Piedmont Wins Gold, Skyline Drops Out

Kudos to Piedmont High, which has been awarded a gold medal by US News and World Report – ranked #64 among all U.S. public schools.  Nearby Skyline High dropped out and was nowhere to be found.  You might jump to the conclusion that these rankings reflect the socio-economic mix at high schools, and you would be correct.

Piedmont High Ranking

The US News rankings are based on academics and college preparedness, and they valiantly attempt to factor in economically disadvantaged kids.  The calculations come from these sources:  proportion of kids taking Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate courses; actual scores from these college-credit tests; and participation levels by economically disadvantaged kids.

School Matters calculated all high schools for this report, and assembles all kinds of information on U.S. public schools as well.  So I pulled up a comparison between Piedmont and Skyline to see where they stand on general proficiencies.

Piedmont Skyline School Matters

While the data is a year old, the overall proficiencies tell a clear story:  97.5% for Piedmont and 75.5% for Skyline.  No matter how you slice the data, economically disadvantaged kids didn’t perform as well and pulled down the averages.  When you exclude that population, the numbers look a little better but there’s still a large gap.

Top Ranked lists are always interesting but can be twisted in so many ways.  Is a high school most successful when they focus on AP tests?  Are disadvantaged kids best measured by the sliver who do?  Well, there’s some validity to the new twist from US News and it’s terrific that Piedmont is a shining star.  But for the Skyline parents and kids who are college-bound, don’t worry too much about it.

Get Your Toys Tested For Toxicity

Get your gift toys tested for toxic chemicals, and rest easier this holiday season.  Chemicals that have been found in some toys include lead, bromine, cadmium, chlorine, arsenic and mercury.  Isn’t that lovely?

Many well-known toys have been tested by Healthy Toys, and you can check this bad toys list.  For example, the Ballerina Barbie doll seems to have mercury problems, while other Barbies are fine.

Ballerina Barbie Testing

But what about toys that haven’t made this list?  The Center for Environmental Health (CEH) will come to your rescue and offer testing at the Montclair Rec Center (map) this Thursday, from 4pm-6pm.

Their team will bring along an “x-ray fluorescence analyzer” to gauge lead as well as other chemical levels.  The CEH says they will limit each person to two toys, if things are busy.

If you can’t make it to the Montclair Rec Center but are interested in testing toys, then drive down to the CEH office at 2201 Broadway, Suite 302 (map).  The office will be open Monday-Thursday, from noon-6pm daily, through December 23rd.

Save The Children Or Ourselves?

Something very disconcerting is happening around our faire village, where we fear solicitors and fundraisers who appear on our doorsteps.  They used to simply hassle us, but now we’re distrustful when anyone rings doorbells.  To me, this represents a loss of civility.

Over the past few days, students have been traipsing around Montclair neighborhoods and asking for donations to Save The Children.  This solicitation appears to be fully legitimate, except it hasn’t been registered with the Oakland Police.  If you want to ring doorbells and ask for money, then you’re supposed to get a permit first.  Some folks are concerned enough to call the cops…but why?

Save The Children

Let’s take this a step further.  When your neighborhood Girl Scout rings and asks you to buy cookies, she may be violating the law if her troop leader didn’t apply for a permit and give one to her.  This is nuts to call in the violation.  (Of course, if she just leaves you a note and you later make a visit to her home?  All is kosher.)

There’s some legitimate basis for concern when strangers wander around Montclair, though.  We experienced a crime wave this fall, with perps casing and later burglarizing homes.  Our cops asked us to call about strangers doing strange things, and this led to arrests.  To wit, October burglaries went down substantially after some of these thieves were spotted and picked up.  We’re still at risk and burglaries continue in the hills.

So how should we respond to solicitors at our doors?  Some Montclarions seem to be on high-alert, and feel we should report all unpermitted solicitors to the cops.  My reaction is far more muted, that you call the cops if someone strikes you as suspicious.  Otherwise all we have to fear is fear itself.

