COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL JULY 26, 2017 Summer reading in South Lane 3A House Bill addresses traffi c stops By Caitlyn May cmay@cgsentinel.com PHOTO BY ZACH SILVA/COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL Summer Reading Spots volunteer Hailie Intros reads to a group of kids during the program. South Lane School District and United Way team up to keep students sharp all year long By Zach Silva zsilva@cgsentinel.com Armed with the knowledge that reading is the key to creating smart and en- gaged students and citizens, United Way of Lane County and the South Lane School District brought the Summer Reading Spots program to Cottage Grove. The goal of this program is to improve kindergarten and elementary school aged kids reading literacy. By getting students to read throughout the summer the hope is that they will then be prepared for school come fall. “Our overarching goal is to provide some opportunities for kids and families during the summer around literacy to prevent summer learning loss,” said Unit- ed Way Lane County’s vice president of community impact Holly Mar Conte. This goal works “right along with ensuring that kids enter kindergarten ready to learn.” This is the fi fth year of this program in Cottage Grove and it now is at three locations: Bohemia Elementary School, Harrison Elementary School and the Dorena Post Offi ce. This summer, in the fi rst week of the program, over 100 children were at these locations in the fi rst week. At each location, Food for Lane County offers free summer meals and at the conclusion of the meal the reading programs begin. The key incentive of the reading program is that each time a child attends they receive a free book, some of which are in Spanish, of their choice. Over the last year, through the help of various community sponsors United Way brought Cottage Theatre presents 2017 in over 1,400 books to be used for the program. The reading program is specifi cally working to get books in the hands of students who are below the poverty level. According to statistics from United Way and the South Lane School District, two thirds of children living below the poverty line do not have books in the home. That statistic paired with the fact that 50 percent of South Lane families with children under fi ve are below the poverty level created a need for a program that promotes reading. “When you have a super harried family where parents might be working mul- tiple minimum wage jobs they don’t have time to take their child to the library, story hour or sit down and read to them every night,” said Jackie Lester who is the former Bohemia Elementary School principal and current P-20 Outreach Coordinator for South Lane. “Kids are coming in requiring a lot of support…as they make it to kindergarten.” Lester sees the strength of the program is in how it can go and help these students get to the reading level they need to be at. This manifests itself at each reading location when students show up and have a great variety of books to choose from. Then for the next hour they get the chance to read aloud with vol- unteers who range from middle school students to retired teachers. “The kids really enjoy it and they love being read to,” said Cheri Jensen who regularly brings her daycare kids to the program. ”They look forward to coming to lunch and getting their book. It’s defi nitely a highlight for them.” The program runs until August 24th. House Bill 2355 passed both houses of the Oregon Legislature and landed on Governor Kate Brown’s desk for her signature before becoming law earlier this month. Its purpose? To help better track interaction between law enforcement and the public as well as stem possible discriminatory practices based on race and gender. The bill, carried by Sen. Jackie Winters, R-Salem, requires that law enforcement collect data regarding a person’s age, race and gender during an offi cer initiated traffi c stop. The Oregon Criminal Justice Com- mission, the agency in charge of im- plementing the new law, and the De- partment of Public Safety Standards and Training have until July 2018 to develop a reporting method for the data and train offi cers on the street on how to properly engage with residents while executing the chosen method. “This procedure will certainly in- crease the time needed for person and vehicle stops, as there will have to be a separate document completed to re- cord all the required information,” said Captain Conrad Gagner of the Cottage Grove Police Department. “Offi cers will need to carry in their vehicles/pa- trol bags an additional stock of what- ever forms are decided on by the Or- egon Criminal Justice Commission.” He also noted that offi cers who stop pedestrians do not have to document the encounter in accordance to the law unless the resident is cited, arrested or searched. Vehicle stops must be docu- mented in all cases. “Based on the number of law en- forcement offi cers Cottage Grove em- ploys, CGPD must begin recording this information no later than July 1, 2020. We then must begin reporting this data to the Oregon Criminal Jus- tice Commission no later than July 1, 2021, and annually thereafter,” Gagner said. 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