There I be trike if th Benton Harbor teach- r d the Be rd of Educ - tion n't ttle their diffe­ rence before hool tart ccording to Benton Har- bor du tion ociation po esman ike Schoeroder. The current contract expir August 26. egotia .. tio h ve been under y since ay. The BHEA i trying to ep up the negotiation and plan to do in forma­ pic eting" of the dmini trative office at 711 . Britain ne t week. ccording to icheal eebler, Dir ctor of Em­ ployee Relation for the S hool Di trict The BH h accu ed the Board of usin talling tactic. The fact of the matter is the BH h continually to re-writ e ch Littl Leagu Director Ted Hu ddre d the B nton Harbor Recreation Bo d Tuesd y on behalf of LL parents manag IS and co ches, LL official pointed out th t 396.80 had b en turned over to Rec Center employee arvin Hayes for the purch of insurance for LL players. Hurse sho d a receipt d ted arch 21, 1979 for the 396. H then related he recei d call month later from insurance gent illi e requesting th t the premium be paid. Hurse told the Board 'It quite a .� and every ction of the current master agreement. The Board' negotiat­ ing team ha propo d a minimum number of chan­ ge from the existing con­ tr ct" continued eebler. ECO 0 IC ISSUES The talks are continu­ ing and are expected to move into economic issue . " After repeated request for the BHEA's economic demands, the teacher's bargainers have not respond­ ed,"said Keebler. He dded, "Recently, they have taken the po ition that they will supply their demandssupon receipt of the Board s pro­ posal. This is rather dif­ ficult there are many thing that can have an impact on the final con­ omic pa k ge that the Board can offer. • • the players were not covered." Hayes e plained that he took the money and used it to pay LL bills at Bargain Center. Board Pre 'dent Herb Quade ed for com- plete report from Hur and Hayes. The LL po ernen al 0 pointed out they had no ore receipts for clo to 2,000 turned into the Re Center. Haye main­ tained that print-out from Bargain Center and C porting tore ill sho all funds collected ent to tho store for LL to purchase. "For example "said Ke bIer, a question of class size has been under descu ion, The BHEA found one - kindergarten teacher with 32 students at the end of the school year. At the sam time, the BHEA failed to sho that e also had many kindergarten classes with as fe as 12 students. The average class' size aero the District for Kindergarten teachers was 19 students hile the maxi­ mum allowed under the contract is 25.' Keebler explained the' economic impact that class reduction could have on the School District. 'There are 201 elementary classrooms in the School District. This is not ounting the kinder­ garten program. If e were to reduce the maximun cia by just one student, this ould m an that the hool Distri t would have "to hire at le t eight ne tea hers at starting cost "of more than 10400. The effect on the District budget would mean an. inc rea in costs of more than 83000. "Therefore the econ­ omic package involves many factors. I t is more than ju t a discussion of ages to teachers. e must 100 at all the demands that the finances of th I Dis- trict. The finance are lirni ed," remmded Keebler. TEACHERS'D. Y: The BHEA also has indic ted that elementary teacher have only 35 minute of planning time but r the teacher' negotia­ tors have failed to sho that the elementary Jeachers, by contract, spend Ie than ven hours each day in school and 45 minutes of that time in­ cludes a duty free lunch period. The teaching mater­ ials that we now u in the District often ha the les­ sons spelled out in detail in the teacher's editions. Th materials greatly re­ duce the time needed by teachers for lesson prepara­ tion. SCHOOL CALEND R: "The Board has pushed for several weeks to get a School Calendar tentatively approved. This is an impor­ tant item a parents and tudent need thi infor­ mation for planning their hool year. Ho ever, the BH A insi on sh rtening the numb r of days tradi­ tionally used to in rvi e te her before hool starts. ntil we can come to me typ of agreement on this issue we do not have. a calendar for the school year ' said eebler. GOTIAT 0 S CONTINUE: Keebler said, "The Boards team continues to review the BHEA dem nds and offer counte porposals and has the authoruty to reach agreement when the rights and interests of the Board of Education, tax­ payers and students are gauanteed," said Keebler. AUGUST 15·21,1979 THE CITIZE PAGE 3 RECOG ITIO FOR SE VICE • age a • o e EE XT WEE: A cl up 10 at the proposed hool d' for the Benton Harbor b • • JOEL PATTERSON lect developer and design a schedule f r constru tion of Ri r Terr ce - the 2 housing units ted for the old ar et ite. The ayor's final "good news" announ m nt called for a day-long r treat with comrnissi oners and taff to "e tablish a ater billing" y tern and deal with an in-depth budget revie ." Patterson explained that the city's poor ter billing system as the b . s of the city's debt ith Benton To nship St. Jo ph Township and the Jiont S age Treatment plant. According to Patte n he learned of the city s, problem with th three municipalitie in the local pre . City re , Benton Harbor City re­ mains without insurance as the Commi . oners refused to take. action onday night on which insurance company should receive the city's business. Commissioner ic ey Yarbrough warned the com­ mi loners 'you're making a big mistake." The city h been with out coverage since Augustl. The two agencies vying for the business are the the ugh • a e agencie . m ndation to th full om- c anus i a Benton Harbor based fum with the lowest quote. Flaugh is a Fairplain agent and as 8 000 over the anus agency bid: I don't under- tand the problem ' Yarbrough . d. 'One com­ pany i offering mor cov r­ age for le mon y. B nt n Harbor a r Joel Patter on glided int the post prim ry ampaign exhibiting th charm, of a polished pro and wielding auth rity with the deftne of an a ured leader. Bounching bac from a poor showin at the polls ugust 8 Patterson con­ duct at the onday night commi . on meeting was apparently geared at a more positi imag and was an abrupt 'about-face from pre-primary actions. Patte .on's concluding remarks climaxed the even­ ing's performance and left the citizens with an upbeat image. He announced: - HUD had approved the city' 87,500 UDAG grant. The funds will go to the Rivervei Drive area to beautify the area by the r--------------------------...;...._-------- ,.- - F bank' to run w r and water line to the location for the office and to purcha pro­ perty in the area for econo­ mic expansion. - Preliminary agreemen ts with HUD had been orked out for the 2,010000 for Kalamazoo de eloper Darrell Jacobs to erect a restaurant and hotel south of the boat launch on Rivervei Drive. ichigan Housing Author­ ity had given Capital and ....... � Associates the go-ahead to EXTERMI ATOR SAYS BID PROCEDURES .CO FU'SING ith the The hang-up has occur- re in special committ designated by ayor Joel Patterson to make recom- t