A request by Lafayette Parish School Board member Greg Awbrey seeking an attorney general’s opinion on the legality of two citizen appointments to the superintendent search committee could delay the board’s timeline for selecting a new top administrator.
The Advocate reports that Awbrey will offer a resolution to the board at its Sept. 21 meeting asking the board to approve the AG opinion, which board member Kermit Bouillion counters could take six to eight weeks to come through and thus significantly push back the search process.
The board on Aug. 17 voted 5-3 to add to its superintendent selection committee a representative from the 100 Black Men of Greater Lafayette and the Lafayette Parish Public Education Stakeholders Council:
Board members Hunter Beasley, who submitted the motion for public involvement at the Aug. 17 meeting, and Kermit Bouillion questioned the timing of the attorney general’s opinion.
The application period for the job closes on Sept. 12, and the board planned to begin interviews next month.
“What if the attorney general’s opinion takes six to eight weeks? What happens to our superintendent search?” Bouillion asked.
Later in the meeting, Awbrey said his “feelings” about the two public representatives participating in the superintendent selection process have been “misrepresented.”
“I think that this process is way too closed, rather than being open,” Awbrey said. “If we’re going to get citizens involved, why are we getting only two groups chosen by one person.”
Read more here.
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MAY 22 In this Baton Rouge Business Report post, Rolfe McCollister considers the privatization of bus service in Baton Rouge. After decades of under-funding, it is a mess, and although a tax (partially) passed last year, improvement hasn't happened yet. McCollister apparently feels it is time to let private business get in on the transit business.
MAY 22 This post on Bayou Buzz by Jeff Crouere urges the defeat of a bill that would grant modest pay increases over the next several years to the state's judges and clerks of court. The state is in no position to fund pay hikes, Crouere argues, with the pay increases costing a total of $9 million over several years. It sends the wrong message to the (proverbial) hard-working people of Louisiana, he says.
MAY 22 The Advocate reports here that State Treasurer John Kennedy is complaining about a meeting of the corporation that oversees the state's tobacco settlement. The Governor wanted it restructured, and he has some support, but not a lot. The corporation agreed with his plan, but Kennedy didn't, and it appears that the meeting was noticed in a manner completely different than that of all previous meetings. Kennedy's given to hyperbole, but in this case the fish don't smell too fresh.
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