Board of Ed approves tenative FY22 budget baxleynewsbanner.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from baxleynewsbanner.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
JANESVILLE
Janesville School Board members took their masks off Tuesday after voting to lift the districtâs mask mandate, while mask-choice advocates watching from outside the board room cheered.
âBreathe that fresh air!â a man yelled.
Effective immediately, students and staff are no longer required to wear masks in school, although they may still wear them if they choose to.
The board voted 7-2 for the change after a sometimes emotional meeting.
The districtâs previous order called for masks through the end of July, which would have meant masks for staff and some 3,300 students during summer school, in the hottest time of the year with few air-conditioned classrooms.
Press release content from Business Wire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.
First Financial Bank Launches Personal Loans Powered by Upstart
April 14, 2021 GMT
SAN MATEO, Calif. (BUSINESS WIRE) Apr 14, 2021
Upstart (NASDAQ: UPST), a leading artificial intelligence (AI) lending platform, today announced First Financial Bank (NASDAQ: FFBC), a Cincinnati, Ohio-based full service bank serving consumer and business clients in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and Illinois, has expanded its Personal Lending Program with the Upstart Referral Network to increase access to unsecured lending solutions, which in turn drives improved financial wellness for its clients and the local communities it serves.
JANESVILLE
Janesville School District officials are estimating K-12 enrollment will be 503 fewer students next fall than they estimated last year at this time.
The effect will be 10.8 fewer teaching positions, which means an estimated budget savings of $897,861, Assistant Superintendent Scott Garner told the school board Tuesday night.
The board approved the annual staffing plan on a 9-0 vote.
Dale Thompson, who was serving at his last board meeting, noted that the district budget still will have to pay increased costs of salaries and benefits and other as-yet unknown costs, âso weâre not flush with money by any stretch of the imagination.â