Submitted by R.J. Henderson, Denair High School boys basketball coach:
For the second year in a row, fans of the Denair High School boys basketball team who also enjoy Cajun food are invited to a fun night to support their team. On Saturday, Sept. 28, the coaching staff will host its 2nd annual Cajun Crab Boil.
Tickets are $60 and include all-you-can-eat crab, shrimp, sausage, veggies and garlic bread served family-style. All-you-can-drink beer and wine is included in the ticket price.
Proceeds will help offset travel and equipment expenses for
the team. Some will be set aside to fund future scholarships for players.
The event will run from 6 to 11 p.m. at 843 Helena Ave. in
Waterford.
For more information, contact coaches R.J. Henderson (209) 535-8332. Denair’s team is coming off back-to-back trips to the Sac-Joaquin Section playoffs. The Coyotes were 17-11 and finished second in the Southern League a year ago before losing in the second round of the playoffs.
Denair
was less than 30 seconds away from another impressive road victory Friday
night. Then, the unthinkable happened in Santa Cruz.
Soquel
scored on a 60-yard pass play with 23 seconds to play, capping a frantic finish
that saw the Knights rally for three touchdowns in the fourth quarter to shock
Denair 26-22.
It was
a stunning turn of events for the Coyotes, who led by 16 points with 7 minutes
left in the final period. For Denair, the defending Division VII state
champion, it was the first loss since Sept. 21 last season against Ripon
Christian, a span of 10 games.
Denair
jumped ahead 15-6 at halftime thanks to a pair of touchdowns from Jorge Yanez
(one running and one receiving) and another big night from Dylan De Silva, who
scampered for 168 yards.
“We
did pretty much what we wanted in the first half,” said Denair Coach Anthony
Armas. “But it seemed like every big play we had, we got a penalty. Holding,
blocking in the back, false starts. You name it, we did it. Penalties just
killed us.”
Those
mistakes and empty possessions proved costly, even after Angelo Retana scored
to put the Coyotes (3-1) ahead 22-6 early in the fourth quarter. Instead of
putting the game away early, the Coyotes let Soquel (3-0) hang around close
enough to mount a comeback.
“They
went to a hurry-up offense out of the spread and started throwing the ball,”
Armas said. “They had a pretty good receiver and we just let him get loose.”
The
disappointing outcome made for a quiet atmosphere on the three-hour bus ride
back home.
The Denair Unified School District is back to full strength with five members
after Carmen Wilson was formally sworn in Thursday night.
Wilson was the other four trustees’ unanimous
choice last month after they interviewed three candidates to fill the seat
vacated when longtime board member John Plett resigned Aug. 8. Wilson’s
appointment is until November 2020, when her term and those of Ray Prock Jr.
and Kathi Dunham-Filson will be up.
Wilson has
two children in Denair schools and has participated on school site committees.
She has been a board member for the Stanislaus County Youth Development
Committee and the Turlock American Little League, and taught Sunday school at
Connection Point Church in Denair. She works as a certified public accountant
at the Center for Human Services in Modesto.
Between her
selection last month and her swearing in Thursday night, Wilson met with Denair
Superintendent Terry Metzger and board President Regina Gomes to begin learning
about key issues in the district.
“I think
she’s going to make a terrific board member. She asked some very good questions
in our meeting,” Metzger said.
In other
action Thursday, the board:
Approved the unaudited final financial report for the 2018-19 school year. The district spent $17.10 million, Chief Business Officer Linda told the board. That was about $1.6 million more than the previous year because the district had saved additional money from the state for one-time purchases like additional modular classrooms at Denair Elementary Charter Academy and Chromebook computers for every student at Denair Charter Academy. It also included pass-through money from the state directed toward employee retirement contributions.
Heard a presentation from Metzger about the Local Control Accountability Plan, known as LCAP, which sets out specific goals for the district and its students. Parents and community members are invited to come to a stakeholder meeting Oct. 17 to begin to lay out new goals for next year.
Approved an agreement to share a school nurse with the Hickman Charter School District. The nurse will work at Hickman on Monday and Tuesday, and in Denair the rest of the week. The deal will save Denair $7,217 a year from its general fund.
