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Government shutdown looms after Trump-backed bill fails; Environmental groups sue CA Air Resources Board over biogas credits; NY elected officials work to electrify municipal buildings; Need a mental health boost? Talking hot dog is here.

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President-elect Trump repeats his threats to jail Jan. 6th committee members, while also putting a stop-gap spending plan in jeopardy. A court removes Fani Willis from Trump's Georgia election interference case. The FAA restricts drones in New Jersey, and a Federal Reserve rate cut shakes markets.

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Rural folks could soon be shut out of loans for natural disasters if Project 2025 has its way, Taos, New Mexico weighs options for its housing shortage, and the top states providing America's Christmas trees revealed.

Moratorium on Teacher Evaluation Likely

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Friday, June 20, 2014   

ALBANY, N.Y. - As the state Legislature's session was drawing to a close Thursday night, it was moving closer to protecting New York's public school teachers from potentially unfair evaluations tied to the rocky rollout of Common Core standards.

Legislation that Gov. Andrew Cuomo introduced Thursday would change how test scores are used in evaluations and prevent teachers deemed "ineffective" or "developing" from facing termination or being denied tenure based solely on student test scores. Because linking test scores to teacher ratings was part of the "Race to the Top" program, there was concern the state might lose up to $292 million in federal funds.

New York State United Teachers president Karen Magee said she wasn't worried.

"The Race to the Top money should not be in danger," she said. "Secretary (Arne) Duncan has the ability to create a waiver for any kind of circumstance like this."

Magee said she believes the implementation of Common Core was poorly handled, for both students and teachers.

"What happened was that the testing component was put in place before the actual Common Core was implemented," she said, "so you were testing students on things that actually weren't even taught."

Magee hailed the measure that was expected to be approved as the legislative session wound down.

"It will ensure that no teacher is unfairly dismissed or treated in an unfair way as a result of flawed data," she said. "I think that's a good day for teachers and, in the end, it's a good day for students, because we have some tremendously effective teachers whose scores do not reflect accurately what they're doing."

The changes would apply to the school year ending this month and the 2014-15 school year.


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