Lawmaker Proposes Cutting School Calendar by 5 Days

A West Virginia lawmaker is proposing legislation that would trim five days from the school calendar.

The Register-Herald reports that Delegate Dave Perry’s bill would reduce instructional days from 180 to 175, although teachers would still work 200 days.

The legislation would prohibit classes from starting before Labor Day and require the school year to end June 5. Perry, a Democrat from Fayette County, said that would eliminate interference with summer jobs, vacations and festivals.

Three bad-weather days would be built into the schedule.

Because of snowstorms and flooding last year, some counties kept schools open until June 24 while others gave up spring break. This year, some school systems began classes in early August and others gave up Thanksgiving break to ensure the 180 instructional days are met.

Tomblin Signs Comparative Fault Legal Reform Bill

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin has signed a bill changing legal protections when multiple parties are deemed at fault in a lawsuit.

Thursday, the Democratic governor approved a comparative fault bill passed by the Republican-run Legislature.

Currently, if a party can’t pay its share of damages and another party was deemed more than 30 percent responsible, the second entity may be required to cover all remaining damages.

The new law would scale back how much other entities have to pay for some damages the insolvent party can’t cover. The amount would depend on how much the entity was deemed at fault.

Tomblin also vetoed a medical malpractice reform bill, but referenced only technical errors.

Both measures are part of a legal reform push by the GOP this legislative session.

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