Showing posts with label BECON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BECON. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

BTU's ad in today's Miami Herald re Broward County Schools Supt. James Notter and Special Education funding; the so-called Integrity Committee


Published on page 5B of Miami Herald on 2/17/2010

The Broward Teachers Union ad above, which I didn't
notice until this afternoon, directly references my email
and Wall Street Journal article on Special Education
-and James Notter's handling of it- which I shared
with many of you on January 6th as first an email and
subsequent blog post.
I've copied and posted it at the bottom in case you
missed it the first time.

So on this issue, Special Education, where were our
Broward School Board members, Ann Murray or
Chair Jennifer Gottlieb, both of whom live in
Hollywood and both of whom are running for re-election
on August 24th?

Here's their official homepage with contact information,
why don't you ask them that question yourself?

Better yet, while you're at it, ask them why the next
scheduled public Integrity Committee meeting
on Monday the 22nd at Coconut Creek High School,
http://browardschoolsintegrity.org/
isn't
currently scheduled to be televised on the
Broward School Board's own cable TV channel,
BECON-TV
, and what they're personally doing
to change that decision?

It's the year 2010 and Broward taxpayers have
already paid for those TV cameras of BECON's,
yet the Broward School Board acts like it's 1910,
and rather than properly deploying those cameras,
they insist that you show-up in person to one of
their meetings if you want to know what's going on.
That attitude explains quite a lot,
don't you think?


http://www.browardschools.com/schoolboard/members/gottlieb.htm
754-321-2008

http://www.browardschools.com/schoolboard/members/murray.htm
754-321-2001


My comments are below the article.


The Wall Street Journal

JANUARY 6, 2010

Special-Ed Funds Redirected School Districts Shift Millions of Dollars to General Needs After Getting Stimulus Cash
By Anne Marie Chaker

Florida's Broward County Public Schools saved as many as 900 jobs this school year. Nevada's Clark County School District just added more math and tutoring programs. And in Connecticut's Bloomfield Public Schools, eight elementary- and middle-school teachers were spared from layoffs.

These cash-strapped districts covered the costs using a boost in funding intended for special education, drawing an outcry from parents and advocates of special-needs children.

Read the rest of the story at:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB126274303415617219.html

Reader comments at:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB126274303415617219.html#articleTabs%3Dcomments

-------

January 6th, 2010
9:40 p.m.

Seriously, what does it show about the lackluster quality
of the majority of South Florida's print/electronic media
that they don't even pick-up on this 'till nearly 5 p.m.?
Exactly.

At least the Sun-Sentinel's Kathy Bushouse was
paying attention to mention it in their blog, so what's
everyone else's excuse?

And in case it had escaped your notice of late, in the
year 2010, the Miami Herald STILL lacks an
Education blog.

http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/blogs/

Guess they were too busy interviewing people about
the weather, and what was happening to the invasive
iguanas, to see a story that speaks volumes about the
consistently piss-poor judgment of people in power
here.

Say hello again to James Notter, another big reason
why large dynamic companies consciously choose NOT
to relocate to Broward County.
Yes, the sad, tragic but oh-so logical consequences of
having someone like him in charge are all around us.

So what do you think Notter is telling parents of
affected kids, to take one for the team?

As a well-informed person wrote me earlier this
evening about this matter, almost incredulously:
Do you know how many times they’ve told us
they’ve subsidized special ed from the general fund?
This is really outrageous.

Outrageous sure, but if nobody else knows about it
because the press has falling iguanas on the brain...
Aye, there's the rub.


----------

Sun-Sentinel
Schools blog

Wall
Street Journal: School districts, including Broward, redirecting special ed money
Posted by Kathy Bushouse on January 6, 2010 04:54 PM

The Broward School District is featured prominently in a Wall Street Journal piece on school districts using stimulus money meant for special education for other uses, such as saving teachers' jobs from layoffs.

