This from
H-L:
Several months from now, members of the Fayette County
school board members will be faced with a series of difficult — and
potentially controversial — decisions.
The school board
ultimately will need to work together to address problems with the
district's budget, to bridge the achievement gap for poor, disabled and
minority students, and to figure out what to do when Superintendent Tom
Shelton's contract ends next year.
|
Clockwise from top left: Doug Barnett, Roger Cleveland, Amanda Ferguson and Natasha Murray.
Read
more here:
http://www.kentucky.com/2014/10/25/3501405/critical-decisions-await-the-victors.html?sp=/99/164/142/#storylink=cpy
|
Two of the five Fayette County
school board members will be competing with political newcomers in the
Nov. 4 election for the right to help make those critical decisions.
The
school board races are important for all Lexington residents, because
voters paying school taxes should exercise oversight, Transylvania
University Political Scientist Don Dugi said.
"There are lots of
reasons to have an effective educational system," he said, "and things
like financial mismanagement and other factors that might cause the
educational system to function at a lower level than it should are
things you want to avoid if at all possible."
In the 2nd District,
incumbent Doug Barnett, a senior staff attorney in the Kentucky Court
of Appeals, is running against Roger Cleveland, an associate professor
in the College of Education at Eastern Kentucky University. The district
covers northern Fayette County.
In the 4th District, incumbent
Amanda Ferguson, a former mediator and non-profit manager, faces Natasha
Murray, a consultant with the Kentucky Department of Education. The
district includes an area south of Main Street and east of South
Broadway.
Barnett and Ferguson have been the two most outspoken
members of the board, questioning Shelton about budget cuts and other
issues.
All candidates have children attending schools in the
district. Murray and Cleveland served on school-based decision-making
councils. Before Ferguson and Barnett were elected to the school board,
they were active in the PTA.
2nd District
As a board
member first elected in 2010, Barnett notes that he has advocated for a
new elementary school. He, along with Ferguson, worked to preserve
funding for band and music programs during a contentious budget cut this
year. Barnett also pushed for the creation of a task force to improve
special education, and fought a plan to outsource custodians. With many
schools in his district beset by the achievement gap and limited
fundraising for student activities, he called for equity for students
and staff.
Cleveland points to 20 years of experience in higher
education and elementary, middle and high schools. He spent six years in
the Kentucky Department of Education. He served on the Fayette Equity
Council, and volunteered in at least 20 schools in the district. His
campaign platforms include equity and excellence in schools, increasing
family and community engagement and closing what he calls the
"opportunity" gap for students.
Barnett said that in addition to
having high expectation for all students, high-poverty schools need
resources from the district and schools need a long-term plan in place.
Achievement gaps will never improve until they improve staff morale and
include all parents in the conversations.
Barnett, who serves on
Fayette's redistricting committee, said that Fayette County needs to
ensure that schools are not overcrowded.
"I think that because we
have fewer middle schools and high schools than we do elementary
schools, the best thing to do would be to keep the elementary kids close
to home and consider socioeconomic diversity in the feeder patterns for
middle and high schools," he said. "I think this approach meets the
goals in the board's guiding principles for school rezoning."
Cleveland
said elementary children should go to a school near their homes and
that redistricting can't be accomplished on the basis of race and
ethnicity.
Barnett said the most important issue for the district
is that all students are learning at levels so they will be prepared for
college and careers.
Barnett, 39, said a trust fund most recently
used to make loans to teachers for travel and other situations, should
be used to support high-poverty, low-performing schools. William Wells
Brown Elementary, which is in District 2, had the lowest tests scores in
the state among elementary schools.
Cleveland said "You can't throw money at low-performing schools."
He said you have to create a culture in the district of good teaching and believing that all kids can learn.
During
the campaign, the candidates have been asked about State Auditor Adam
Edelen's special examination which found chronic mismanagement in the
district, Barnett said the school board needs to assure the public that
the board will hold the responsible parties accountable.
Cleveland,
51, said the allegations that led to the audit resulted from
personality conflicts among district officials and "had nothing to do"
with children.
He is concerned that the district spent thousands
of dollars on the audit and district officials already knew much of what
was in the findings. Cleveland said "too much play" had been given to
the findings in the audit. Instead, he said the district should be
talking about student achievement.
"Students are not reading on
grade level, there are horrendous gaps, we should have more
conversations about student achievement versus personality issues,"
Cleveland said. Everyone should be held accountable for the problems
outlined in the findings, including current board members, he said.
4th District
Murray,
in her work for the Kentucky Department of Education, has reviewed
programs at low-performing and high-performing schools. She said that
her area of expertise was evaluating gaps in reading and math, and that
she hopes to bring a fresh perspective of how to navigate challenges
that impact the academic success for all students. Murray said her
professional experience in educational policy sets her apart from
Ferguson, her opponent. Among her priorities are equity in education and
increasing innovative educational opportunities to raise student
achievement.
Murray said community partnerships is one way to make
that happen: "I want to see Fayette County become one of the
trendsetters ... that other districts look to us."