Susan Lockwood, who volunteers as a block captain, says we should address the matter with ill-informed solicitors – and even provides this informative script so they understand the reactions and rejections from Montclarions:

You seem legit to me; I know canvassing is tough work. But there is a law that says you need to carry a permit and I suggest you talk to your bosses about it right away.  There have been a lot of burglaries here in this neighborhood, some related to soliciting, and you will find that many of my neighbors are going to turn you away because of this.  Someone could even call the police if they really wanted to.  My own policy is simply to make no exceptions to my rule of not entertaining solicitors without permits.  Sorry.  Have a good night, and be sure to talk to your boss.

Regardless of permitting, it’s hard to be patient with solicitors.  My personal favorites are the magazine sellers who return annually, like the Capistrano swallows.  I’m irritated by these solicitors as much as the next person, and try to turn them away nicely rather than harshly.

But when it comes to legitimate causes that catch my attention?  I’m putty in the hands of the requesters, and even appreciate their effort and courage to ring doorbells.  A few years ago, I was solicited for environmental causes and helped out.  I would probably welcome a twenty-something’s pitch to save the children, and then decide whether to donate or gently reject them.

Maybe I have faith, but it’s unlikely that solicitors and fundraisers pose a safety threat.  While permits are a good thing, their absence doesn’t mean you are coming face-to-face with criminals.  Sometimes you have to go with your gut instinct and, as my Gen Y buddies would say, chill.

First Time: No Home Fires Tonight

Keeping warm on this truly chilly evening?  Well, this better be due to your electricity or gas supplied heat only, because it’s now illegal to use your fireplace or wood-burning stove.  Welcome to the first Spare The Air Day, winter edition.

Today the air quality was reported as “102” for the Coast and Central Bay, which includes Oakland and the Oakland Hills.  This means it’s unhealthy for sensitive groups like active kids/adults and people with respiratory problems.

Air Quality Report

When the particulates get too high, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District Board declares a Spare The Air Day.  No wood, fake logs or pellets may be burned during the these bad days – which can occur from November through February.

This wood-smoke rule was passed last July, and I admit to ignoring the news back then:  “Regulation 6, Rule 3 makes it illegal to burn wood or fire logs in fireplaces, wood stoves, pellet stoves, outdoor fire pits, or any other wood-burning devices when the Air District issues a Winter Spare the Air Alert.”

Let this be fair warning, as you could become a scofflaw by tending the home fires.  Fines start at hundreds of dollars, so I have heard.  Yet enforcement can’t be a high priority for patrolling cops, so it’s not clear who will be driving around and sniffing chimneys.

Hey, I’m all for improving air quality and the Air District says that 2/3rd of the particulates come from this burning.  This seems like a form of pollution we can actively prevent!  Since we don’t live in Siberia, I have to believe that controlling or eliminating wood fires isn’t very tough for folks.

To stay tuned into the bad day alerts, you may check online, call 1-877-4NO-BURN, or sign up for your personal Air Alerts via email or cell.  Of course, local TV/Radio stations also report these declared days too.

Huh, Foreclosures Up And Down

Despite the recession, our distressed property counts have decreased lately!  Realty Trac reveals that properties in the 94611 zip code are actually down over the past two months, by nearly six percent.  That’s doesn’t make much sense, right?

Dig a little deeper for the real news, though.  Among all homes headed to or legally foreclosed, some 576 are currently owned by banks.  Two months ago only 519 were bank-owned properties, which means 11 percent more are in trouble.  There’s the foreclosure news we were looking for.

Foreclosure Stats Dec 9

In the chart above, let’s take a look at how Oakland and Alameda County are doing these days.  The picture isn’t pretty, as overall distressed properties have shot up nearly 10 percent at the city level and four percent for the the county.

While our zip’s distressed property levels are lower, nearly six percent of total housing units are distressed.  That level, based on 2000 census data, is likely due to higher overall home ownership in 94611 versus the city and county overall.

For residents of Montclair and Piedmont, the situation seems to be a gradual and slightly hidden creep for now.  If more folks lose jobs and can ill-afford their mortgages, we’ll surely see the grim reaper appear over the coming months.