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December 5th, 2008

special education

Motel Specifical Ed: Hillsborough Shire Specifical Edcuation Employees

The below blog post should be read with comprehension.

Keep in mind that "low expectations" is the bane of all education, not just Special Ed.

My personal opinion is that kids should be taught to maximize their individualized daily living potential.

Think about that concept.

Taught to maximize their individualized daily living potential.




It is my opinion that "professional-educator-decision-makers" look at disabilities as an excuse, not a reason.

I submit that the higher the rung of the rank of the educator, the less pro-active for the individual disabled. The special-education system is about gate-keeping funds more than individualized focus.

Prove me wrong on that point.

It is my opinion that public education is so far away from individual focus that there is no way public education will ever be "sucessful" because "success" is measured wrongly.

Think about it.

Statistics do not have much meaning to the ones who can not pursue life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, no matter what the disability is.




We Need a Better Transition Program The Life That Chose Me: "The mission of the school system is to educate students according to the state curriculum standards. That will always come first, and everything else is extra, regardless of what is put on the IEP. We can write lovely goals and a lovely transition plan but that neither compels nor empowers us to carry out those plans. The IEP is pretty much toothless in areas that do not align with NCLB. If it does not address the state curriculum, Im going to have a hard time carrying it out because the law clearly mandates what Im required to do teach to the standards. And I do not have sufficient time to even do that very well. So guess what happens to those goals, objectives and transition plans? They are being sidelined.

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CT Environmental Headlines blog

Petition urges Gov. Rell and CT DEP to require upgrade to Millstone cooling system to protect Long Island Sound's fish, lobsters and marine life | CT Environmental Headlines: 13,000 signatures have been submitted to Gov. M. Jodi Rell and the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection urging them to require Dominion Power to upgrade its out dated and harmful cooling system at Millstone Nuclear Power Plant and protect Long Island Sounds fish, lobsters and marine life.

At a public hearing tonight in Old Lyme, CT., Citizens Campaign for the Environment (CCE) is calling on the Governor and the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) to finally require Dominion Power to upgrade its out dated and harmful cooling system at Millstone Nuclear Power Plant. Public support for upgrading the cooling system is demonstrated today by the 13,000 signatures CCE will be submitting to the Governor from members of the public all across Connecticut. To date, Governor Rell has received over 2,400 letters and DEP Commissioner McCarthy over 2,200 individual letters in support of the upgrade. The CT Congressional delegation has received over 3,500 letters over the past six months.

The public is collectively asking the state to require Millstone to upgrade their cooling system to a more protective closed-loop system. The current cooling system would never be built today if it were a new plant because the antiquated technology is deadly to marine life, said Emmett Pepper, Connecticut Program Director for CCE. Pepper continued, Life in the Sound is tough enough for fish and lobsters without having five billion organisms needlessly killed each year by Millstone.

Since 1975, Millstone has used a once-through cooling system that takes in 2 billion gallons of water per day from LI Soundenough to fill 110,000 swimming pools. Documented from 1976-2003, Millstone has killed more than 159 billon larvae, eggs, juveniles, and adult fish for the seven fish species recorded. Environmentalists, including CCE, have advocated for the cooling system to be upgraded to a closed-loop system that recycles the water, reducing the water intake up to 90%.

Recently an agreement, between the DEP, Dominion and environmentalists at Save the Sound and Soundkeeper, set up strict timelines for studying and determining cooling options for the plant.

This agreement finally ends the delay game that has continued for over a decade. The permitting process for Millstone has an end in sight. Now we must ensure that the DEP uses sound science and not industry jargon to make the right decision that requires Millstone be upgraded to closed loop technology, said Adrienne Esposito, CCE Executive Director.

The public hearing will take place tonight, Thursday, December 4, 2008 at 6 p.m. at DEP Marine Headquarters, 333 Ferry Road, Old Lyme, CT 06371.

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