Signatures 57 total
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Name: Stephanie Keenan on Feb 13, 2010Comments: my child deserves to attend a school with a school nurse!!!Flag
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Name: Lynn Hamblen on Feb 14, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Tammy McDowall on Feb 14, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Coralie Van Alstyne on Feb 15, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Shannon Elsemore on Feb 15, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Rene LaRose on Feb 16, 2010Comments: The idea of not having actual nurses over-seeing the health of our students would be a terrible thing. How can we send our children to school when many untrained aids do not know the details of health concerns. Many works misunderstand the use of insulin, and the use of gucogon for a diabetic patient. How can we willingly send our health-needy children to school without a school nurse who over-sees our children's concerns? We must realize our schools must have equal access. If our children need a nurse to be available, then we do not have equal access, just as other special needs children are to have equal access.Flag
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Name: Marisa Williams on Feb 17, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Jennifer Bradley, RN, PHN on Feb 17, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Barbara Ann Chestnutt on Feb 17, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Jennifer Dunnam on Feb 18, 2010Comments: stop cutting ANYTHING having to do with our schools! our kids are not who should be paying for shortfalls.Flag
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Name: Dian Baker PhD, RN on Feb 18, 2010Comments: All school children need to be safe at school, especially those with special needs. Availability of a school nurse is a basic core function of a school district to ensure that ALL children have access to the curriculum and can be safe and healthy while attending school. Cutting your school nurses will put the district in jeopardy of violating several laws and legal protections for children. It is not an option to basic resources to support learning for children while the attend school - Dian BakerFlag
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Name: Jennifer Powers on Feb 19, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Tristan Kleinknight, BSN PHN on Feb 19, 2010Comments: Its unfornate that students could be put at such a risk.Flag
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Name: Lisa O on Feb 19, 2010Comments: Keep the school nurses! They are vital to the children's health!Flag
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Name: Jennifer Edwards on Feb 19, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Adrian Burgeson on Feb 22, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Julie Goette on Feb 22, 2010Comments: Both of my children have asthma and need inhalers and one of my children has a nut allergy and has to have an epi-pen in case of emergency. I know I would feel better knowing there was a credentialed, trained nurse at their school at a moment where my child's life depended on it.Flag
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Name: Lynette Donohue on Feb 22, 2010Comments: I have found the help of nurses invaluble when concerns have arisen regarding health problems with children in my class. I have also benefitted from their help in the past when dealing with my daughter when she was in the Rocklin school system.Flag
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Name: Tina M. Chiu on Feb 23, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Tara Nakano on Feb 25, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Nancy L. Miller RN on Feb 26, 2010Comments: Every child deserves a school nurse. School nurses perform a variety of services that goe unnoticed but are imperative to the heatlh and safety of children. Please do not cut Nursing services in your district.Flag
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Name: Janet Dunlap on Feb 26, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Tiffaney Cahill on Feb 26, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Sherri Voyer on Feb 26, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Nancy Gilfillan on Feb 27, 2010Comments: I am strongly in support of the School Nurse program. It would be a big mistake if the district eliminates this valuable resource. I hope the district will reconsider this decision and look at a nurse placement in schools as a great preventative measure to further struggles that teachers, parents and students face.Flag
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Name: Lisa Loebs on Feb 27, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Nora Keenan on Feb 27, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Anonymous on Feb 27, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Patrick James on Feb 27, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Angie Casper on Feb 27, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Kristina Smith Aschemeyer on Feb 27, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Pam Iwamoto on Feb 27, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Teri Hampton on Feb 27, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Joy Lowry on Feb 27, 2010Comments: Our credentialed school nurses are an invaluable part of the RUSD team. With over 10,500 students attending the school district, there are a number of students with a myriad of medical conditions & different types of medications that could require special care & response if an emergency should occur. The nurses write care plans, train & ensure that these students needs & safety are met. It gives the parents & students the peace of mind to not worry about their children & safety while at school, while allowing the students to not miss school & soley focus on the responsibilities of being a student . If something should arrise, the best possible care would be provided. It would not be humanly possible to only have 1 school nurse responsible for the entire school district, without seriously jepordizing the safety of every student . Besides the students with the special medical issues, there are the day to day incidents that occur that also can require the guidance of more than just 1 nurse could possibly handle. We must be responsible & not cut our nurses out of our district. They are an important part of the RUSD team that ensures the best possible & right of each student to have a safe & sucessful school experience starting in K - 12th grade.Flag
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Name: Emily Ford on Mar 3, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Megan L. Bourke on Mar 3, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Jolene Froehlich on Mar 5, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Sheila Bridges on Mar 9, 2010Comments: I think school nurses are important for the health of the students and staff of the Rocklin Unified School District.Flag
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Name: Susan Firchau, RN PHN on Mar 10, 2010Comments: Research supports that there is a direct correlation between the number of school nurses and increased student attendance, to say nothing of supporting a healthy and safe environment for students.Flag
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Name: Coree Keenan on Mar 11, 2010Comments: In addition to me wanting my children screened for vision, hearing, and scoliosis, I want to make sure that he and all of his school friends have been properly immunized. My son has asthma. And although it is rare that he will need medicla intervention, when he does, it is urgent and potentially life saving. I want a school nurse at his school of attendance!Flag
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Name: M. Von Esmarch on Mar 11, 2010Comments: It cannot possibly be safe NOT to have a trained nurse at school. With so many children with diabetes, epilepsy, fainting disorders, and more, such a move would be a gamble. Anything you save on salary, you'll end up spending on litigation and/or settlements.Flag
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Name: Misty Snider on Mar 11, 2010Comments: Without or nurses, how..what..and what will happen! Come on please don't the children GIVE ENOUGH ALREADY? PLEASE STOP TAKING AWAY FROM THE KIDS!!!Flag
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Name: David Beasley on Mar 11, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Carolyn Nguyen on Mar 12, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Robert Barrett on Mar 12, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Shannon Estrada on Mar 12, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Donna Beck on Mar 12, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Bonnie Wendt on Mar 12, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Lyndsey on Mar 12, 2010Comments:Flag
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Name: Jennifer Hammond on Mar 13, 2010Comments:Flag
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