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Lucia Mar Unified School District parents seek the recall of three school board members
Lucia Mar parents seek the recall of three school board members
and last updated 2021-05-05 02:45:44-04
Parents frustrated with the Lucia Mar Unified School District Board of Education have banded together and are now calling for a recall of three school board members.
These parents say the school board failed its students by not advocating for a return to in-person learning as soon as guidelines allowed. They believe the board s actions are directly responsible for failing grades and now want new representation.
On Tuesday, parents gathered outside the Lucia Mar Unified School District Board of Education office to send a message to school board members.
A South San Luis Obispo County COVID-19 vaccination site is moving. Beginning Monday, the Arroyo Grande High School vaccination site will move to the South County Regional Center in Arroyo Grande, The move comes as the Lucia
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A Christian club on a public school campus in Arroyo Grande is raising concerns with one parent.
One day in October, Arroyo Grande resident Julie Holt s first grader brought home a flyer from school that made Holt raise some questions.
“She came running up to me and she was holding this flyer, Holt said. She said, ‘Mom, oh my gosh! There is a Good News Club at school! She was so excited about it.”
The Good News Club is a Christian after-school group that’s largely geared towards public elementary school students. The Good News Club is an exciting fun-filled hour once a week, the flyer reads. It includes dynamic Bible lessons, life changing scripture memory, meaningful songs, creative learning activities, snacks and prizes.
Courtesy of Shannon Galvin
As some students struggle with remote learning, Central Coast parents have started a group urging the reopening of schools for all grade levels.
More than 800 parents, students and community members have joined the Central Coast Families for Education Reform. Creator Shannon Galvin says her two teenagers who attend Arroyo Grande High School are seriously struggling with remote learning.
“It’s awful, Galvin said. They aren’t motivated, my son doesn’t want to leave his room and get out of his bed.”
Galvin said her son got F’s most of the fall term.
“And we are killing ourselves to just try and get them up to passing grades before the end of the semester,” Galvin said.