Read the rest of the post at:
http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/educationblog/2010/01/wall_street_journal_school_dis.html

Shortly after I sent most of the above out as an email
late this afternoon, I saw that CBS-4 did a segment on
their 6 o'clock newscast, curiously labeled:
Attack Ad Published Against Superintendent Notter
http://cbs4.com/video/?id=91715@wfor.dayport.com

Not mentioned at all in the segment is the whole issue
of what Notter did with Special Education funding,
which was the subject at hand in the WSJ story almost
six
weeks ago.
Naturally, no South Florida reporters have followed-up on
that!

Now about that truly underwhelming and under-performing
Integrity Committee
appointed by James Notter
so many months ago, now about to have their second
-yes, just their second!- public meeting...


South Florida Sun-Sentinel
www.sun-sentinel.com/news/broward/fl-broward-ethics-20100210,0,550836.story
Broward school district takes 2 months to pay ethics panel administrator Questions over contract structuring slowed pay, according to e-mails
By Akilah Johnson, Sun Sentinel
February 10, 2010

The staff administrator of the Broward Schools blue ribbon ethics commission worked for nearly two months without getting paid because the district was not sure how to structure his contract, according to e-mails to and from district administrators.

The three members of the independent commission – Fort Lauderdale Mayor Jack Seiler, attorney W. George Allen, and former Florida Attorney General Bob Butterworth — are donating their time. But the school district agreed to pay for staff and supplies to help the commission reform the district's purchasing practices and ethical training.

On Dec. 14, Paul Falcone, who used to work for Fort Lauderdale Commissioner Charlotte Rodstrom, was hired at $1,000 per week plus $433.35 a month for healthcare coverage. He is considered an outside vendor of the school system.

Falcone was finally paid by the district on Friday. Confusion remained regarding exactly how to construct his consultant agreement until Wednesday when Donnie Carter, the district's chief operating officer, sent an e-mail to the School Board.

According to the e-mail, commission costs are not expected to exceed $40,000, which include travel reimbursements, cell phone, computer, printer and $1,245 for the creation of the website, browardschoolsintegrity.org.

Falcone's agreement says his responsibilities include research and follow-up, creating an information book for each panel member as well as "logging public sentiment from public hearings, editorials, blogs and emails."

The fact-finding mission is expected to be completed by June, the e-mail said.

The panel – formally called the Commission on Education Excellence Through Integrity, Public Ethics and Transparency – was created after the Sept. 23 arrest of now-suspended School Board member Beverly Gallagher on corruption charges, including bribery, fraud and extortion.

Panel members say not knowing how to structure Falcone's contract is what happens when a large bureaucracy creates an unprecedented commission.

"I'm glad they actually took the position [of] 'We'll ask questions first and write the check later'," said Seiler. "I would have been more concerned if they cut a check to Paul and said 'Gee, should we have done that?'"

There are "real problems in the district," Seiler said, mentioning spending by the facilities and construction department, misuse and overuse of change orders, and employees too scared to speak on the record for fear of retribution.

The commission is holding a series of public hearings as part of its fact-finding review. The next hearing will be held on Feb. 22 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Coconut Creek High School, 1400 NW 44th Ave., in Coconut Creek.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Latest on Broward School Board ethics, slow-moving Bob Butterworth Integrity Crew; Adios, Gottlieb & Murray!

Some of you may recall that back on January 28th, I sent out an email and then posted as a blog posting most of the following:
If you really want to spend some time chasing your tail,
try going to the website of the Broward School system group I've been referring to here in emails and in blog posts as the
Three Amigos, a.k.a. the Commission on Education Excellence Through Integrity, Public Ethics and Transparency,
http://browardschoolsintegrity.org/



Using their own website, try to find the time, date and location of their next public meeting.
Go ahead.
Really, go ahead.

It's not there.


