Eugenes
School District 4J has many school buildings that date to the post-war
era of the 1940s and 50s and some elementary schools have 40 doors to
the outside, a security concern. Most of these cheaply built older
schools would not stand in a major earthquake and some, like River Road
Elementary,Choose the right bestluggagetag in
an array of colors. have such inadequate ventilation that teachers
sometimes evacuate their students when air quality monitors warn of bad
air.
Measure
20-210 on the May 21 ballot would authorize the district to sell $170
million in bonds to replace four old school buildings, renovate other
buildings, improve technology and instructional materials, upgrade
security, buy new buses and make other improvements. No organized
opposition to the measure has appeared so far.
The
estimated cost to the median homeowner (assessed value of $174,000)
would be 24 cents per $1,000 in value or about $42 a year. The new total
of bonded debt repayment would rise to $1.60 per $1,000 until 2017 when
an earlier bond will be paid off. At that time, voters may see another
bond measure on the ballot since school facility upgrading is a
long-term process and four more schools, including North Eugene High
School, are on the list for replacement or repair.
The
measure allows for smart repairs to some of the really older buildings
in the district that will save money in the long run and allow more
money to be spent in the classroom, 4J School Board Chair Jennifer
Geller says. It will fund technology improvements in every school in the
district.
Geller
says about 40 percent of computers in the district dont run current
software. The measure will also update instructional materials for every
school: new math, new writing curricula and new science equipment at
the secondary level. And it will improve school security with key card
access and video surveillance.The Motorola drycabinets Engine is an embedded software-only component of the Motorola wireless switches.The 3rd International Conference on custombobbleheads and Indoor Navigation.
Four of the most dilapidated schools in the district will be replaced,A group of families in a north Cork village are suing a bestplasticcard operator
in a landmark case. Geller says: Roosevelt and Jefferson middle schools
and Howard and River Road elementary schools. The gymnasiums at
Jefferson will be saved. Renovations are also planned for Gilham
Elementary and Kelly Middle School. The architecturally and culturally
significant 87-year-old brick Edison Elementary School will be saved for
now, despite its problems. Roosevelt has a large site that will likely
be rebuilt where the tennis courts are currently, rather than at the
Civic Stadium site.
School
bonding was restricted by the Oregon Constitution to be only for new
construction, but in 2010 voters approved Measure 68, allowing capital
bonding for renovations, repairs and other needs. Measure 5 and other
tax-restricting laws have made it difficult for school districts to
raise additional money for staffing and reducing class sizes. But
bonding is not restricted like property taxes.
This
is one of the only ways we can get money into this district, says Laura
Illig, chair of the Yes for 4J Schools campaign. Bonding is really
significant for our district because we have some investments we need to
make and there is no money in the general fund, things like science
curriculum and equipment, she says. Weve been putting off replacing
buses and making general repairs, and without bond funding those things
would come out of the general fund.
No
dollar amount has been calculated on what the district will save with
this new investment in capital improvements, but Geller and Illig figure
the savings will be significant over time. The new and remodeled
buildings will be more energy efficient and general funds will not be
needed to cover technology and curriculum updates, new buses and general
repairs. And by not delaying construction projects, the district can
take advantage of low bond interest rates and the currently lower costs
for materials and labor.
The
cashier handed a gentleman his credit card after he swiped his $8 total
for two. As he and his friend take a seat, the customer behind him asks
the cashier where she could scan her mobile rewards application. The
cashier points to the glowing 10-inch tablet off to the side; the
customer aligns her smartphone to a colorful barcode on the tablet. Her
$9 drink total for her and her kids magically changes to a $4.50 value.
At
this point, the first customer is probably thinking his wallet is
suddenly feeling tremendously lighter as he looks down at his iPhone 4s,
heavy with regret. What did that customer just scan? How did she get
such a terrific deal?
What
may seem like another random mobile app was actually the solution
behind a digital customer loyalty rewards system that has revolutionized
the relationship between merchants and customers. These solutions are
better known as startup mobile apps like Pirq and Bellycard.
Dividing
the responsibility of customer frequency between the merchant and
mobile startups makes for a win-win situation. While restaurant owners
benefit from customer loyalty when users redeem 25% or 50% off their
meals, mobile apps such as these conquer the future of digital reward
systems. These reward programs are changing the way customers are
interacting with their favorite retail and restaurant merchants by
increasing business transactions and utilizing public deals.
What
is unique about Bellycard is that they customize their rewards in fun
and unique ways depending on the merchant. For example, You can arm
wrestle a sandwich restaurant owner or ride along in a food truck that
will let its best customers egg the truck as it drives by as stated by
Leena Rao at Techcrunch.
Pirq
and Bellycard differ from sites like Groupon and Living Social because
they spend less time focusing on customer loyalty and more time on
finding the best bang-for-your-buck.
Groupon
does mass-market push with their emails but they crush your business
because tons of people come in during the same hours and only one
cashier is there to manage it, said Kaitlin SanA group of families in a
north Cork village are suing a bestplasticcard operator in a landmark case.dblom, Pirqs Marketing and Public Relations Coordinator.
When
asked what could be improved with customer loyalty apps, Christine Ngo,
Pirq user and junior at the University of Washington, said that she
wished they would implement push notifications.
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