News Stricter policies adjust no-pass, no-play rules AUSTIN (AP) — A new school year wouldn’t mean a new slate for students par ticipating in extracurricular activities under a bill by Senate Education Committee Chairman Teel Bivins. Under his bill, a student failing a course during the last six-week grading period of the school year would be suspended from extracurricular activities the following fall. It would apply even if a stu- i dent ends up with a passing grade for the course overall. Suspensions under the no pass, no-play rule currently aren’t held over from one school year to the next. But Bivins, R- Amarillo, said he wants to “keep the focus on academics.” Under the current rule, failing students’ suspension from extracurricular activi ties is as short as three weeks, if they can bring up their grades to passing in that time. Students can prac tice or rehearse during the suspension period. “I thought everything was going well, and I thought everyone was pretty happy with the results.” Eddie Joseph Texas High School Coaches Assosciation grades in good shape in the first six weeks of the next school year,” Bivins said. If a student does well in summer school, Bivins said his intention is that would keep them from being suspended in the fall. In addition, he said, “Once they know what the rules of the game are, it will be I hope an incentive for them to work harder in the springtime.” The bill is opposed by Eddie Joseph of the Texas High School Coaches Association, who said, “Obviously, the object is to pass the course.” Joseph said a student could do well in the other grading periods, then hit a slump or traumatic event and make a 69 in the final six weeks, but still pass the class. A passing grade is 70 out of 100. “When the springtime comes, all youngsters have a hard time staying focused on what they’re there for,” he said. The bill, which includes the three-week sus pension period, “might ensure that those stu dents during the summertime not only prac tice band or debate ... but also do a little work in the summertime to get ready to get their Joseph said he was surprised at the move to change the no-pass, no-play requirement in light of the 1995 modifications. “I thought everything was going well, and I thought everyone was pretty happy with the results,” he said. {Victim'^ ffered ? illionj^ rltten om Sir By Ryan Rogers, The Bati Jon Kocian, a senior chemical engineering major, and Pete Chalfant, a senior environmental design major, pose as human manequins at the Loupots on University Drive Tuesday afternoon. ANTAMOI |j| Simpson i < ■n Fred Gol m that wou 1 c (jtball great t rages if he s itting he is |‘No matter offered, I w crime wh ,” Simpson Phillip Bak Joldman ea Jed Press in w: “I don’t v Tracking deadbeat parents The federal government has paid millions for states to build computer systems that track down parents owing child support. A dozen have the computers up and running, others are still working. The systems must be in place by October. $ millions Federal spending 600 500 400 300 200 100 Bin mu! silBiB US fH I h Documents show shortcomings in child support prograi 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 Washington. State-by-state progress 7 filSjfjil v fully certified conditionally certified not certified [ . Mississippi j .Zl ora Louisianna : l Virginia Georgia ! WASHINGTON (AP) — Sixteen years ago, the federal government agreed to pay states to develop com puter systems to track deadbeat par ents. Taxpayers have spent $1.5 bil lion since then but only a dozen states have operational systems. The money, most of it spent in the past two years, went to computer companies, state workers and numerous consultants. There were consultants to design the systems, to write bids, to build software and even to police other consultants, an Associated Press review of audits and other documents shows. The purpose was to modernize the collection of overdue support money — a figure that has grown to $35 billion owed to 29 million children. When officials are asked why more has not been accomplished, fingerpointing abounds: —State officials say they received bad advice and systems that didn’t work. —Vendors say technical difficul ties and changing federal require ments are to blame. —Federal officials say some states didn’t manage the projects properly. —And congressional auditors con tend the federal agency overseeing the effort did little to hold states accountable. “A lot of energy is being spent on trying to figure out whose fault this is,” said Elisabeth Hirschhorn Donahue, an attorney for the National Women’s Law Center, a nongovernmental outfit that tracks child support policy. The computers are expected to deliver big payoffs. They’ll store all case data, process and distribute pay ments, connect to tax and welfare agency computers and share informa tion with other states. The last is a crucial component because one-third of all child support cases involve out-of-state parents. A year and a half after the federal deadline passed for states to computer ize their collection systems, only three states have met all federal requirements. Washington developed its own sys tem, without using consultants, for $30 million. After a false start with one vendor, Virginia jointly developed a system with a contractor for $21 mil lion. Wyoming maintained strict con trol over the consultants it hired and built a system in three years for under $10 million. All three states have rela tively small caseloads. Nine states have been given condi tional federal certification, meaning their systems meet most of the requirements but need minor adjust ments to gain final approval. Many other states have spent tens of millions of dollars on contractors but only have partial systems, at best, to show for it. When the federal deadline for completing the systems passed in 1995, Congress extended it two more years, and hundreds of millions of dollars of additional federal aid has flowed to these states. “No one is denying that t much more to do,” said David deputy director of the Department of Health and Hi Services’ Office of Child Support agency that oversees the effort. Michigan serves as a case in pi With one of the largest child port caseloads at 1.4 million, state has spent $116 millionin eral and state funds to buildao puter system. The system is ridi with technical flaws and meet federal standards, j State auditors found gave several consultants nonco petitive contracts that fs allowed them to earn fulpaymjl' even if they only worked&yra of the hours promised. Some contractors lacked teb know-how, so the state paid |l training at a cost of $100,000 forli and lost time on the job., auditors! 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