In fact, the only thing that has been added tothe website since it came online are links to news articles about the group.
And nothing since January 12th, the day after their first and only public meeting.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/videobeta/watch/?watch=2a16c099-dbad-4b75-8f0c-a64769278b58&src=front

To me, that sounds a lot more like a fan's celebrity website than an actual watchdog group's efforts to get the public engaged.
Time's a wastin'.

Well, today, February 7th, ten days later, guess what has changed?
Hardly anything!

They've now listed info about their next meeting on Feb. 22nd in Coconut Creek, having previously met on January 10th at Dillard.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/videobeta/watch/?watch=2a16c099-dbad-4b75-8f0c-a64769278b58&src=front

Really?
Six weeks in-between public meetings for a watchdog group that has a limited shelf-life to begin with?
And what about a public meeting in SE Broward?


Off the top of my head, I can think of at least five locales in Hollywood and Hallandale Beach that are more than capable of handling the number of taxpayers and parents who would attend such a meeting, with plenty of room for media.

In case you were wondering about my clever suggestion previously that the January 10th Butterworth & Company public meeting could've been and should've been televised
on the Broward School Board's own cable channel, BECON-TV, using the very TV cameras that Broward taxpayers have already paid for, I received a lot of email responses seconding
that motion.

Frankly, many people wondered why nobody else thought of it, including the highly-paid legal staff at the Broward School Board, much less, Butterworth himself, the former Attorney General of Florida.

Everyone who has contacted me so far on that issue also believes that all the future meetings of the so-called Integrity group be televised, recorded and replayed so that more people can see it for themselves.

(FYI: Turns out that BECON/Channel 63 is also available on DirecTV, unlike the County's cable channel, which as I found out this past week in investigating the Courthouse issue, is
unable
-or unwilling?- to replay their own webcasts of Commission meetings on their own website, something the City of Hollywood has been doing for years. Hm-m-m...)

After I sent that email out ten days ago, I got very curious about what was more important than the School Board introducing taxpayers and parents to the three men that Supt. James Notter selected to clean things up.


For the record, here's what BECON-TV showed the night they could've taken a small step towards accountability and transparency by showing
Butterworth & Company:

http://www.becon.tv/becon-tv-schedules

6:00 pm Historic Hotels of America : Le P Avillon
6:30 pm Broward School Beat : Episode 45
7:00 pm Untold Stories : Barnstormers to Blue Angels
7:30 pm Dateline Health Nsu : Public Health Dh#277


Early next week, I'm going to send an email to Supt. James Notter and the School Board Attorney directly asking them to put a fire under Butterworth & Company
and get them to actually put useful info on that Integrity website, and to fully explain why BECON-TV can't or shouldn't be televising future public Integrity meetings.

By the way, one good reason why you don't want to follow "Broward
School Board" as a subject on Twitter is three and three-quarter pages of the same Tweet, hour-after-hour for about five days

http://twitter.com/search?q=%22Broward%20School%20Board%22

Not that
http://twitter.com/browardschoolnw is of much use either.


The things you find out when you take a hard look at a very dysfunctional crew.


www.sun-sentinel.com/news/broward/fl-pavarini-westglades-20100206,0,7655196.story

South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com
A costly lesson: Broward school district mistakenly pays out $290,000
Return money or be sued, builder told

By Megan O'Matz, Sun Sentinel
February 7, 2010

In the midst of a crushing budget crisis, the Broward school district mistakenly paid more than $290,000 to a Fort Lauderdale firm for a school classroom addition that it quickly scrapped. Now the district finds itself in the awkward position of asking for the money back.

If Pavarini Construction Co. refuses, the district could be headed for a costly legal battle. According to Pavarini President Gary W. Glenewinkel, the company is "in the process of reviewing our records and all data related to this issue."

The error upset the district's new head of construction, Thomas E. Lindner, who took over in early January after the former administrator retired.

"You can't rubber-stamp invoices, even if they're for $5," Lindner said. Asked if the district mistakenly paid other construction companies, he said he doesn't know but is going to find out.

"This is just one that I discovered," he said.

