Sentences with phrase «supplant local»

The danger is that such assessments will be used to supplant local decisionmaking, rather than to inform it.
The Democratic attorney general spent last week going back and forth with the state's district attorneys over an executive order that Schneiderman investigate instances in which an unarmed civilian dies at the hands of police, essentially supplanting the local prosecutor.
Supplanting local with global might not be picturesque, but it gives a lot of opportunities for connection, and for variety.

Not exact matches

The article described how the «billion dollar industry» was opposed by many local pastors who feared «that with worship - by - tube, the living room sofa is supplanting the pew and gifts mailed to televangelists are taking the place of Sunday offerings.»
State - provided services may often be supplemented, or indeed supplanted, by local citizens» and community organisations.
Though partially supplanted by search ads, traditional online display ads («banner ads») can still have political value, particularly when run on local media sites.
Local elites, for example, found themselves refugees, supplanted by an alien power.
Carter says that the best place for low - ranking baboons is often the peripheries, in the hopes of finding food and grabbing a few kernels before information spreads, and they are supplanted by the local dominant.
Geo - literacy focuses closely on local history, but it is not meant to supplant a global perspective.
The second trend began in the post — World War II era, as state funding supplanted and matched or slightly exceeded local revenues.
And how should districts ensure they are truly using federal dollars to «supplement not supplant» state and local funds?
The federal supplement, not supplant provision is intended to ensure that services provided under Title I are in addition to, and not in place of, services that would otherwise be provided to participating students with state and local funds if Title I, Part A funds were not allocated to the school site.
Under the ESSA, prior to issuing proposed rules under title I on standards, assessments under section 1111 (b)(2), and the requirement under section 1118 that funds be used to supplement, and not supplant, State and local funds, the Department must establish a negotiated rulemaking process.
The Secretary is considering conducting negotiated rulemaking on academic assessments and the requirement that funds under title I, part A be used to supplement, and not supplant, State and local funds.
Maintaining the requirement that title I, part A funds be used to supplement, and not supplant, non-Federal funds, but revising the manner in which an LEA must demonstrate compliance with this requirement by requiring an LEA to demonstrate that the methodology it uses to allocate State and local funds to each title I school ensures that the school receives all the State and local funds it would receive in the absence of participation in title I.
The superintendents do not want «supplement, not supplant» reform to be an opportunity for the Dept. of Education to «exert unprecedented influence over the more than 90 percent of K - 12 funding generated by state and local districts.»
The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) negotiated rulemaking committee completed its third and final session today coming to consensus on the assessment (testing) issues but failing to reach agreement on supplement, not supplant (ESSA provisions requiring that federal Title I funds be used in addition to state and local education investments and not as a substitute for such).
NOTE: Funds made available under the RLIS Program shall be used to supplement, not supplant, any other Federal, State or local education funds.
AASA, the School Superintendents Association, highlighted a joint letter on the Dept. of Education's proposed «supplement, not supplant» regulations, which called them «far - reaching federal mandates» that are «in conflict with the spirit and intent of the underlying statute, which is premised on state and local...
In both cases there is an expectation that governing bodies supplant the assessor / overseer / appraiser role of local authorities.
Local education agencies must also ensure that the hiring of these substitutes supplements — and does not supplant — the use of local and state funds they would otherwise be spending for such substitLocal education agencies must also ensure that the hiring of these substitutes supplements — and does not supplant — the use of local and state funds they would otherwise be spending for such substitlocal and state funds they would otherwise be spending for such substitutes.
The ESSA topics USDE is currently embarking on within a negotiated rulemaking framework are assessments and ensuring that Title I funds «supplement, not supplant» existing state and local funding.
When federal funds are made available, they will be used to supplement the amount of state and local funds that would, in the absence of such federal funds, be made available for the uses specified in the state plan, and in no case supplant such state or local funds.
The secretary invites advice and recommendations on standards and assessments as well as on the requirement that Title I, Part A funds «supplement, not supplant» state and local funds.
The U.S. Department of Education is seeking public comment on the proposed regulation to implement the requirement in Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, revised as the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), that federal funds must supplement, and may not supplant, state and local funds.
The U.S. Department of Education (ED), Senate Republicans, and education leaders continue to spar over ESSA requirements related to «supplement - not - supplant,» a tricky funding issue in the law that stipulates that federal funding should not replace state and local education dollars but, instead, should add to them.
Congress has been very clear that funds they provide disadvantaged students must be used to supplement not supplant (i.e., augment rather than replace) state or local dollars.
While much of the ensuing discussion rightly only focuses on certain areas of Title I funding (required by the law on assessment issues) and language on whether to supplement or supplant funding, NAESP is working in tandem with these efforts to influence the USED's actions on Title II funding related to comprehensive state and local support for principals.
Maintaining the requirement that Title I, Part A funds be used to supplement, and not supplant, non-federal funds, but revising the manner in which a local educational agency (LEA) must demonstrate compliance with this requirement by requiring an LEA to demonstrate that the methodology it uses to allocate state and local funds to each Title I school ensures that the school receives all the state and local funds it would receive in the absence of participation in Title I.
To address this inequity, Congress approved the first supplement - not - supplant provision in 1970 to ensure that districts did not use federal money to replace state and local dollars.
The continued shrinkage of thaw ponds could bring significant changes to local ecosystems, as spruce forest is likely to supplant tundra as the dominant land cover.14, 20 This could lead to a northward advance of some species of plants and other trees, while leaving resident vegetation more vulnerable to early mortality — potentially further disrupting the climate.14, 20,21
One of the problems with modernist architecture is that in many places in the world, it has supplanted traditional methods of building that over generations, have been specifically adapted to local climates, materials and knowledge.
Whether the local newspaper reporter is ready to admit it or not, bloggers have begun to supplant traditional print reporters as leading journalists.
Provide additional financial resources in addition to technical assistance and other in - kind supports that will enhance access to and the quality of early childhood education programs in the state, and in so doing, ensure that additional resources do not supplant other federal, state, local or private dollars for similar purposes.
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