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In July 2021, Seven gained control of Boral with a 70% shareholding. [14] In February 2024, Seven Group Holdings launched a takeover offer for the remainder of the shares it did not own. [15] It was rejected by Boral's board. [16] After revising the offer, Seven Group Holdings gained full ownership of Boral in July 2024 and the company was ...
In April 2011, Seven Media Group was acquired by West Australian Newspapers to create Seven West Media. [14] SGH remains Seven West Media's largest shareholder, with a 40.2% stake. [15] In July 2021, Seven Group Holdings took 70% ownership in construction materials company Boral. [16] It gained full ownership of Boral in July 2024. [17]
The Texas Education Agency has taken over seven other school districts since 2000, and 15 in the past three decades, replacing their elected boards with boards of managers appointed by the commissioner. [33] [34] TEA has also intervened through appointments such as conservators or monitors in at least 51 school districts. [35]
Cerda recommended permanently closing seven campuses, consolidating two schools and redesigning one learning center. He says the plan will cut the deficit in half and impact 2,800 students.
Texas officials on Wednesday announced a state takeover of Houston's nearly 200,000-student public school district, the eighth-largest in the country, acting on years of threats and angering ...
The company also produces fibre cement sheeting, aerated concrete products, bricks, permanent formwork for walls and systems to support plasterboard construction through Rondo, a joint venture with Boral. It spun off its interests in heavy building products to a separate listed company, Rinker Group, in 2003.
The Houston Independent School District takeover formally began on June 1, 2023 with the appointment of a new superintendent and board of managers. [48] Millard House II was replaced as HISD superintendent by Mike Miles (school superintendent) as part of the planned takeover. [49]
The Houston Independent School District (HISD) in the late 1960s and early 1970s refused to consider Chicano students as a minority for the purposes of desegregating schools. [2] The Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF) opened a case against HISD, alleging that the district was illegally segregating black and Chicano ...