Tag: Mike Broadwater

  • Community Advisory Team Op-Ed by Superintendent Mike Broadwater

    Community Advisory Team Op-Ed by Superintendent Mike Broadwater

    by Mike Broadwater
    Superintendent
    Loveland City Schools

     

     

     

    Dear Loveland Tiger Community,

    When I joined Loveland City School District as Superintendent in 2021, one of the first things we began to work on was our #beLOVEland Strategic Vision. Parents, students, staff, and community members worked together to set shared goals for our district. Our #beLOVEland Strategic Vision serves as our north star, and by focusing on that, we’ve achieved some amazing results. Loveland City School District is in the top 3% of public school districts in the state, earning five stars in every category on the Ohio School Report Card. We produce above average results at below-average costs, with per-pupil expenditures lower than 62% of Ohio public school districts.

    One of the goals of our #beLOVEland Strategic Vision is Community Engagement. To reach that goal, we created a Community Advisory Team. More than 80 people volunteered to join us for four meetings throughout the school year for a deep dive into important issues and give district leadership important feedback. We are halfway through the year, and I want to deliver a progress report on our work.

    Community Advisory Team (CAT) Meeting #1 focused on student success topics, including student mental health, supporting English Language Learners, our gifted and intervention programs, and the Ohio School Report Card. We presented data to CAT members during the meeting, had great discussions, and gathered important feedback. All of that work has led to a few action steps. First, beginning with the 2025-26 school year, we are moving to a later high school start time. Studies show that starting school later has a positive impact on students’ sleep schedules and mental health. Second, we will continue focusing on academic success and preparing students for life after high school. The feedback has made it clear that this remains a priority for our community. The state of Ohio has also focused more attention on this area, and the Ohio School Report Card is expanding to score schools on College, Career, Workforce, and Military Readiness.

    CAT Meeting #2 was an in-depth discussion about school finance. Treasurer John Espy provided important information to the CAT members about the district’s current financial outlook, sources of revenue, and expenditures. Ohio’s public school funding system can be challenging to understand, but our community has made it clear they want to know even more about school finances. Thanks to the feedback from the Community Advisory Team, Treasurer John Espy has launched a series of “Finance Friday” educational videos. We will share these videos via social media, the school district website, and our monthly Community Newsletter. You can follow this link to learn more about the Community Newsletter and subscribe.

    These action steps – a later high school start time, continued work on College, Career, Workforce, and Military Readiness, and our new series of Finance Fridays educational videos, are just the first steps we’re taking based on the Community Advisory Team’s work. The CAT will hold two more meetings this school year to discuss our Loveland Tiger Pathways program and district facilities.

    Relationships are at the heart of what we do here in Loveland City Schools. We’re only successful because of the amazing relationships between teachers and students, between staff members and parents, and between the district leadership and our community. By building relationships and showing our #beLOVEland spirit, we’ll continue to grow and improve together.

    I encourage community members to get involved by attending Town Halls or joining efforts like the Community Advisory Team. We extend the invitation, but it is up to our community members to share their voices with us. You can complete our Community Survey by following this link, or if you have questions, you can email me at mikebroadwater@lovelandschools.org.

    Go Tigers!

  • School Board selects Jonathan Eilert as President and Lynn Mangan to serve as Vice President

    School Board selects Jonathan Eilert as President and Lynn Mangan to serve as Vice President

    Loveland, Ohio – At the January 9th Loveland City School District Board meeting, newly elected Board members Lynn Magan and Christina Jeranek took their oath of office. The five-member Board then voted unanimously to elect Jonathan Eilert to serve as President and Lynn Mangan to serve as Vice President.

    _________________

    Board Members

    Jonathan Eilert is the Loveland School Board President. He was elected to the Board in November 2021. His term expires 12/31/25. eilertjo@lovelandschools.org
    Lynn Mangan is the Loveland School Board Vice President. She was elected to the Board in November 2023 and her term expires 12/31/27. manganly@lovelandschools.org
    Christina Jeranek was elected to the Board in November 2023 and her term expires 12/31/27. jeranech@lovelandschools.org
    Dr. Eric Schwetschenau was appointed to the Board in May 2020 and his term expires 12/31/25. schweter@lovelandschools.org
    Eileen Washburn was elected to the Board in November 2017 and her term Expires 12/31/25. washbuei@lovelandschools.org 

    You can email the entire Loveland City Schools Board of Education, by sending an email to: board@lovelandschools.org

    The Loveland City Schools Board of Education holds its Business Meetings on the third Tuesday of the month at 6 p.m. in the LMS/LIS Media Center unless otherwise noted.

