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TEA launches STAAR Interim Assessment Pilot

TEA logo 2016

Commissioner of Education Mike Morath notified school districts and open-enrollment charter schools that the Texas Education Agency has launched the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness Interim Assessment Pilot.

“The STAAR Interim Assessment Pilot is an optional TEA tool to help educators tailor instructional practice to address students’ needs,” Morath said in a news release. “Interim assessment includes items developed with the help of Texas teachers, as well as some former STAAR summative test items. The interim assessment is a tool that districts and educators can use to improve outcomes for students in Texas.”

The spring 2018 Interim Assessments will be a pilot administration working with school districts and charters that elect to participate. Districts may elect to use these interim assessments district-wide. Schools and educators may also choose to administer them locally. All interim assessment items are fully aligned to the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills, the state’s curriculum standards used in all public schools, the release said.

School systems that choose to participate in the pilot will be asked to provide feedback via a survey. In addition, TEA will conduct on-site visits to get first-hand information from students and educators regarding their experience with the tool. Results of the survey and on-site visits will inform improvements in the Interim Assessments before the full launch in the 2018-2019 school year.

For the initial pilot period (spring 2018), grades three through eight mathematics and reading interim assessments will be available.

For the 2018-2019 school year, Algebra I, English I, and English II, as well as Spanish in grades three through five, will also be available. Interim assessments will be administered during a pilot testing window from Jan. 29 through March 23.

Morath stressed that the interim assessments will not be part of STAAR accountability, the release said. TEA will not have access to the student-level data.

New CEO to discuss transition in first ECHD meeting

Roy Perkins, left, of God's Way engages in a video conference with Richard Llanez using an app called Zoom on Wednesday in his home. Perkins uses Zoom to connect with an audience and speaks about the Holy Bible.

Medical Center Health System’s new president and CEO Rick Napper will join the Ector County District Hospital board of directors for his first regular meeting tonight.

The board will meet at 5:30 p.m. in the board room of Medical Center Hospital, 500 W. Fourth St. A finance committee meeting is set prior to that at 4:30 p.m. and will also be in the board room.

Napper will be giving a transition update during his first meeting, as well as discuss a new committee assignment.

Several items are listed on the agenda for the board to discuss in executive session including the following:

  • A litigation update on Chauncie Davis v. MCH; Elisha Washington v. MCH; both of which are alleged discrimination cases, John Presley v. MCH, et. al., which is an alleged breach of contract case, and any potential/contemplated litigation claims.
  • Deliberate and discuss the purchase, exchange, lease or value of real property.
  • Provide an update on the employment of a Chief Medical Officer and Vice President of Strategy and Business Development.
  • Update on negotiation for health care product lines and services.
  • District 5 board member Don Hallmark said the executive session items reflect what all Napper is up to right now and certain circumstances they are in right now. The hospital is seeking a replacement for the CMO position after John O’Hearn turned in a letter of resignation following Webster’s retirement and Chief Financial Officer Jon Riggs’ resignation.
  • Former CFO Robert Abernethy returned as interim CFO in December following Riggs’ resignation and has since agreed to take on the role full time.
  • Also on the agenda is an interlocal agreement and request to sell property as presented by Hallmark. The property in question really has nothing to do with the hospital, Hallmark said, but as a taxing entity they must approve the sale of the property since it was put up for bid and no one bought it.
  • “It’s a property out at Goldsmith and it’s a junker. It’s been foreclosed on for taxes and been abandoned, I think,” Hallmark said, adding that vagrants were living in the house on the property.
  • The taxing entities each have to release it for less than the approved fee and Hallmark said the they will only net $135 on the sale. Hallmark said someone living in the area is buying the property, will get the vagrants out and he believes will be demolishing the house on the property.

IN OTHER BUSINESS

  • Other agenda items listed include:
  • Investment policy annual review and approval.
  • MRO Release of Information Online Agreement. “This will be a consideration for approval of an agreement between MRO Corporation and the Ector County Hospital District where MRO will now provide ECHD with Disclosure Management Services that include Release of Information Services,” said MCHS lead attorney Ron Griffin in an email.
  • Replacement committee member for bylaws committee and MCH/Tech Coordinating Committee.
  • Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at the Permian Basin report.
  • The finance committee will discuss CER: PremierConnect Budgeting and Financial Reporting Solution.

City to honor girl who raised money for police dogs

Randi Spencer, right, serves out hot chocolate to Sgt. Randy Vest at her hot chocolate donation stand for Odessa Police Department K9 unit in the drive way of her home Friday, Dec. 22, 2017, on Sapphire Street in Odessa, Texas. Donations will go towards buying bulletproof vest and Kevlar boots to protect OPD K9s. Spencer estimates the vest and boots to cost $1000 per K9. (AP Photo|Odessa American, Jacob Ford)

The Odessa City Council is scheduled to recognize 10-year-old Randi Spenser today for raising more than $7,126 for the Odessa Police Department’s K-9 unit by selling hot chocolate in her neighborhood during the holidays.

