Christy, and all. I am referring to an appointment process and believe that the school board should look to appoint someone up to speed who can be a part of a vigorous debate and may not always agree with them. A new person with limited experience wouldn't even be able to ask useful questions in 6 months. Now change that to who I think should run for the seat and we have an entire different picture. I have supported candidates from a wide range of backgrounds and experiences who have run for the school board. The process of running for the seat matures them and sharpens their questions and directions when they serve. Those who have their hats in the ring for the seat in the fall are getting an education and valuable experience now as they meet with conflicting interest groups and round their vision of the school district. I was very proud to have been Gilbert de la O's campaign manger when he ran for the school board and remember sending him out every week for 5 months to doorknock in Highland Park, Mac Groveland and Summit Hill where the highest concentration of voters are. He might have been from the West Side and have worked with urban youth his entire life but if he was going to win the seat he had to convince voters from Highland and Mac Groveland and Summit Hill tha t he could represent their concerns as well. No offence Christy, but you, or someone like you haven't invested the time, energy or shown that commitment to be just handed the seat on the school board. But, ask the current school board - their are plenty of "political hacks" like me who would be willing to help a "fresh face" run for office if they have the kind of commitment to be willing to waste everyone of the week ends and many of their week nights door knocking this summer. When Gilbert ran, he was a "fresh face" but he wore out several pairs of shoes that summer making sure plenty of people saw that "fresh face." J.M.O.N.T.O.M.E.P.P.O.F Chuck (political hack) Repke Ward 2 -----Original Message----- From: Cristy DeLaCruz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: stpaul@mnforum.org; [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Fri, 29 Apr 2005 00:29:10 -0500 Subject: Re: [StPaul] How to best serve the School Board?
Chuck & other forum participants, in no way did I mean to imply that someone seeking to fill this vacancy would do this "for fun" or for some whimsical reason. As one who has served on my district council, along with several nonprofit boards, I do not question that the SPPS board must choose someone with the appropriate experience and skills to serve. There are no institutions more important than public schools for the future of this city (or any city). Good schools contribute greatly to our local economic and civic well-being, and not to accord them that respect is foolhardy. The person who fills this seat cannot run this fall, if I understand the position announcement correctly, so the individual who is selected might join the "thousands" of taskforces and commissions you mention, Chuck, so they might prepare be ready to run in 2007. If we're always reaching back into history to fulfill these vacancies, we fail to develop the talent pool that will someday take care of us when we are old and need good policy-thinkers. 'Not an encouraging thought. I think Bill Finney and Gilbert de la O (and also Andy Dawkins, who you did not mention) are good candidates, and the board will not be without a strong pool to consider even if they receive no further applications. Chuck, I do not think of leadership as a game. Indeed it is a critical and serious part of a healthy democracy. What I meant to emphasize is that there is a dearth of leaders in some underrepresented communities in this city. I believe that some lower-income or minority candidates might be well-positioned to serve in this position as leaders, and have a lot more at stake than most of us when it comes to public schools. However, most of the folks I know fitting this description are stretched so thin with other responsibilities: single parents doing their best with their children at home while putting in long hours, immigrant parents working just to afford housing and health care, young graduates with a boatload of student loans choosing high-paying professional jobs so they can pay for their tuition that increased by over 50% while they were in school, etc. I can safely say that no board position where I served has been "fun," especially budgeting, board development, and dialing for dollars. As Anne Carroll states in her related post, the 05-06 budgeting work will be completed before the interim board member steps up. What I want to see is someone who has the energy to talk to legislators, hound the governor, engage the County, City and other groups in seeing that our schools will continue to improve. I believe that our current board does a herculean job at what they do, spending much personal time (and money sometimes!) on this serious work. The candidate they select will surely meet this challenge with enthusiasm and vigor, if they hope to serve well. Cristy -- Cristy A. De La Cruz Highland Park ------------------------------------------------- JOIN the St. Paul Issues Forum TODAY: http://www.e-democracy.org/stpaul/ ------------------------------------------------- POST MESSAGES HERE: stpaul@mnforum.org To subscribe, modify subscription, or get your password - visit: http://www.mnforum.org/mailman/listinfo/stpaul Archive Address: http://www.mnforum.org/mailman/private/stpaul/