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PUBLISHED ONLINE SEPTEMBER 12, 2024   •   VOL. 6, NO. 30

Content produced by WINGATE LASSITER unless credited otherwise
(Click on highlighted link above to e-mail the editor)


School Board Chair Lyn Andrews and Superintendent Eric Bracy highlighted improvements in test results for Johnston County Public Schools at a gathering of school leaders last Friday afternoon at Four Oaks Middle School.
 

Academic progress historic, says superintendent

although goal of no more D-graded schools wasn't reached

Last week's release of statewide testing results for the 2023-24 academic year prompted Superintendent Eric Bracy to call it "one of the greatest years in the history of Johnston County Public Schools."

To back up that statement, Dr. Bracy pointed to several benchmarks during last Friday's announcement celebration, including these highlights:


The number of "low performing" schools, as defined by the N.C. Department of Public Instruction, has dropped from 16 in 2018 to just one as a result of 2023-24 testing. The superintendent said "that's the lowest number Johnston County has had since the new accountability model" was put in place by the state in 2014. South Smithfield Elementary is one of six schools removed this year from that list. East Clayton Elementary is the only one left on it.

85% of Johnston's schools either "met" or "exceeded" the state's expectations for academic growth this past year, with 52% of the county's schools reaching the "exceeded" designation. "That's the highest percentage in the Triangle," noted Dr. Bracy, referring to the region that includes Wake, Durham, and Orange counties.

23 of Johnston's schools placed among the top 20% of more than 2,500 schools statewide for academic growth in 2023-24. Smithfield Middle School and South Smithfield Elementary "exceeded" expectations and are included in that group. (West Smithfield Elementary and Wilson's Mills Elementary "met" expected growth while Smithfield-Selma High's expectations were "not met.")

Dr. Bracy pointed out that 56.4% of Johnston County's public-school students achieved "grade-level proficiency" this past year – up from 54.2% in 2022-23 and above the past year's statewide measurement of 54.2%.
The superintendent noted that Johnston's is one of just 12 school systems across the state that have exceeded their pre-COVID achievement levels.

Despite those advances this past year, Johnston's schools fell short of Dr. Bracy's goal of moving all of the county's schools off the state's list of those graded D or F based on overall academic performance. Four schools did lift their grades from D to C, yet four remained on the D-grade list – South Smithfield Elementary, Smithfield Middle, Selma Elementary, and Selma Middle – joined by East Clayton Elementary, which dropped from C to D with the latest test results.

The only Johnston schools graded A are the Career & Technical Academy and the Early College Academy, both with relatively small enrollments based at Johnston Community College. They were also the only local schools graded A in 2022-23.

Three of Johnston County's eight traditional high schools achieved B grades for 2023-24: Clayton, Cleveland, and Corinth Holders. All the others were graded C, as was Neuse Charter School at Smithfield and Johnston Charter Academy at Clayton. American Leadership Academy Johnston – the county's newest charter
school, located between Smithfield and Clayton – was downgraded from grade C to D.

 

SMITHFIELD-AREA
COMMUNITY SCHOOLS
2023-24
Performance
Grade / Score *
Grade-Level
Proficiency
2023-24
Grade-Level
Proficiency
2022-23
South Smithfield Elementary   D / 50 39.6% 34.0%
West Smithfield Elementary C / 55 43.1% 47.4%
Wilson's Mills Elementary C / 56 48.7% 50.5%
Smithfield Middle D / 47 36.9% 39.2%
Smithfield-Selma High C / 62 42.7% 37.5%
All Johnston County Public Schools n/a 56.4% 55.2%
* Since 2013-14, student performance data have been used to assign letter grades to public schools as required by N.C. General Statute 115C-83.15. The grades are based on each school’s achievement score (weight of 80%) and each school’s student academic growth (weight of 20%). The total school performance score is converted to a 100-point scale and then used to determine a school performance grade:
A: 85-100; B: 70-84; C: 55-69; D: 40-54; F: less than 40.



 

Town Clerk Parrish is Smithfield's new HR director

Shannan Parrish, Smithfield's town clerk since 2011 and a town employee since 2005, has been promoted to the position of Human Resources director, in effect Town Government's supervisor of employees.

She succeeds Tim Kerigan, who has moved to Nash County to work as HR director there.

Ms. Parrish has earned numerous professional credentials over her years of services, including North Carolina Certified Municipal Clerk and Master Municipal Clerk from the international clerks' association, and is the first clerk in the state to achieve the honor of Athenian Dialogue Facilitator from the international association, according to the town's announcement of her promotion..

She holds associate degrees in Accounting and Business Administration from Johnston Community College.

In addition to her new responsibilities as HR director, Ms. Parrish will continue to serve as town clerk until a new appointee fills that job. Among the clerk's duties is recording official minutes of Smithfield Town Council sessions.

 



Student firefighters show school board how it's done

Senior Jeremy Price shows how firefighters are trained to "gear up" on a moment's notice during a demonstration before the Johnston County Board of Education Tuesday. He was accompanied by classmates Chris Rogers and Abigail Kimsey of Smithfield-Selma High School, which along with Clayton High offer classes leading to firefighter certifications. This was Johnston County Firefighters Week, which included a 9/11 memorial service at SSS Wednesday morning on the anniversary of the coordinated terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. (JCPS YouTube screenshot)

All fire departments have first responders on duty

From County of Johnston Public Information Office

In a significant and historic step for public safety, all 23 fire departments across Johnston County now offer first-responder services, providing crucial medical assistance in support of the Johnston County EMS System.

