SINCE 1979 • VOLUME 40, NO. 19 SECTION A FEBRUARY 8, 2019 $1.00 Keizer has a reading problem Roughly 45% of McNary freshmen can’t read at grade level Remedial classes nixed, catch-up falls to regular teachers By MATT RAWLINGS Of the Keizertimes It’s no secret low-literacy levels are a problem in the United States. According to ProLiteracy, more than 30 million adults in the country cannot read, write or do math above a third- grade level. The issue is now hitting close to home at McNary High School with 45 percent of 501 incoming freshman reading below grade level, which caused McNary ad- ministration to take action. “We saw that as a challenge. We wanted to fi gure out ways to get kids caught up,” Mc- Nary principal Erik Jespersen said. “We’re always going to have kids below grade level, it just is a little more elevated this year.” The issue was discovered by McNary vice principal Su- sanne Stefani. Every year, middle school- ers in the Salem-Keizer School District take a Scho- lastic Reading Inventory Test (SRI). However, the numbers were not initially made acces- sible to McNary administra- school classes they should be placed in. At the start of the school year, McNary had literacy tu- torial classes for students who were defi cient in reading and By MATT RAWLINGS Of the Keizertimes At the start of second se- mester, which was Jan. 28, the Salem-Keizer School District made the decision to discon- tinue the literacy tutorials, or any English elective that was a substitute for students that were below grade-level in reading and writing. “The rest of the district shifted away from this when we transitioned to the Common Core State Standards,” said Lillian Govus, who is the di- rector of community relations and communications for the Salem-Keizer School District. “(McNary) had been tracking kids into a below-grade level course that they are discontin- uing next year.” While McNary Vice Prin- cipal Susanne Stefani was a bit caught off guard, she un- derstood why the decision was made. “The concern was with lit tutorial, but it was also im- portant to the district that (students) have access to [grade nine] English curricu- lum along with their peers so Please see READ, Page A6 Please see CATCH-UP, Page A6 KEIZERTIMES/Candace Johnson Reading inventory scores from the McNary High School incoming freshmen class show that 45 percent of students can’t read at grade level. Only profi cient and advanced level scorers were at grade level or above. tion, much to the dismay of Stefani. “It was diffi cult to pin down someone who could get me a report,” Stefani said. In the spring of 2018, Mc- Nary held a forecasting ses- sion where students sign up for classes for the next school year. Eighth-graders preparing for their freshmen year would have their middle school En- glish teachers send course rec- ommendations for what high Celts upset Saxons on road PAGE A14 No Adults Allowed: Love is in the air PAGE A2 Comment on River Road future Tuesday KEIZERTIMES/Eric A. Howald First Citizen Vickie Jackson’s dedication to the Keizer community is much more than lip service. An open house and public comment workshop on the Keizer Revitalization Plan is scheduled Tuesday, Feb 12, at the Keizer Civic Center. “This is not a formal work session, just an opportuni- ty to see what is being talk- ed about,” said Nate Brown, Keizer development director. The Revitalization Plan is focused on Keizer’s com- mercial corridors – River Road North and Cherry Avenue North – and what, if any, action should be tak- en to streamline aesthetics and transportation. The plan is being developed with con- sultants from OTAK, Inc., Johnson Economics and Kit- tleson and Associates. The open house will run from 6 to 8 p.m. “There isn’t a formal pre- sentation. You can spend as much, or as little, of your time as you desire checking out what you are interested in. We really want people com- fortable giving feedback in an informal and comfortable setting,” Brown said. Please see RIVER RD, Page A10 Keizer’s First Citizen (Wo)man with a plan By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes There is a framed note inside the meeting room of AccurAccounts, that explains why its owner, Vickie Jackson, was selected as Keizer’s newest First Citizen. To paraphrase, it states: Jackson doesn’t make appoint- ments between noon and 1:30 p.m. on Thursday because that time belongs to her commu- nity. “It was given to me on the day I joined Rotary,” Jackson said. “It’s important to me.” That is the fi rst thing the note signals. Jackson joined the Rotary Club of Keizer in 1990, and she was just the sixth female member of the longstanding Keizer group. At the time, Jackson was an employee of AccurAccounts and she went to her boss to ask permission. “She paid for my dues and we thought it would be a way ry. Jackson was sixth months to promote the business, I pregnant at the time and an- might have known otherwise. other member of the club said You join Rotary to give back he expected her to become a stay-at-home mom in the near to the community,” she said. In her 29 years as a Rotar- future. “There’s one way to take a ian, Jackson served as treasur- er, president (twice, including statement like that, but I heard being the fi rst female presi- I didn’t need to stay home dent of the Keizer club) and to be part of my child’s life, I needed to has a legacy of be involved,” fi nancial do- Jackson said. nation that After buy- amounts to ing the busi- $5,000 in sus- ness from her tained giving. boss, She also led — Vickie Jackson former Jackson started an effort with- volunteer ing in the Rota- ry Club to donate $10,000 one full day a month at Gub- toward a game room at the ser Elementary School after Keizer chapter of the Boys & her oldest son, Nicholas, be- Girls Club on Noren Avenue gan attending there. “I would help teachers, Northeast. However, those accom- read to kids, have lunch with plishments barely scratch the them and go outside for recess surface, which also goes back with them. That was part of to her induction into Rota- Please see JACKSON, Page A10 McNary club advocates for inclusion PAGE A3 It snowed! “I needed to be involved.” South snaps McNary girls’ win streak PAGE A11 Submitted Amelie Bell tosses snow in the air after waking up to discover she had the day off school Tuesday, Feb. 5. Check out more reader-submitted photos on Page A4. ZERO DOWN, ZERO DUE AT INCEPTION 237/ mo . $ 0 Due $ * 36-Month Lease Keizer at Inception 2018 FORD FOCUS 4DR SE *Lease based on 36 payments. Cap Cost $17,613.08 after $13,500 Factory Rebate and $1,502 Skyline discount. Plus $645 acquisition fee. $0 down cash or trade + Factory Rebate. $0 Security deposit. $0 due at inception + Factory Rebate. Total lease charge $8,948. Residual value $8,698.15. 10,500 Miles per year. MSRP $21,215. 1 at this price. On approved credit. Stk#183105. VIN#304739. Art is for illustration only. 3555 River Road N, Keizer (503) 463 - 4853 www.skylineforddirect.com