Kaʻū High & Pāhala Elementary Principal Sharon Beck wins the 2023 Masayuki Tokioka Excellence in School Leadership Award at the Public Schools of Hawai'i event last Thursday. She is flanked at left by Hawai'i Superintendent of Schools Keith Hayashi and at right by Island Insurance Foundation Chair Tyler Tokioka. |
EXCELLENCE IN SCHOOL LEADERSHIP is the award bestowed upon Ka‘ū High & Pāhala Elementary School Principal Sharon Beck. The 2023 Masayuki Tokioka Excellence in School Leadership Award was delivered at the Public Schools of Hawai‘i Foundation annual dinner last Thursday.
“This tremendous recognition of Principal Sharon Beck is a recognition of her leadership at Ka‘ū High & Pāhala Elementary,” said state Superintendent of Schools Keith Hayashi. “It’s her ability to bring the community together, all in the spirit of helping not only students, but their families and the overall Ka‘ū community.”
Public Schools of Hawai'i Foundation Trustee and Island Insurance Foundation Chairman Tyler Tokioka said, “Principal Sharon Beck rose to the top primarily because we were amazed by what she’s been able to accomplish given the area that her school is located in. The location creates challenges that other principals may not face… the size of the area that she serves and the economic issues that the area can create logistical challenges, resource challenges, in addition to the normal learning challenges that all principals face.”
Beck was awarded $25,000 – a $10,000 personal cash award and $15,000 toward a school project of her choice. Beck hopes to use the school award money toward bluetooth devices that would provide students with access to learning in remote areas that may not have WiFi access.
“This award, to me, is a team recognition,” Beck said. “I couldn’t do this alone. It is the faculty, the staff — everyone at school that puts their heart and soul into our students.”
MEMBERS OF HAWAI'I'S TEACHERS UNION voted overwhelmingly Wednesday afternoon to ratify a new four-year contract. Hawaiʻi State Teachers Association announced that Hawai'i Teachers Association Bargaining Unit 05 employees of the state Department of Education and public charter schools cast almost 7,000 ballots. Ninety-two percent approved the contract that will take effect July 1, 2023, through June 30, 2027. About 8% voted against the contract. For the first time since 2017, members voted in person at 31 polling sites across the state.
HSTA President Osa Tui, Jr. said, “HSTA thanks bargaining unit members who came out today to ratify
Gov. Josh Green said, "We have a deep appreciation for Hawai'i's teachers and and this contract was meant to demonstrate that. By raising starting salaries to $50,000, we hope more of Hawai'i's young men and women will aspire to become teachers,. Higher salaries and bonuses for veteran teachers will also improve teacher retention and reduce teacher shortages. Good public education remains one of our top priorities."
To help offset Hawaiʻi's cost of living, employer contributions to teachers' health insurance premiums will also increase in the new contract.
Department of Education Superintendent Keith Hayashi said, "We're happy to see the overwhelming support from teachers for this contract that all sides worked diligently on, to elevate the teaching profession in our public schools. The Department appreciates the collaborative effort with HSTA, Governor Green, and his administration."
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Southeast of Pāhala, rocked at 4:31 p.m. USGS reported: “The earthquake was widely felt on the Island of Hawaiʻi, with 89 felt reports in the first half-hour. Reported shaking intensity was very light (V on the Modified Mercalli scale) and little or no damage is expected.” HVO scientists characterized the earthquake as one in the seismic swarm under the Pāhala area, ongoing since 2019. Honaunau's quake happened at 7:21 p.m. 8 miles from Capt. Cook and 8 miles from Honaunau, drawing many more reports of shaking in the more populated district.
Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park will only accept credit and debit cards starting May 26. NPS Photo/J.Wei |
A statement from the Park says, "Entrance fees are an important source of revenue used to improve the visitor experience in national parks, including road and facility repairs and maintenance, trail improvements, visitor and resource protection services and more. Moving to a cashless system allows parks to be better stewards of visitor dollars by reducing the amount of time park staff spend managing cash, increasing the amount of fee revenue available to support critical projects and visitor services, and improving accountability and reducing risk."
South Korea's Consul General for Hawai'i Hong Seok-In |
So far this year, there have been 317 DUI arrests compared with 339 during the same period last year, a decrease of 6.5 percent.
Hawai‘i Police Department’s Traffic Services Section reviewed all updated crashes and found 284 major crashes so far this year compared with 233 during the same period last year, an increase of 21.9 percent.
To date, there have been seven fatal crashes, resulting in eight fatalities, compared with last year's 10 fatal crashes, resulting in 12 fatalities. One crash led to multiple deaths. This represents a decrease of 30 percent for fatal crashes, and 33.3 percent for fatalities. Police promise that DUI roadblocks and patrols will continue island wide.