    January 23, 2024 (4th Tuesday)
    February 20, 2024
    March 19, 2024
    April 16, 2024
    May 21, 2024
    June 25, 2024 (4th Tuesday)
    August 20, 2024
    September 17, 2024
    October 15, 2024
    November 19, 2024

    Board Work Sessions are held at the Board of Education Administrative Office Conference Room at 6 p.m. unless otherwise noted.

    February 6, 2024
    March 5, 2024
    April 2, 2024
    May 7, 2024
    August 6, 2024
    September 3, 2024
    October 1, 2024
    November 7, 2024

    Administration

    Superintendent Mike Broadwater Phone: (513) 774-6203 broadwmi@lovelandschools.org
    Treasurer John Espy Phone: (513) 774-6207  treasurer@lovelandschools.org
    Assistant Superintendent Dr. Stace Puerta (513) 774-6220 puertast@lovelandschools.org
    Garth Carlier, Assistant Superintendent of Human Resources (513) 774-6202 carliega@lovelandschools.org
    Jesse Kohls, Director of Student Services (513) 774-6220 kohlsje@lovelandschools.org
    Andrew Setters, Director of Communication and Community Engagement (513) 774-6227 setteran@lovelandschools.org
    John Ames, Business Manager (513) 774-6229 amesjo@lovelandschools.org
    Adam Samuels, Coordinator of Technology and Innovation Phone: (513) 683-5600 samuelad@lovelandschools.org

     

     

  • Join in celebration of Dr. Kathryn Lorenz Board of Education service

    Join in celebration of Dr. Kathryn Lorenz Board of Education service

    Loveland Magazine file photo of Dr. Kathryn Lorenz in this year’s Homecoming Parade.

    Loveland, Ohio – Join your friends and neighbors in honoring Dr. Kathryn Lorenz and her 32 years of service to the Loveland City School District Board of Education. Dr. Lorenz will retire from Board service at the end of 2023, and the community is invited to join together to honor her.

    “For more than three decades, Dr. Lorenz has been a vital part of leading and growing our district. As she steps away from the Board, she will leave behind an amazing legacy of commitment to public education and public service. I am so happy to see our community honoring her in this way,” Loveland City School District Superintendent Mike Broadwater said.

    Friends of Dr. Lorenz have organized a Board Retirement Celebration to be held on Sunday, December 10, at 1 PM at the Oasis Conference Center. The event will be an opportunity to reminisce, share stories, and show appreciation for Dr. Lorenz’s many years of service and leadership.

    Tickets start at $20 per person. Purchase tickets, sponsor a table, or sponsor the event by following this LINK.

    All proceeds above the cost of the event will fund a scholarship in Dr. Lorenz’s honor through the Loveland Schools Foundation. If you can’t make it or if you’d like to donate, please click HERE and select the Donations option.

    For additional information, please contact Board Member Elect Lynn Mangan at lynnmmangan@gmail.com

  • Board President Dr. Kathy Lorenz was recognized today

    Board President Dr. Kathy Lorenz was recognized today

    Photo of Dr. Lorenz and Superintendent Mike Broadwater by Loveland Schools

    Loveland, Ohio – Board President Dr. Kathy Lorenz was recognized today at the Loveland City School District Convocation for her “tireless efforts over 32 years to make LCSD a great place for kids!”

  • Loveland schools open Wednesday amid busing concerns

    Loveland schools open Wednesday amid busing concerns

    Loveland, Ohio – In his Superintendent’s Message sent out Sunday evening Mike Broadwater provided the dates students return to school, however, he also provided “urgent” information about possible skipped bus routes because of the District’s continuing bus driver shortage.

    “There is an urgent need for bus drivers for our district. Without additional drivers, we may be forced to skip some routes on some days because we are critically short-staffed. We are working to avoid this, but please create a backup plan for how your family would handle transportation in the event we are forced to limit bus service due to the driver shortage.

    “Loveland bus drivers receive paid training, health insurance, and retirement benefits. Follow this link to apply online, or call our Transportation Department at 513-683-3103. Please spread the word to your friends and neighbors about this great opportunity to help our Loveland City School District community.”

    The school buildings will have staggered start times again this year.

    • Students with last name A-L will have their first day on Wednesday, August 16
    • Students with last names M-Z will have their first day on Thursday, August 17
    • All students together on Friday, August 18, 2023.

    The staggered start allows students and instructors to begin the year with more one-on-one time with each other to set up technology and establish new routines.

