patching...
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

Kings Dominion Law

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Manassas Park Charter Admendment Fails in House, Senate

The charter amendment would have made it possible for the city's school division to set its own schedule, allowing for the start of school before Labor Day.

An amendment to Manassas Park's city charter that would have been a work around a law that prevents classes from starting before Labor Day, failed to pass in the Virginia House of Delegates and the Senate. Senate Bill 1245 came up four votes shy of the two-thirds majority needed to clear the Virginia Senate on Tuesday, school officials said. The bill was introduced by Manassas Park and Manassas Sen. Charles J. Colgan-D. If passed, the bill would have amended and reenacted 5.6 of Chapter 912 of the Acts of Assembly of 1993, which provided a charter for the Manassas Park related to its schools, meaning the schools would have been allowed to set their on class schedules.  An identical bill was introduced in the House of Delegates this year by…

Comment_arrow

Mises

2:21 pm on Thursday, February 7, 2013

I'm not sure what that means or what kind of substance it adds to the conversation. Are you saying that everyone should start earlier since parents are unwilling to be involved in educating their child at home?   more ›

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Repeal of ‘Kings Dominion Law’ Moves to Senate

RICHMOND – Virginia school districts finally may be able to start classes before Labor Day without getting special state permission under a bill that the House approved and sent to the Senate. But it remains uncertain whether the measure will survive in t

Captial News Service RICHMOND – Virginia school districts finally may be able to start classes before Labor Day without getting special state permission under a bill that the House approved and sent to the Senate. Delegates voted 76-23 last week to approve House Bill 1063, sponsored by Delegate Robert Tata, R-Virginia Beach, and a bipartisan group of 40 other legislators. The bill now is before the Senate Education and Health Committee. But it remains uncertain whether the House measure will survive in the upper chamber; the Senate committee killed a similar Senate bill on a 9-6 vote last month. “I’d say it’s a 50-50 chance,” said Delegate Jennifer McClellan, D-Richmond, who was co-patron of HB 1063. “I support the bill, and I have always …

Got a Hot Tip?