Interim City Manager Michael Marrero described Spenser as “a great example of a civic minded young person taking action to improve her community.” Police Chief Mike Gerke and Mayor David Turner are scheduled to present her with an award.

Spenser, an aspiring police officer who has three pet dogs, told the Odessa American last month that she was inspired to raise money for the K-9 unit after seeing the movie “Megan Leavey” about a soldier’s bond with a military combat dog during her service in Iraq.

“It opened my eyes up of what they did and how I could help my community by not only helping the dogs but helping the handler,” she said.

She set up her hot chocolate stand at the corner of Sapphire Street and Shiloh Road. Her donation, which the City Council is also scheduled to approve accepting today, will be used for equipment such as bullet-proof vests and shoes for the dogs.

“We went over there a couple nights . . . and it was freezing cold, and she was still out there selling hot chocolate,” Deputy Chief Jesse Duarte said. “It’s amazing what this little 10-year-old did.”

Empty Bowls event helps feed area

Attendees of the 2014 Empty Bowls fundraiser Friday evening select their handmade bowls at the event to benefit the West Texas Food Bank.

The 17th annual Empty Bowls event is set for 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Feb. 2 at Trinity School Commons, 3500 W. Wadley Ave. in Midland. All of the proceeds raised will go to the West Texas Food Bank.

Hand-made ceramic bowls created by students and faculty from the partner groups will be available for $15 apiece.

Food for the event is being donated by Catfish and Company and Jason’s Deli in Midland. Come pick out your favorite bowl, enjoy soups and desserts, and support the West Texas Food Bank.

Reserved tables for eight will be available for $500, and will allow guests to pick from the “pick of the kiln” bowls.

The Empty Bowls event was started in 2001 with only 100 bowls, and has grown into one of the major fundraisers for the West Texas Food Bank with the support of Midland College, Odessa College and the University of Texas of the Permian Basin.

ON THE NET: Empty Bowls Facebook page.

AngioScreen event set

ORMC Logo Red 2016

The Odessa Regional Medical Center Health Screening Van has scheduled an Angio-Screen Vascular Health Event 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Jan. 15, 22, and 29 at ORMC, 520 E. Sixth St. AngioScreen is a painless, non-invasive vascular health screening. It takes only a few minutes to complete and you will leave with an instant color ultrasound picture printout with data showing your risk of heart disease and stroke.

The cost is $50.

For appointments or more information, call 582-8677.

ON THE NET: Odessa Regional Medical Center.

Synthetic drugs focus of work group

R9 PRC

A group of registered nurses from University Medical Center in Lubbock will be featured at “Fake Drugs, Real Effects: Synthetic Drugs in Our Community,” an epidemiological work group organized by the Permian Basin Regional Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse.

The work group is scheduled for 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Feb. 2 at the Region 18 Education Service Center, 2811 La Force Blvd. in Midland.

The agency’s series of epi-work groups target specific issues regarding behavioral health and substance abuse and how they impact Region 9 communities, including Odessa, Midland and the Concho Valley.

The group will discuss use of synthetic drugs among youth and its role in behavioral health. The main focus will be synthetic canaboinoids, like fake weed, Community Liaison Michelle Smith said. She’s hoping 100 people will attend.

Nurses Education on Illegal Drugs and Synthetics (NEIDS) is a group of emergency room RNs that educate the public on the health risks and hazards of synthetic marijuana and other drugs through public service announcements, educational offerings to school-age children, point-of-care education, local coalitions against synthetic marijuana and support new or revised legislation of local and state laws to halt the sale, distribution, and manufacturing of these synthetic compounds and illegal drugs, Smith said.

When patients come into the emergency department on synthetic drugs, patients can’t tell them what they’re on so the nurses don’t know how to treat them. Parents may be using the drugs with their children, so they won’t readily admit to that when they arrive at the hospital.

Regional Evaluator Kayla Fishbeck said there is no screening for the drugs because their chemical composition keeps changing.

Fishbeck said the effects of synthetic drugs can have lasting neurological effects. She added that others say they feel high for months afterward. Parents sometimes think their child is schizophrenic, but it’s the effect of synthetic drugs they may have taken weeks ago and they can’t shake it.

Because the amount of chemicals applied to the plants vary, the volume people receive when they purchase the drugs varies. Smith said the drugs are targeted at youngsters.

