Hortonville Area School District

Hortonville Area School District
Location
Hortonville, Wisconsin, Greenville, Wisconsin & Surrounding Towns
District information
Type Public
Grades PK-12
Superintendent Dr. Heidi Schmidt
Students and staff
Students 3,555
Other information
Website http://www.hasd.org/

The Hortonville Area School District (HASD) is a school district in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. It serves the communities of Hortonville and Greenville, and parts of Center, Dale, Ellington, Grand Chute, Hortonia, and Liberty. As of 2012, the district enrollment was 3,555.[1] The district maintains six school buildings on three campuses. Total district population was 18,952 at the 2010 Census.[2]

Schools

K4 Schools

HASD provides 4-year-old kindergarten at sites throughout the community.[3] Sites include:

Elementary schools

Middle schools

High school

History

During the 1972-1974 school years, teachers belonging to the Hortonville Education Association[lower-alpha 1] went on strike against the Hortonville School District. Strikes by teachers were illegal under state law. The 84 striking teachers were replaced by strikebreakers and classes resumed. The union took the firings by the school board to court, asserting that the disciplinary hearings held by the Hortonville Board of Education were prejudiced because of the board's role as the bargaining unit for the district.

The case went to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, which found for the Hortonville Education Association, reversing Wisconsin lower courts, which had found for the school board.[5]

The case went to the United States Supreme Court. In a 6-3 decision authored by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, the court found the board had held the power to discipline the teachers under state law, and further that the action was in the best interests of the community, in providing continued education for the charges of the board, the students.

Notes

  1. After the Hortonville Education Association losses, until 2003, when teachers in the Hortonville district were admitted to a national union, a non-affiliated local union, Hortonville Association of Teachers (HAT), was the bargaining association.[4] They are now affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.