District auditors are now reviewing how the error occurred. Lindner said he will consider their findings and determine how to ensure it doesn't happen again.

The district's construction department has been under intense scrutiny after the September arrest of suspended School Board member Beverly Gallagher. She was snared in an FBI sting for allegedly taking bribes to rig construction contracts.

On April 21, the School Board agreed to hire Pavarini to handle the construction of a $6.7 million, 24-room addition to Westglades Middle School in Parkland.

The company stood to make $581,365 in management fees for the project's initial "pre-design" and "design" phases.

But declining enrollment and years of aggressive building left the district with thousands of empty seats. State officials ordered the district to halt its building spree. In August, the School Board voted to abandon the Westglades project along with scores of others.

But by then, Pavarini had already submitted an invoice seeking payment for $387,596. The invoice is dated April 25, only four days after the contract was awarded.

A project manager for the school district reduced the amount due to $290,683 — half of the $581,365 — and approved payment May 11, records show.

"Four or five people sign invoices like this," Lindner said, but only two have access to the full project file: the project manager and a reviewer in the Capital Budget Department.

The invoice shows that Pavarini had hired a Coral Gables architectural firm, Wolfberg Alvarez & Partners, to design the addition.

Lindner said Pavarini was not entitled to any money because the district never issued a "Notice to Proceed" — a document authorizing companies to begin work. Lindner said he did not know if Pavarini or the architect did any work on the project at all, but if they did without the formal notice "that's on their nickel … not our nickel."

In a letter dated Jan. 25, Lindner asked Pavarini to refund the money. "If they decide not to, then we'll litigate for it," he said.

The district sues architects and contractors for mistakes their firms make on projects, but it can take years to recover the money, if ever.

School Board chairwoman Jennifer Gottlieb said she was unaware of the billing problem with Pavarini. "That's a lot of money," she said. "Apparently something fell through the cracks, and it seems it's a pretty expensive issue."

The payout left others scratching their heads as well.

"Why didn't school district employees check to make sure the project was going to be built before they cut a check of that size?" asked Nick Sakhnovsky, chairman of the school facilities task force. "Doesn't anyone review quarter-of-a-million-dollar checks?"

Reader comments at:
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/broward/fl-pavarini-westglades-20100206,0,901512,comment-display-all.story


I'll leave it to you to decide whether or not it's a positive sign for oversight and accountability in the year 2010 that someone who, as Chair of the Broward School Board, like Jennifer
Gottlieb, is "unaware" of $290,000 mistakes, or even whether there are many more such ticking time-bombs out there, waiting to go off.

Personally, as you may surmise from my previous critical comments about them here, under no circumstances would I vote for the re-election of Jennifer Gottlieb or Ann Murray in November.

To me, they have consistently proven thru their own words and deeds that they are ineffective as representatives of the taxpayers and parents of this county, especially if you
live in SE Broward and don't like what you see from them.

In short, their good intentions have NOT translated into good results for children, parents or taxpayers.
They are part of the problem, not part of the solution.

That simple fact should be more than enough to tell you that they ought to be replaced by people who are more curious, serious and capable of providing the necessary oversight and accountability for one of the largest school systems in the country.

An institution whose self-evident weaknesses and chronic inability to be truthful about its own actions actually repels many out-of-state businesses from relocating here.

In my opinion, Jennifer Gottlieb and Ann Murray 
have been given a free ride for quite some time.
Their free ride should end in November.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Monday night's public meeting of Notter's Three Amigos -Bring hand warmers! Where are BECON's TV cameras?

Last Wednesday we got word that...

Miami Herald
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/broward/story/1411248.html


Broward ethics panel to take public comments

By Patricia Mazzei
January 6, 2010

The three-person panel tasked with proposing improvements to how the Broward public school district does business will hold its first public hearing next week.

The Commission on Education Excellence Through Integrity, Public Ethics and Transparency will seek public input at 6 p.m. Monday at the Dillard Center for the Arts, 2501 NW 11th St., Fort Lauderdale.