Fishbeck said people think they are safe because they bought them at a convenience store, tattoo or hookah shop. The drugs “really hit” the States around 2008. The manufacturers get plant material and spray it with paint thinner, acetone or drain cleaner.

Smith said many people who take synthetic drugs can pass drug tests.

“In the oilfield, that’s what people lean to because they do drug testing out there, but they’re undetected,” Smith said.

Fishbeck said the largest demographic on synthetic drugs is oilfield workers in their 20s to 40s. The reason people usually take the drugs is to stay awake.

“… That’s the crazy thing, too, is that there are people who take these every single day and they’re still alive. But then there are other instances where if you’re in the vicinity you could have a heart attack, one of the nurses said that,” Fishbeck said.

Around 2014 and 2015, Fishbeck said emergency rooms would see many cases a day of synthetic drug overdoses. “Now it’s just a couple to several a week, so it has faded some. But they expect it to rise with the next oil boom,” she said.

Synthetic drugs are illegal in Texas, but the companies that make them are finding ways around that.

In Odessa and Midland, it’s illegal to sell synthetic drugs, but there are still shops that do and they have lines outside waiting for the store to open, Smith said.

Kevin Thompson, also of the Permian Basin Regional Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, said there are treatment facilities in the region that handle synthetic drug abuse, but there are not enough and there is no consistency in how the drugs are made which makes it a problem to treat.

The drugs are made worldwide and Thompson said there are online forums that advise people on what vendors to use and what currency, whether it’s dollars or cryptocurrencies, like Bitcoin.

Thompson said he thinks the work group is much needed.

“… Because even though marijuana use and alcohol use are very high in this area and higher than a lot of the other substances, this stuff is like use it once and most of time you’re incredibly addicted, or you could die,” Thompson said. “That’s unique about synthetic drugs because you don’t know what you’re ingesting and it’s a community problem that frankly not enough people are talking about. And something about this area with the economy that we have and the number of people that are looking for the newest way to stay up longer, or to get high we just don’t have enough resources to combat issue …” Thompson said.

A separate event, Your Mental Health First Aid is scheduled for 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Feb. 6, also at the Region 18 Education Service Center. Smith said this is filled up.

If You Go
  • What: “Fake Drugs, Real Effects: Synthetic Drugs in Our Community,” an epidemiological work group organized by the Permian Basin Regional Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse.
  • When: 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Feb. 2.
  • Where: Region 18 Education Service Center, 2811 La Force Blvd., Midland.

 

 

More Information

Region 9 PRC: https://www.reg9prc.org/

Dance the night away on Friday

Dance logo

Ector County Friday Night Dance has scheduled dance nights with a live band from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Fridays at the Northside Senior Center, 1225 N. Adams Ave.

The following live bands have been scheduled to perform in January.

Friday: Goodtimers.

Jan. 19: Mike Leonard. Bring a dish for feed night at 6:30 p.m. Jan. 26: Johnny and Suzy. Admission is $5. Visitors are welcome.

The dances are alcohol and smoke free events. Call 337-5281 for more information.

MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Sammy Allen records rare triple-double as UTPB rolls over Arlington Baptist

UTPB's Sammy Allen (11) goes up for a shot over Arlington Baptist's Jashun Petite (3) during the first half of their basketball game Monday at the Falcon Dome. UTPB won 99-56.

Sammy Allen couldn’t help but smile.

On a night for the record books, he had put in plenty of work, and he enjoyed every minute.

Allen tallied a rare triple-double and the No. 8 UTPB men’s basketball team rolled to a 99-56 win over Arlington Baptist in nonconference action on Monday in the Falcon Dome, with the Falcons senior guard scoring 11 points, dishing 10 assists and hauling in 12 rebounds to complete an uncommon feat in the college game.

“It feels great,” Allen said with a grin after the win. “It feels real great.”

The Falcons cruised by their NCCAA competition to pick up their 10th straight victory, with the game well in hand before Allen laid in a basket to take his scoring line from nine points to 11 with just more than three minutes to play — and cinch a fitting, high-effort achievement for the high-effort senior, a 6-foot-2 guard who ranks among the Division II’s top 10 players in rebounding.

Allen entered Monday averaging 11.8 rebounds per game and is often praised by coaches and teammates alike for his work on defense and away from the basketball, and Monday night, he was mobbed by them with congratulations when he checked out for the final time after scoring that last lay-in and completing his triple-double.

“He makes plays that nobody else makes, with his effort, with his heart, with his toughness and with his desire to get his hands on the ball,” UTPB head coach Andy Newman said of Allen. “He’s really a special player in that regard.”

Six Falcons players scored in double figures Monday night, and UTPB led 38-21 at the halftime break before rolling on in the second half.

Allen recorded 10 rebounds in the first half alone, and dished five assists before the break.