    School Important Dates

  • School district will hold a Town Hall Meeting to discuss “ongoing funding challenges”

    School district will hold a Town Hall Meeting to discuss “ongoing funding challenges”

    Loveland, Ohio – In his weekly Superintendent’s Message, Mike Broadwater described the importance of a planned town hall meeting to discuss, “…our ongoing funding challenges”. He said, “The district is currently in deficit spending, which means that we are spending more money to pay for staff and services than the federal, state, and local tax revenue that is coming in. Our Five Year Forecast shows deficit spending for the current fiscal year of $3.7 million and projects a $3.8 million deficit in the following fiscal year.”

    To that end, at the Board of Education meeting on December 10, it was decided that the District will hold a Town Hall Meeting on Thursday, January 5, at 6 PM in the Media Center at the Loveland Intermediate School.

    “The purpose of this Town Hall is for district leaders to hear from our Loveland City Schools community about issues facing the school district, including the financial future of Loveland City Schools.”

    Two members of the Board of Education and the Superintendent will attend.

    If you cannot attend, you can watch the live stream by following this link. Only in-person attendees can participate with questions or comments. A recording of the meeting will be available to watch for those who are interested.

    [Watch Now] Loveland City School District Town Hall Meeting

  • Untitled post 95249

    Loveland School Treasurer Rob Giuffre – Photo Provided

    Loveland, Ohio – Andrew Setters the Loveland City School District Director of Communication and Community Engagement sent this message to Loveland Magazine saying, “I’ve included the Superintendent’s Message from our December Community Newsletter below. It has a pretty clear message about the district’s five-year forecast and the financial decision-making that will need to take place in the months ahead.”

    Setters added, “We’ve gotten good feedback on this, and I thought it might be of interest to your readers.”

    Superintendent’s Message
    
    Loveland Tiger Community,
    
    Treasurer Rob Giuffre presented the five-year forecast during our Board of Education Meeting on November 15. You can view it under “important documents” on the Treasurer’s webpage by following this link. Watch the discussion around the Five Year Forecast at the two hours and thirty-five-minute mark of the Board Meeting recording by following this link. 
    
    The Five Year Forecast is a tool to allow school districts and communities to plan for future needs by looking at our projected financial situation over the next five years. It’s a lengthy document, but the most relevant information is on page three. It shows that we are in deficit spending for the current fiscal year by $3.7 million and projects a $3.8 million deficit in the following fiscal year. 
    
    Deficit spending means the district is spending more money than we receive from local, state, and federal tax revenue. The district is making up that deficit by using our cash reserves. Because we only get tax revenue deposits twice a year, those cash reserves are necessary to pay bills, payroll, and other expenses. 
    
    There are two paths ahead - a reduction in expenses or an increase in revenue. Salaries and benefits make up 86% of our costs, so a reduction in expenses means a decrease in staff positions. Because the district already implemented staff reductions in 2020, it will be difficult to make additional cuts without impacting educational opportunities for students. Increasing revenue means asking voters for additional funding through a levy. 
    
    Loveland City School District receives very little state funding compared to other districts around Ohio, and we do not expect the situation to improve. The state funding model is expected to eliminate more funding for suburban districts like Loveland in the future. The district’s financial situation cannot wait for help from state lawmakers who have been unable to fix the unconstitutional school funding system for decades. 
    
    In the weeks ahead, the Treasurer and I will look at options to present to the Board of Education as they consider which path to take. 
    
    If you have any questions, please contact me: broadwmi@lovelandschools.org
    
    Go Tigers!
    
    Mike Broadwater
    
    Superintendent
    
    Loveland City Schools
  • School Superintendant releases video statement about levy defeat

    School Superintendant releases video statement about levy defeat

    Loveland, Ohio – Mike Broadwater, the Superintendent of the Loveland City School District has released this video statement about the defeat yesterday of the operating levy.

    You can communicate with Broadwater via email: broadwmi@lovelandschools.org


    [Updated] 2022 Loveland Area Mid-Term Election Results

    David Miller – Nov 9, 2022

  • Ohio gov thinks a law is making kids sick and says it’s unconstitutional. He won’t challenge it

    Ohio gov thinks a law is making kids sick and says it’s unconstitutional. He won’t challenge it

    DeWine spokesman says risks are too high

    BY: MARTY SCHLADEN and Ohio Capital Journal

    Some are questioning Gov. Mike DeWine’s sincerity when he says he’s doing all he can to fight the spread of coronavirus among children.

    DeWine and the leaders of children’s hospitals are in a panic over the lack of masking in Ohio schools. Hospital admissions of children with covid are up 536% since July and the hospitals report that they’re being overwhelmed by the surging delta variant and an unusual jump in other respiratory illnesses.

    [Watch video] Ohio Children’s Hospital leaders briefing for school administrators –…

    DeWine and the hospitals are pleading with local school officials to enact their own mask mandates because DeWine says his hands are tied by Senate Bill 22 — a law the GOP-controlled legislature passed in March over his veto. 