Ferguson, who
is wrapping up her second four-year term on the board, said she has been
a strong advocate for all of her constituents and is getting positive
feedback for her questioning of Shelton and other district leaders.
"I
have always tried to represent the best interests of both our students
and the community, to make sure every tax dollar is wisely spent, and to
be a voice for those who feel they have not been heard — whether they
be students, parents, teachers, administrators, or simply concerned
citizens," said Ferguson.
"To me, a school board member's
responsibilities include serving the public by asking questions,
sometimes tough ones, of those in leadership, offering critical
analysis, responding to citizens' concerns, and listening to the needs
of teachers and other employees. All of these tasks work together
towards the most important goal of educating our students and ensuring
their readiness for college and careers beyond their time in the Fayette
County Public Schools."
Ferguson said she was concerned that
Fayette County was classified as a "needs improvement" district, instead
of "proficient" in the latest round of statewide student testing.
Murray said she is concerned that students are not equipped to be successful in the work force.
On
the issue of Edelen's audit, Ferguson, 48, said while the
superintendent is working to correct problems and the district should
move ahead, people in the community are not satisfied that full
responsibility has been taken for the problems that Edelen found.
Murray,
39, said the audit should assure people that every dollar was accounted
for — Edelen found no criminal wrongdoing — and she thought Shelton had
taken immediate corrective action.
Ferguson, meanwhile, said that
redistricting is needed to address Fayette County's overcrowded
schools. She said to balance diversity and let children attend schools
closest to their neighborhoods is "not always going to be possible."
Murray
said the redistricting debate should include weighing economic
diversity, maintaining feeder patterns of schools so that elementary
students go to the same middle and high schools, and the costs of
transportation.
The Herald-Leader searched Fayette County court records for all four candidates.
In
December 2009, the University of Kentucky Credit Union filed a civil
complaint in Fayette District Court against Murray to collect on an
unpaid $1,193.33 Visa credit card bill. Murray signed a document called
an agreed judgement in January 2010 saying she would make payments. An
order of wage garnishment was issued June 28, 2011. The case was
resolved July 2011, according to court documents.
"I closed
accounts and thought everything was taken care of, but apparently with
that one card the Credit Union had been sending information to the wrong
address," Murray said. "All debt was cleared and has been settled."
-
Doug Barnett
Born: Oct. 6, 1975
Residence: 1881 Lost Trail Lane
Education:
Bachelor's in political science and history, University of Kentucky
(1998); law degree, University of Kentucky College of Law (2001);
pursuing master's in public administration, Kentucky State University
(expected 2016)
Occupation: Senior staff attorney, Kentucky Court of Appeals
Elected Office: Fayette County Board of Education, District 2. Elected 2010.
Family: Wife, Jennifer; children ages 11 and 4
Website: dougbarnettforfcps2014.nationbuilder.com
-
Dr. Roger Cleveland
Born: Oct. 21, 1963
Residence: 465 Skyview Lane
Elected Office: None
Education:
Communications degree from Morehead State University; M.A. in sociology
of education, Union College; doctorate in social and cultural
foundations of education from University of Cincinnati
Occupation: Associate professor, Eastern Kentucky University
Family: Wife, Audra; children ages 3, 18, 13, 13
-
Natasha Murray
Born: Sept, 5, 1975
Residence: 1473 Thames Drive
Education:
Doctoral candidate in applied quantitative research methods,
Educational Psychology department at the University of Kentucky;
master's degree in higher education, from the University of Kentucky
Occupation: Educational consultant at Kentucky Department of Education
Elected office: None
Family: Husband, Marqus; children ages 12 and 16
Website: natashamurray2014.com
-
Amanda Main Ferguson
Born: July 15, 1966
Residence: 317 Cochran Road
Education: B.A. in psychology from University of Kentucky; M.A. in psychology from Vanderbilt University
Occupation: Former mediator and non-profit manager; currently stay-at-home mom
Elected office: Two-term incumbent on Fayette County Board of Education
Family: Husband, Todd; children ages 16, 13 and 10
Read
more here:
http://www.kentucky.com/2014/10/25/3501405/critical-decisions-await-the-victors.html?sp=/99/164/142/#storylink=cpy
Read
more here:
http://www.kentucky.com/2014/10/25/3501405/critical-decisions-await-the-victors.html?sp=/99/164/142/#storylink=cpy
2 comments:
I see why Cleveland doesn't want to answer any questions about his platform, his thoughts about the audit or anything else. How in the world can board members be held responsible for the results of the audit when material information was being concealed from them? The audit received "too much play?" Really? His arrogance just turns me off.
Based upon what he said at the debate and in this article, as well as the contribution issues, He just feels too slimy of a character for me. Nothing about him really says that he wants to be on this board and I don't think he would be a very good fit.
Any predictions, Dr. Day?
Here's mine: Ferguson gets roughly 65% of the vote. Barnett wins another close one.
Post a Comment