Gilroy teachers demand raises, smaller classes
UPDATE: Teachers respond: Teacher salary data needs clarification
Dozens of teachers within the Gilroy Unified School District have shown up en masse to recent Board of Education meetings, demanding district officials give teachers a raise while also improving students’ experiences.
The Gilroy Teachers Association and district...
Pulido named new special education director
Gilroy’s 1,326 special education students, whose needs range from weekly speech therapy to 24/7 residential schools, have a new leader in charge of their care in the wake of the resignation of the woman who had run the beleaguered department since 2013.
Teachers, district reach tentative agreement
The teachers union and school district reached a tentative agreement March 28 that raises salaries and lowers out-of-pocket health care expenses, according to the Gilroy Teachers Association.
The agreement was approved by the union on March 30, and will head to the Gilroy Unified School...
Two little Gilroy schools get big-time cash gifts
GILROY—There’s wild celebration at two Gilroy elementary schools, recipients of their largest cash gifts ever, and to make it that much sweeter the more than $20,000 is from an alumnus of their classrooms.The gifts are the latest in a constant and welcome stream of donations to the Gilroy Unified School District, its teachers and students that so far this year adds up to $94,560, well on the way to last year’s total of $150,613.Some gifts are huge, some are small, but all are welcome, according to schools superintendent Debbie Flores, who said the recent donations to Glen View and Eliot elementary schools are special as they were given specifically to the district’s two neediest schools by a former student.“This is just so wonderful, having a former student come back and making a donation, that’s just incredible, Flores said Tuesday, adding, “It’s really one of the most generous gifts we’ve received.”The exact figure is $21,200. Eliot and its teachers and library will receive $10,800 while Glen View will have $10,400 for supplies.The donors are Ty Ashford, 31, and his partner Nicholas Jitkoff, 36, both of Palo Alto. The donations were given through a family charitable foundation created by Jitkoff’s family in 1982, the Texas-based L’Aiglon Foundation.Ashford grew up in Gilroy and attended Rod Kelley Elementary School, South Valley Middle School and Gilroy High School. He is the son of Steve and Linda Ashford, owner of Ashford’s Heirlooms, a downtown antiques emporium. Steve Ashford also serves on the city planning commission.Ty Ashford explained the gifts this way: “I was reading an article on Reddit a few months ago about the steep out-of-pocket expenses teachers face in providing supplies for their classrooms and their students,” he wrote in an email to the Dispatch.“On that idea, we came up with the concept for our school grants. I have vivid memories of going through elementary school at Rod Kelley in bright, colorful, and engaging classrooms. I think every student should have the opportunity to make similar memories.”He said the foundation is being run more and more by the new generation of Nicholas’s family, and one of their priorities is education, so more grants to schools are planned.The pair plans to tour Glen View and Eliot with school officials on Monday.Ashford’s family history in Gilroy goes back more than 50 years.“My grandparents moved here in the early 1960's when they bought the Western Auto department store, which is now our family's antique store—Ashford's Heirlooms in the same location. Growing up, I always saw my parents and grandparents passionately involved in community boards, events and organizations, so I've always tried to make that part of who I am too. My partner, Nicholas, comes from a large south Texas family who are as passionate as mine are about making sure our community is more than just a group of people living in close proximity,” he said.At Glen View, principal Corina Sapien could hardly contain her joy at being a recipient of the donors’ generosity.“We’re still sort of reeling from it,” she said. “It’s very generous. When we saw the letter our first question was, is this for real?”She said she wants teachers to be free to use the funds as they see fit in classrooms. One need is for a color printer, she said, echoing Ashford’s comments about his memories of colorful classrooms at Rod Kelley school.Noting it’s her school’s largest ever single cash donation, Eliot’s principal Patricia Pelino said, “It was unexpected. We feel pretty humble [and] we are so blessed here at Eliot, I cannot describe in words what it means to us.”She said each teacher will receive $400 for classroom supplies and that special attention will be given to the school’s neediest families and students. She said she and Eliot’s teachers are very grateful to their benefactors and are looking forward to meeting with Ashford on Monday, Oct. 19 to tour the schools, beginning at Eliot at 1pm.In addition to funds for school supplies, Ashford and Jitkoff included $2,000 designated for the Eliot library to buy books, Pelino said.At Ashford’s Heirlooms on Monterey Street, Ty Ashford’s proud father, Steve, said he was thrilled that his son and Jitkoff picked Gilroy schools as recipients.“This is really a good thing, I was real happy they have chosen Gilroy,” Steve Ashford said.He said his son always was caring and giving and showed that as he grew up by, for example, working in the Gilroy Senior Center and with handicapped kids at HOPE.“He grew up with my dad at the [Western Auto] store. He got up in the morning and came downstairs and hung out with grandma and grandpa, retail was in his blood when he was very young,” Steve Ashford said.To this day, seniors and kids from HOPE with whom Ty Ashford worked remember him fondly, according to his father.“They always stop in the store and ask, ‘How’s Ty?’” he said.
Enrollment continues to decline at Gilroy schools
The declining enrollment across Gilroy Unified School District has officials looking at ways to more evenly distribute the number of students across its elementary schools.
While nearly half of the district’s schools are expected to have double-digit percentage decreases in five years, Las Animas Elementary...
PHOTO: Mount Madonna School Class of 2023
Mount Madonna School announced Cecily Kelly, Mariah Cohen and Samuel Kaplan as the 2023 co-valedictorians and Zoey Ocampo-Sobkoviak as salutatorian.
Mount Madonna School's 2023 high school graduation ceremony will be held at the school’s upper campus on June 15 at 10:30am.
“The graduating class is comprised of academically strong and creative students,” said Head...
Jolly farewell
When the school year ends, Christopher High School Principal Patricia Jolly will be filing out with the students as she retires from her position.
Council OK’s funding for school officer program
A majority of the Gilroy City Council on Nov. 15 agreed to fund a program that will allow police officers to return to local schools shortly.
The council voted 5-2 to approve paying half of the $483,383 cost for the school resource officer program in...
Blue and White rule this week
There may no longer be a varsity football season, but there will be a homecoming celebration at Gilroy High School.
Sports boosters, alumni, parents, cheerleaders, student organizations and teachers and staff at Gilroy High went ahead this week with the school’s annual Homecoming celebration, despite...
Gilroy Prep is city’s newest middle school
GILROY—It’s another school term for Gilroy, but for one of its school it’s a milestone year.





















