Date: Fri 08-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 08-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
charter-school-board
Full Text:
School Board Members See No Need For Charter Changes
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Members of the Board of Education warned the Charter Revision Commission last
week that allowing a political party to have a majority on the school board
would "politicize" the board.
"Partisan politics has never been a consideration, perhaps because we have
equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats. My concern is when one party has a
majority, the issues and votes can be along party lines," said Board Chairman
Herb Rosenthal.
The board members and Dr John Reed, superintendent of schools, attended the
Charter Revision Commission meeting last Thursday evening at Edmond Town Hall
to discuss changes which other town officials have recommended for the makeup
of the school board.
"There is little evidence that the voters are unhappy with the board the way
it is," insisted Mr Rosenthal, a Democrat who has served on the board for 11«
years.
All of the school board members agreed that the board should continue to have
six members who are elected for four-year terms. Board members served six-year
terms until their terms were shortened to four years by a previous charter
revision commission. Some town officials had proposed that the school board
terms be shortened even more, to two years.
School board members disagreed. It takes more than a year just to begin to
learn about the complex policies and financial matters involved in planning
and operating a school district, they said.
Mr Rosenthal said that contrary to remarks by town officials and editorials in
The Bee, it is easy to run for a seat on the school board.
"Section 9-453d of the state statutes requires that you need a petition with
the signatures of only one percent of the number of voters who voted in the
last municipal election," he explained. "There were 4,525 votes cast which
means 45 signatures."
The fact that no one has petitioned to be on the ballot is due either to
satisfaction with the board or is due to a lack of understanding of the law,
he said.
Some of the people at the meeting commented that they were unaware of this
provision in the law. "I've been here 40 years and I've never heard of it,"
said Jack Rosenthal, Legislative Council member who served 12 years as first
selectman.
School Board member Amy Dent, a Democrat, said if a decision is made by the
Charter Revision Commission to change the school board to an uneven number of
members, "I would then urge you to have a non-partisan board with an open
nomination format, an open caucus format."
Mrs Dent also said she believes the charter impedes the budget process by
specifying too much time between deliberations and the referendum.
"There is no closure," she said, explaining that if the budget is defeated,
the process can drag into the summer months.
"It is extremely difficult to plan efficiently and effectively for the opening
of school if we are still spending a significant portion of our time on
dealing with the budget," she said.
Republican Isabelle Murray said she had strong feelings about the potential
risk of politicizing the board after the experience she had when her party
tried to unseat her by running Joe Borst in an election that she won by one
vote.
"I've seen what the Legislative Council has done, and I've seen what we've
done," she said. "I've been told that if we didn't go the way of the majority
party, the budget would be at risk to be cut - and it has been. Legislative
Council has the final say on the budget, we do not have the final say."
"It may be a trite saying, but power corrupts and absolute power corrupts
absolutely," Mrs Dent said. "If a party has a majority, there is the
opportunity to dictate through the political parties. We've seen that happen
on council."
Republican Susan Hills said she thinks each party should put up two candidates
for each position on the school board "so there will be a choice." If a board
member resigns, only the other two members of that party should vote on the
replacement, she said, to make the choice truely "non-political."
Ruby Johnson, a Charter Revision Commission member who served on the Board of
Education years ago, said that she had not been her party's "recommended
candidate" for the school board. Republican Charles Nanavaty, who had a
similar experience, described himself as "the candidate the board members felt
they could work with."
Peggy Ulrich-Nims, a Democrat who joined the board last year, said she was an
unaffiliated voter when she was approached to run for the position.
"In the other communities where I lived, the boards have all been
non-partisan," she said. "Here I had to go through a screening and assessment
of credentials by the town committee, a process you don't get with an open
caucus in which candidates may come with their own agendas."
Herb Rosenthal said six is the right size for the board because "it keeps the
board members from trying to micro-manage the school district."
Dr Reed said that if the budget is defeated in a referendum, Legislative
Council should have the power to set the budget rather than having another
referendum. "If the people don't agree, they can elect a different Legislative
Council the next time," he said.
"Perhaps Legislative Council also should have the power to put a capital item
to a referendum rather than going to a town meeting and have someone petition
it to a referendum afterwards," he suggested.
Dr Reed also said it is very difficult on the local level to differentiate
between members of the two political parties and he did not believe that the
board acts in a partisan manner.
Attorney William Denlinger, who served 10 years on the school board and two
years as its president, strongly recommended keeping the board as it is.
"Through the screening process each party tries to pick out the best people
they can find to serve. People tend to leave their party affiliations at the
door and do what is best for the children" he said.
"What we have in Newtown works. The machinery is there to have more than one
candidate run. If the community is happy and the parties are happy, why should
you legislate that the numbers of candidates must be increased?"