“He deserves it,” Falcons forward Josh Morris said of Allen. “He never focuses on offense. He always focuses on defense. He does the hard things that not everybody wants to do. Seeing him get that triple-double — everybody was happy for him.”

With Allen’s achievement highlighting the night, UTPB handled its business to get to 13-1 on the season. The Falcons are 5-0 in Lone Star Conference play, and return to league action later this week for two tests on the road at Texas A&M-Kingsville and Angelo State.

Monday night, Morris scored a game-high 23 points, adding 10 rebounds for a double-double of his own. Shooting guard Garrett Baggett came off the bench to sink five 3-pointers for 15 points in 14 minutes.

Daeshon Francis scored 12, powering down a flashy alley-oop pass from Allen in transition midway through the first half to put UTPB up 16-6 with 11:08 to play until the break.

Allen said, on a personal note, he had been struggling off the floor earlier Monday, but met with a classmate and former teammate to pray in the afternoon, then, on the court, that early dish to Francis set him on his way from turning a ‘bad day’ into a night for the record books.

“Starting off, I had a bad day,” he said. “I just let God handle it, and I’d do the rest.

“I came in the game, and I got the first alley-oop pass to Daeshon Francis. What’s so crazy, he told me, ‘It’s going to be there tonight,’ and I said, ‘OK,’ and it was that first pass and I got it there. Then I said, ‘OK, I’ve got something coming for me.’ That was it.”

Newman called Allen’s feat the first triple-double recorded by a Falcons player in his five seasons at the helm, and possibly a first in program history.

The Falcons tip off against Texas A&M-Kingsville on the road Thursday at 7:30 p.m.

UTPB 99, Arlington Baptist 56

ARLINGTON BAPTIST

Kel Wallace 7-9 2-3 16, Eric Wood 4-12 1-1 11, Jashun Petite 2-5 4-6 10, Kennedy Jones 4-9 2-4 10, Quinton Moore 2-8 0-0 4, Andre Roman 1-1 0-0 2, Marvin Hall 1-1 0-0 2, Bryce Morgan 0-5 1-2 1, Joey Gibson 0-1 0-0 0, Zhaire Simmons 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 21-52 10-16 56.

UTPB (13-1 overall)

Josh Morris 9-13 5-8 23, Garrett Baggett 5-7 0-0 15, Daeshon Francis 6-8 0-0 12, Trayvond Massenburg 6-6 0-0 12, Sammy Allen 5-16 1-3 11, Amari Bryant 3-5 1-2 10, James McPherson 1-9 2-2 4, Zeldric King 2-6 0-0 4, Jevon Thomas 0-1 3-5 3, John Moscoso 1-2 0-0 3, Renard Thomas 0-2 2-2 2, Andres Villa 0-3 0-2 0, Ethan Bush 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 38-81 14-24 99.

Halftime — UTPB 38, Arlington Baptist 21. 3-Point goals — Arlington Baptist 4-16 (Eric Wood 2-9, Jashun Petite 2-3, Quinton Moore 0-3, Kel Wallace 0-1), UTPB 9-22 (Garrett Baggett 5-6, Amari Bryant 3-5, John Moscoso 1-2, James McPherson 0-5, Sammy Allen 0-1, Renard Thomas 0-1, Andres Villa 0-1, Ethan Bush 0-1). Total fouls — Arlington Baptist 19, UTPB 20. Fouled out — UTPB: Zeldric King. Technical fouls — None. Rebounds — Arlington Baptist 30 (Kennedy Jones 6), UTPB 54 (Sammy Allen 12). Assists — Arlington Baptist 13 (Quinton Moore 3, Jashun Petite 3), UTPB 25 (Sammy Allen 10).

Police investigating highway motorcycle crash

The Odessa Police Department responded to a major crash involving a motorcycle this afternoon, according to an OPD news release.

OPD and Odessa Fire Rescue responded to the crash around 4:17 p.m. Monday at 48th Street and Andrews Highway, the release detailed.

Investigation revealed a truck hit a motorcycle and fled the scene without meeting necessary legal requirements, the release stated.

The motorcyclist was transported to Medical Center Hospital with life-threatening injuries, the release said.

Police are encouraging motorists to avoid the intersection of 48th Street and Andrews Highway and use alternative routes until further advised.

Police searching for person of interest

Cody Miller

The Odessa Police Department is searching for a man in connection with an aggravated assault investigation, according to an OPD news release.

OPD Spokesman Steve LeSueur said the person of interest, Cody Miller, is not a suspect at this time.

Police are asking anyone with information regarding the whereabouts of Miller to call Detective D. Rocha at 432-335-4933 or Odessa Crime Stoppers at 432-333-TIPS and reference case No. 17-21149.