Displaying items by tag: coventry local schools

Late last week, according to News 5, Coventry Local Schools District noticed a data-stealing virus identified as a "trickbot" on the district's network. 

As a precaution, Coventry Schools Superintendent Lisa Blough announced that the entire district would be closed Monday, May 20th. 

As of early Monday afternoon, the FBI has reportedly been contacted to assist with the investigation into the source of the virus. The News 5 report goes on to say that while it doesn't appear that any school accounts have been compromised, two teachers' personal Amazon accounts have been accessed. 

The district has reportedly frozen all of its accounts as a precaution. 

As of early Monday afternoon, Superintendent Blough said that they were "nowhere near" having everything corrected. 

Published in Local

Two 14-year-old girls were killed, and a 15-year-old boy injured, when a car hit them along South Main Street in Coventry Township Sunday afternoon. 

According to the Summit County Sheriff's Office report, the 24-year-old female driver was traveling down South Main near Leicester Drive about 4:45 p.m. Sunday. The driver from New Franklin, who was not named in the report, drove her 1999 Ford Escort over the fog line and hit the three kids who were playing in or near the South Main Street. One teen girl from Akron was pronounced dead on the scene and the other 14-year-old girl, from Coventry Township, was transported to Akron General Hospital where she later died. The 15-year-old boy was also transported to Akron General where he is still listed in critical condition. 

The driver has not been charged, but Inspector Bill Holland with the Summit County Sheriff's Office says charges are pending after the investigation is complete. 

All three students were reportedly students at Coventry Middle School. The young girls who were killed were preparing for graduation that was scheduled for Tuesday. The graduation has been canceled, though school is in session on Tuesday. Coventry Local Schools Superintendent Rusty Chaboudy says the district's "crisis team" has been deployed to the middle school. Chaboudy tells us several counselors are on campus for students and for teachers as well.

Published in Local

Coventry Local Schools is being placed in fiscal emergency.

The district has been in a fiscal watch for over 18 years, a situation that state auditor Dave Yost says isn't getting any better.

"They're looking at pretty close to a million dollar deficit this year," Auditor Yost tells WAKR.net, "and they haven't been able to find a way out."

Coventry Superintendent Rusty Chaboudy says that the district actually requested the fiscal emergency status, for a reason.

"To be able to borrow from the state Solvency Loan," Chaboudy tells WAKR.net, "pay off some of our debt, and get the school district on the correct financial track."

Yost says there is some short term help that the district could tap to help pay immediate expenses, while fixing the long term situation.

 "We don't want the school to miss their payroll, and we're in the middle of a school year...the first issue is the kids," Yost says. "So, the state education department does have a little flexibility there to help out on a short term basis, while we get the ship righted."

The state will take over most financial decision-making through a commission five member commission.

That commission has to approve most spending, rather than a local school board.

(State Auditor's office, news release) The inability to submit an acceptable financial recovery plan that eliminates the projected current year deficit prompted Auditor of State Dave Yost to place the Coventry Local School District (Summit County) in a state of fiscal emergency.

"It's no secret that the Coventry Local Schools have been facing a constant financial struggle," Auditor Yost said. "With today's elevation into fiscal emergency, we'll take a hard look at their issues and help the district find a path toward solvency."

The Coventry Local School District was placed in fiscal watch on May 15, 1997 by the Auditor of State based on the following:

· An operating deficit of $895,000, which exceeded 8 percent of the previous year's general fund revenues;

· An unencumbered cash balance in the general fund (minus property tax advances for the preceding fiscal year) of negative $306,000, which was less than 8 percent of the preceding fiscal year expenditures; and

· The failure to pass a levy that would raise enough revenue in the succeeding year to eliminate conditions one and two.

After the declaration of fiscal watch, the district was required to submit and update a financial recovery plan each year with the state superintendent of public instruction. However, the district's board of education passed a resolution on October 26, 2015 that stated their inability to adopt a financial recovery plan that would eliminate the projected current year deficit. With today's declaration of fiscal emergency, the Auditor of State's office will conduct a full financial analysis of the district and certify the deficit to the Ohio Department of Education.

A Financial Planning and Supervision Commission will now be created to assume all or part of the powers of the board of education. Three members of this commission must be appointed within 15 days of this declaration of fiscal emergency. A financial plan must be developed by the commission within 120 days of its first meeting to address the district's financial crisis.

The Auditor of State serves as an advisor to commissions for all school districts in fiscal emergency. In this role, the office provides accounting training and assistance, as well as monthly monitoring of the district's financial activity to ensure compliance with the recovery plan and various accounting rules and reports.

Published in Local