Members of the Missouri House of Representatives prepare for session to begin on March 12. A total of 163 members now serve state districts in the House.


Molly Miller/Missourian

JEFFERSON CITY – The Missouri House of Representatives is made up of 163 members, the fourth most of any state.

Sen. Travis Fitzwater, R-Holts Summit, is looking to change the institution he once served in.

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Missouri Sen. Travis Fitzwater, R-Holts Summit, listens to testimony during a

Sen. Travis Fitzwater, R-Holts Summit, listens to testimony during a Senate committee meeting March 12 at the state Capitol.


Molly Miller/Missourian

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Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

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Show-Me Dinosaurs Party Entertainment Service Roars into Columbia MO

"Show-Me Dinosaurs", a newly launched party entertainment service, is set to bring the magic of dinosaurs to life in Columbia, MO and other towns in … [Read More...] about Show-Me Dinosaurs Party Entertainment Service Roars into Columbia MO

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