Agreed to contribute $300 per participant for eight students and two teachers to attend the national FFA convention Oct. 28 to Nov. 3 in Indianapolis. The Denair High Ag Boosters cover the cost of lodging, transportation and other expenses.
The California State Board of Education unanimously sided with the Denair Unified School District on Wednesday in a boundary dispute involving the neighboring Turlock school district.
The issue dates to 2015, when developer
Ron Katakis petitioned the Stanislaus County Office of Education to transfer
about 91 acres from the Denair district to the Turlock Unified School
District. Katakis envisions nearly 300 homes at
the northwest corner of Tuolumne and Waring roads, which has been in the Denair
district since the boundary lines were drawn many decades ago.
Public hearings were held in the fall
of 2015 and a county commission unanimously voted in February 2016 to keep the
property within the Denair district. Turlock appealed the decision, which
finally was heard Wednesday in Sacramento by the 10-member State Board.
“We’re thrilled,” said Denair
Superintendent Terry Metzger, who spoke at the hearing along with Trustees
Kathi Dunham-Filson and Ray Prock Jr. as well as the district’s legal counsel.
Two officials from the Turlock district
also spoke.
The boundary dispute has major financial
implications, especially for Denair. The district will receive $1 million or
more in developer fees when news home are built on the currently vacant
property, plus hundreds of thousands of dollars per year in state funding based
upon student enrollment.
“We explained the financial
significance,” Metzger said. “We estimate it’s about $980,000 a year. That’s 6%
of Denair’s $15.3 million budget. It’s six-tenths of 1 percent of Turlock’s
$162 million budget.”
Metzger said state trustees also seemed
reluctant to overturn a unanimous local decision or set a precedent that favored
a larger school district over a smaller one. Turlock has more than 14,200
students while Denair has 1295.
The Stanislaus County Committee on
School District Organization weighed nine factors required by the State
Education Code before voting 9-0 in February 2016 to deny Katakis’ petition.
Turlock appealed the county decision in March 2016. The matter has been waiting
to be heard at the state level ever since.
The State Board’s
staff recommended denial of Turlock’s appeal, saying, “The California
Department of Education finds that there are no compelling educational
reasons to overturn the unanimous action of the county committee to disapprove
the proposal to transfer territory from the Denair USD to the Turlock USD.”
The 10th installment of the annual Denair Farm & Family Festival promises to be the best one yet. There will be music, food, a tractor parade, dozens of booths and fun for the whole family when the community comes together on Saturday, Sept. 14 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
“There
is truly something for everyone,” said James Shehan, the chairman of the Denair
Farm & Family Association, which organizes the event.
The
festival typically draws 5,000 or more visitors to Denair each year. They are
treated to a host of fun activities on Main Street between Sante Fe Avenue and
Gratton Road.
The
day starts with the Farm Run 5K. Registration opens at 7 a.m. and the race
begins at 8 a.m. The route winds from downtown out into the country and back.
“They
can walk or run with their dog, they can bicycle, whatever they’d like to do,”
Shehan said of participants.
At
9 a.m., the festival truly kicks off with an antique tractor parade down Main
Street. There are more than 20 vintage tractors owned by local farmers
scheduled to appear. All the tractors later will be on display at the Farm
Discovery Zone at the Community Center, which also will have an exhibit of hay
harvesting equipment from the turn of the century to modern times.
After
the parade, visitors can browse among more than 100 booths featuring jewelry,
home decor, information on local companies and organizations, clothing, toys,
gifts and plenty of food. There also will be a children’s play area with a
bounce house and other games.
At
10:30, the music begins. California Creedence will perform the
hits of Creedence Clearwater Revival as well as other popular songs from the
1960s and ’70s until 1:30 p.m. Later in the afternoon, the popular local
ukulele band Sunshine Strummers also will take the stage.
Shehan
said the Denair Farm & Family Association annually raises $2,500 to $3,000,
which it gives out as scholarships each spring to graduates of Denair High
School.
When the festival is over, visitors who still have an appetite are invited to stick around for the annual Denair Volunteer Fire Department barbecue that follows.