Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 1 May 2014, p. 3

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•T h e IF P • H alto n H ills, Thursd ay, M ay 1, 2014 3 e-mail: hassellsauto@bellnet.ca www.hassellautomotive.com Spring is back, and so is our 8th Annual Super Spring SpecialNOW ON!! - Oil & Filter and complete top to bottom check over (Excludes synthetic Oil) - Installation of summer tires (already on rims) included. - Tim Card - Windshield Washer Fluid EXTRAS Only $4995Call for anAppointment Craig Barrager Sales Representative Buying or Selling. Call today to find out what you need to know! REA L ESTAT E CENTRE INC., BROKERAGE DIRECT 416-704-5211 cbarrager@gmail.com GLOBE PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS GLOBE PRODUCTIONS Produced by arrangement with, and the music and dialog material furnished by TAMS-WITMARKMUSIC LIBRARY INC., 560 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10022. AUDITIONS ThursdayMay 8 & FridayMay 9 7:00-10:30 pm at the Old Armoury To book an audition contact Melissa Fischer at missmelis@gmail.com For more info visit our website at www.globeproductions.ca Open Wednesday to Sunday, from noon to 5pm 515 Main St. Glen Williams April 30th to May 19th, 2014 V I S UA L A RT S C E N T R E Williams mill www.williamsmill.com New for 2014... the Spring Fling Cafe ...and don't miss the Glen Williams Glass Annual SECONDS SALE May 10 and 11 More high school students with the Halton District School Board might be eligible for busing at the start of the next school year. Trustees are expected to vote at the May 7 board meeting on a recommenda- tion that the walking distance policy for secondary students-- used to determine eligibility for board-provided transporta- tion to their school-- be lowered to 3.2 kilometres from the current 4 km bench- mark for the 2014-15 school year. The six trustees who commented on the issue at an April school board meet- ing all indicated they liked the idea of the change, meaning it has a good chance of passing at the May 7 meeting. The 11-member board of trustees also will consider harmonizing policies for the transportation of French Immersion and English program students. The recommendations came to the board following a study conducted by Halton Student Transportation Services (HSTS), the consortium that consists of the Halton public and Catholic school boards. The two Halton boards' current home- to-school distance criteria of 4 km is higher than the provincial average of 3.2 km. Catholic board trustees are expected to discuss similar student transportation recommendations in May. "It is expected this reduction in walk- ing distance will benefit both students and school communities, improving stu- dent attendance, reducing administra- tion and the associated stress for staff and students by nearly eliminating the need to authorize optional seats on bus- es, and by reducing the need to provide student municipal bus passes in Oakville and Burlington…." stated part of a trust- ees' report on the recommendations, which were received by the public board. The HSTS feasibility study deter- mined the additional cost to the Halton District School Board to reduce the walk- to distance for secondary students would be $155,482 and result in an increase of 826 students receiving transportation services (from 2,543 to 3,369), an in- crease of nearly 33 per cent. Cost estimates are based on 2013-14 HSTS contract rates. The number of new students who would be eligible for busing would in- crease the most at Georgetown District High School with 189 added at an esti- mated cost of $29,672 more. "I think by doing this we are going to help a lot of students," said Oakville trustee and board chair Kelly Amos. As for the other component of the proposed transportation changes, if the distance-to-stop-criteria for Halton pub- lic board elementary French Immersion students attending HDSB schools was re- duced to the recommended 0.80 km, the estimated extra cost will be $31,625. It would result in no increase in the number of students receiving transporta- tion services but bus routes may be lon- ger for French immersion students, as buses will make more frequent stops. Those additional costs would be shared on a proportional route by route, board-by-board basis. "This harmonization will simplify scheduling and routing for the HSTS as well as providing flexibility for the inte- gration of routes. It is expected access to transportation will be more convenient and equitable for families, which would be recognized by a reduction in the number of students being transported to school in private vehicles," stated the re- port to the public school board. HDSB could change walking distance to high schools policy -- impact on GDHS students By TIM WHITNELL Metroland Media Group

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