    It circumscribes the governor’s ability to issue health orders such as his 2020 statewide mask mandate by limiting them to 30 days. After that, the legislature would have to sign off in order to continue them.

    Asked on Tuesday why he wouldn’t impose a mask mandate as a temporary measure, DeWine said he didn’t want to muddy the issue.

    “All that will do is cause a great deal of confusion and then I think people would say, ‘Well there’s no mandate on, there’s no requirement on, we can go back, there’s really no reason to keep masks on,” the governor said. “I’m afraid what would happen is we would slide backwards, we would go the wrong way.”

    However, some noted that when SB 22 was passed, the governor, who is a lawyer, didn’t believe it would stand up in court.

    “Lots of talk out there excusing @GovMikeDeWine‘s refusal to issue a school mask mandate,” Katie Paris, founder of the group Red Wine and Blue, tweeted. “His hands are NOT tied. He could issue a mandate today and if the legislature fights it, he could take them to court.”

    She followed up with a thread that included the statement DeWine issued when he vetoed SB 22.

    “We believe that significant portions of SB 22 are unconstitutional,” the statement says. “Parts of the bill violate the separation of powers doctrine embedded in our Ohio Constitution; other parts violate Article II, Section 15 of the Ohio Constitution, proscribing how laws must be made; and even other parts of the bill likely violate Article IV, Section 5 of the Ohio Constitution, by exercising power reserved to the judiciary.” 

    Loveland School Superintendant Mike Broadwater

    Loveland School Superintendant Mike Broadwater told Loveland Magazine on Thursday, “It is unfortunate that Governor DeWine no longer has the power to issue health orders that would put every school district across the state in the same situation if that’s what he feels is best. But by leaving it to local control, he’s allowing each district to make the decision that fits best for their community.”

    The current policy of the Loveland City School District is that students in grades PreK-6 are required to wear a mask indoors. Students in grades 7-12 do not have to wear face coverings. All others, while in the buildings must wear masks.

    The Legislative Service Commission also questioned the legality of a draft of the bill, writing that it “might be vulnerable to a constitutional challenge on the grounds that the legislature cannot take such an action by resolution.” But for some reason, it was dropped from the final version of the bill, which was otherwise unchanged.

    Asked why DeWine doesn’t just impose a mask order and fight it out in court, Press Secretary Dan Tierney on Wednesday said it was too risky.

    “Somebody who’s advocating for that is hoping that a judge puts on an immediate restraining order that would allow (the mask mandate) to continue, but you also have to weigh the chance that a judge could rule the other way: that the legislative recision is perfectly valid,” Tierney said.

    He added that DeWine’s current approach — persuading local officials to put on their own mask mandates — is making rapid progress. The portion of students in schools with mask mandates has jumped from 35% on Sept. 1 to 54% on Tuesday, Tierney said.

    “We went from a little over a third to a little over a half of students being in a school where everybody wears a mask in less than two weeks,” he said.

    But while DeWine is blaming the GOP supermajority in the legislature for sapping his ability to fight his coronavirus, on Wednesday he signed off on legislative maps that would preserve that supermajority. Even as DeWine helped to approve the maps, he questioned whether they would survive a court challenge, Gannett journalist Haley BeMiller reported.

    The move by DeWine — who has also criticized President Joe Biden’s vaccination-or-test mandate — prompted a blast from John Hagner, campaign manager for Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, who is seeking the 2022 Democratic gubernatorial nomination.

    https://twitter.com/JHagner/status/1438485210811748356

    “Mike DeWine on Tuesday: the gerrymandered Republican supermajority is keeping me from protecting kids and keeping them in school,” Hagner tweeted. “Mike DeWine on Wednesday: ok, let’s have four more years of an even more gerrymandered Republican supermajority.”

    Reporter Jake Zuckerman of the Ohio Capital Journal and David Miller, Editor of Loveland Magazine contributed to this rstory.

  • Video message from Loveland Superintendent about “Parent Choice” and masking/vaccination policy

    Video message from Loveland Superintendent about “Parent Choice” and masking/vaccination policy

    Loveland, Ohio – The Loveland City School District issued this statement at 3:42 PM:



    Loveland Tiger Families,

    Please watch the following video message from Superintendent Mike Broadwater. It should answer many of your most important questions about back-to-school. Follow this link for the Ohio Department of Health Guidelines for Quarantine After Exposure in K-12 Classroom Settings.

    You may email the Loveland City Schools Board of Education through this link.

    You may email Superintendent Mike Broadwater through this link.Learn more about our Board of Education meeting schedule through this link.