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HOBBS, N.M. Zeke Kaney has spent all of his teaching career in the Hobbs Municipal School District, and while each position he has held has brought its own excitement with it, the newly announced director of Career and Technical Education is ready to build even more into the community as head of the new $50 million Career and Technical Education Center (CTECH).
“This is the kind of job that will keep you around,” Kaney told the Hobbs News-Sun while smiling widely during a recent Friday morning.
And, HMS Superintendent TJ Parks said Kaney is the ideal person to lead CTECH forward.
Educator guides development of Hobbs tech education center
BLAKE OVARD, Hobbs News-Sun
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HOBBS, N.M. (AP) Zeke Kaney has spent all of his teaching career in the Hobbs Municipal School District, and while each position he has held has brought its own excitement with it, the newly announced director of Career and Technical Education is ready to build even more into the community as head of the new $50 million Career and Technical Education Center (CTECH).
“This is the kind of job that will keep you around,” Kaney told the Hobbs News-Sun while smiling widely during a recent Friday morning.
Created: February 16, 2021 09:43 PM
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. School districts across the state are still deciding whether to bring students back to the classroom for hybrid learning.
The Los Lunas School Board made the decision a few weeks ago to remain virtual until after spring break, but they decided to reconsider that option during a Tuesday meeting.
Board President Bryan Smith claimed the previous vote was actually tabled, so he presented a new plan. I want to support a reentry model that addresses everyone’s concerns. And it seems difficult, but its really not that difficult. I want teachers to come back based on their choice, not because they were antagonized or ridiculed for their decisions,” Smith said.
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(Reuters) - When Stan Rounds heard about U.S. President Joe Biden’s plans to suspend new drilling on federal lands to fight climate change, he worried about the education budget.
FILE PHOTO: Drilling rigs operate in the Permian Basin oil and natural gas production area in Lea County, New Mexico, U.S., February 10, 2019. Picture taken February 10, 2019. REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
Rounds heads a state association of school administrators. He knows that New Mexico - home to the country’s richest oil fields on federal lands - depends heavily on drilling revenues to finance its struggling public schools. And budgets have already taken a hit from falling crude prices as the coronavirus pandemic sapped global fuel demand.