The milestone was officially marked on September 3 when the Bentonville Fire Department began delivering these vital emergency services. With Brogden and Strickland's Crossroads departments implementing their programs in July, all areas of Johnston now benefit from local fire departments’ medical-response capabilities.

This expansion of services was made possible by the recently established countywide Fire Protection Service District and the continued support of the Johnston County Board of Commissioners. With additional funding allocations, fire departments have enhanced staffing and training and acquired essential equipment to ensure critical first-responder support could be extended to more communities.

 



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WHAT'S COMING UP

Child car-seat assistance at main fire station Saturday
Safe Kids Johnston County will host a free Car Seat Check Event at the main Smithfield fire station on South Fourth Street this Saturday. Families can drive up from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and receive free instruction on correctly installing and using child car seats.

County Board to set tax-revaluation schedules Monday
The Johnston County Board of Commissioners will hold a public hearing on proposed "Schedules of Values, Standards, and Rules" for the upcoming revaluation of real estate for county taxation during Monday's second-monthly meeting at 6 p.m. at the Courthouse. (The schedules may be viewed at the Tax Office in the Courthouse; they are not posted online.) VIEW the complete agenda for Monday's meeting>
Earlier Monday, the County Commissioners will conduct a public hearing on a proposed incentive grant – for an unnamed manufacturing project at Selma's Eastfield development – at 3:30 p.m. in the Selma Civic Center on Webb Street.


Town Council to consider Holt Lake townhouses Tuesday
One of three land-use hearings on the agenda for Tuesday's meeting of the Smithfield Town Council is a request for a special-use permit for Country Club Townhomes, a 60-unit development proposed for 8.06 acres on the north shore of Holt Lake at the intersection of Bright Leaf Boulevard (US 301) and Country Club Road. A second hearing is scheduled on conditional rezoning to allow a 210-lot single-family residential development on 140 acres on the west side of Buffalo Road just north of Buffalo Creek. (A similar request for that site was turned down by the council with a 4-3 vote at its June 18 meeting.) A third hearing Tuesday will address a request for Office and Institutional zoning for residential property at 606 South Third Street. VIEW the complete agenda for Tuesday's meeting>

DAR's annual Constitution bell-ringing here next Tuesday
The local Smith-Bryan Chapter of Daughters of the American Revolution is hosting the event at 4 p.m. Tuesday, September 17 to celebrate the 234th anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution in 1787. The public is invited to bring bells to ring for one minute at the Market Street entrance to the Johnston County Courthouse. "Wear patriotic or colonial clothing if you would like to," the DAR chapter advises.

Countywide Transportation Plan public session next week
The County of Johnston will host the second phase of public input for the Countywide Comprehensive Transportation Plan (CTP) next Thursday (September 19) from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the Great Hall outside the auditorium at Johnston Community College. If you are unable to attend but would like to provide feedback, the CTP survey is still available at this link>  Additional information on County of Johnston website>
 



DEATHS & FUNERALS

Click on the name to read an obituary, usually posted by the funeral home.

SYLVIA MOORE PARKER, 82 – died September 10

RUDY FOYE, 73 – died September 9

WILLIAM (BILL) LEONARD DENNING, 98 – died September 8

BILLIE JEAN RENFROW SIMPSON, 91 – died September 7

JAMES (JIM) EDWARD JONES, 86 – died September 6

DANNY RAY BAKER, 72 – died September 5

FRANCES (FRAN) UPCHURCH CARPENTER, 96 – died August 27

HELEN HOOD BAKER WALLACE, 86 – died August 24


 

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A WORD (OR TWO) FROM THE EDITOR

Private-school vouchers rate higher than teachers?

Yes, that's the answer from the N.C. General Assembly as both branches of our Legislature this week adopted an updated state budget that appropriates $463 million to clear a 55,000-student backlog of families waiting for what's labeled as an "Opportunity Scholarship" to help pay for tuition at unregulated private schools.

Most of those families on the wait list would not have qualified for those vouchers before income limits were lifted this year. Now they'll all get between $3,360 and $7,468 per child attending a private school as of October 1, the amounts of aid linked to household incomes.

Meanwhile, the revised state budget for 2024-25 ignores pleas from public-school teachers and administrators for pay raises above minimal amounts previously authorized. There's a teacher shortage in North Carolina, and it's a struggle to fill the vacant positions without higher salaries across the board.

While the state's political leaders have turned their backs on marketplace reality, our local governments have stepped up to the plate. Two recent examples are Johnston County's raising of local pay supplements for teachers and the Town of Smithfield's raising of police pay to match what other cities and towns in our region now offer.

"School choice" is the rallying cry behind private-school vouchers for all who want them. But what's fair about that when a majority of our state's lawmakers continue to pursue measures that undermine rather than strengthen our public schools?

P.S. The budget bill adopted by the General Assembly this week does include extra funding to cover enrollment increases at North Carolina's public schools and community colleges. That includes charter schools, which are tuition-free public schools that are NOT private schools operating outside government purview.

 



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