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New Vision Charter School Building Expansion
Loveland Planning Commission Supports New Vision Charter School Campus Expansion
New Vision Charter School Receives 2018 Best of Loveland Award
Press Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
New Vision Charter School Receives 2018 Best of Loveland Award
Loveland Award Program Honors the Achievement
LOVELAND July 20, 2018 — New Vision Charter School has been selected for the 2018 Best of Loveland Award in the Charter Schools category by the Loveland Award Program.
Each year, the Loveland Award Program identifies companies that we believe have achieved exceptional marketing success in their local community and business category. These are local companies that enhance the positive image of small business through service to their customers and our community. These exceptional companies help make the Loveland area a great place to live, work and play.
Various sources of information were gathered and analyzed to choose the winners in each category. The 2018 Loveland Award Program focuses on quality, not quantity. Winners are determined based on the information gathered both internally by the Loveland Award Program and data provided by third parties.
About Loveland Award Program
The Loveland Award Program is an annual awards program honoring the achievements and accomplishments of local businesses throughout the Loveland area. Recognition is given to those companies that have shown the ability to use their best practices and implemented programs to generate competitive advantages and long-term value.
The Loveland Award Program was established to recognize the best of local businesses in our community. Our organization works exclusively with local business owners, trade groups, professional associations and other business advertising and marketing groups. Our mission is to recognize the small business community’s contributions to the U.S. economy.
SOURCE: Loveland Award Program
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After STEM shooting, Loveland charter schools explore adding school resource officers
Loveland Classical Schools and New Vision Charter School look at options
Jeff Culler poses for a photo with his daughter, Mady Culler, 10, outside New Vision Charter School Friday in Loveland. Mady is a fourth-grader at the school and Culler is concerned about security at Charter schools like New Vison and thinks it is important to have a school resource officer. (Photo by Jenny Sparks/Staff Photographer)
School resource officers patrol, play and teach in Loveland’s traditional public middle and high schools. They get to know the students, make referrals, and in some cases, teach classes or coach teams — and can be vital presences during episodes of school violence.
But, though Loveland’s two charter schools operate under the Thompson School District umbrella, neither of them have police officers stationed at their schools.
For Jeffrey Culler, father of two New Vision Charter School fourth-graders who celebrated their last day of school Friday, this disparity is troubling, particularly in light of the May 7 shooting at the STEM School Highlands Ranch charter school, where no officer was stationed at the time of the shooting.
Culler has since taken it upon himself to “make some noise” about the lack of trained officers in charter schools, viewing it as an issue of equity among all Thompson School District kids.
“This has been my mission from God lately,” Culler said.