The independent group was convened after the September arrest of suspended School Board member Beverly Gallagher in a federal corruption probe. Gallagher has pleaded not guilty to charges that she took $12,500 from undercover FBI agents for a promise to influence a decision on a school construction project.

To serve on the commission, Superintendent Jim Notter chose former Florida Attorney General Bob Butterworth; Fort Lauderdale Mayor Jack Seiler, a former state legislator; and attorney W. George Allen, who filed the lawsuit that forced the district to desegregate almost 40 years ago.

Reader comments at
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/broward/story/1411248.html?commentSort=TimeStampAscending&pageNum=1


Then on Friday we heard...

My emphasis in red below


South Florida Sun-Sentinel

www.sun-sentinel.com/news/broward/fl-school-ethics-panel--20100109,0,1614300.story

Ethics panel set for first public hearing on school district

By Kathy Bushouse, Sun Sentinel
January 10, 2010

In the past few months, the Broward school district has been hammered by the arrest of a School Board member, allegations of contractor ripoffs and an investigation of a transportation department besieged by accusations of nepotism and sexual harassment.

On Monday, the panel created in October to scrutinize the district's policies and practices will have its first public hearing to set priorities on what it should investigate.

"We're going out to see what the people want," said attorney W. George Allen.

Allen, former Florida Attorney General Bob Butterworth and Fort Lauderdale Mayor Jack Seiler are running the Commission on Education Excellence Through Integrity, Public Ethics and Transparency.

They have not set a firm timetable for the investigation.

The panel was created by Broward Schools Superintendent James Notter and School Board member Maureen Dinnen after the Sept. 23 arrest of Beverly Gallagher on corruption charges involving school construction, and shortly after board member Stephanie Kraft disclosed her husband's business ties to School Board lobbyist Neil Sterling.

The Florida Commission on Ethics also is investigating a complaint against Kraft that she misused her position to help Prestige Homes developer Bruce Chait.

Chait was arrested in December and charged by state prosecutors with bribery, unlawful compensation and perjury.

Earlier, in the summer, district auditors alleged two contractors ripped off more than $750,000 after Hurricane Wilma repairs.

The auditors said there were signs of collusion and coercion, as well as inflated and falsified documents so the companies could be paid.

After the panel was formed, the school district began an investigation into its transportation department.

The department's top two administrators — Ruben Parker, director of transportation services, and Lucille Greene, director of student transportation — were reassigned. Officials won't discuss specific reasons for the investigation.

But the Broward Teachers Union asked Gov. Charlie Crist and Attorney General Bill McCollum for independent investigations last month. The union said the transportation department's problems included kickbacks in exchange for jobs, bus safety issues, nepotism and sexual harassment.

The governor forwarded the union's complaint to the Office of the Statewide Prosecutor.

That office is the "best entity to not only review the material but also to intitiate any necessary investigations," said Crist spokesman Sterling Ivey.

McCollum's office said the union's concerns are outside the attorney general's jurisdiction. McCollum's office reccomended the union contact the state's ethics commission, auditor general or the statewide grand jury, according to a letter dated Dec. 17.

Allen said the group spent the past two months getting organized. Now that the group is ready to work, he hopes to move quickly and make recommendations the district will adopt.

"I would hate to do work and then just turn it in as a written report, and nothing happens," Allen said.

Notter said the district would not automatically adopt all of the panel's recommendations but will consider them. He said all the district's operations and policies are open for review.

"They're going to come back with items that we need to revise, revamp, tweak, or frankly, maybe initiate brand-new," Notter said.

Monday's hearing is scheduled for 6 p.m. at the Dillard Center for the Arts, 2501 NW 11th St., Fort Lauderdale. For those unable to attend, the commission also is working on a website with an e-mail address and telephone number so people can send in tips.

The panel was promised complete independence from the district. Its leaders won't be paid, but the district will foot the bill for the staff.

Butterworth, Seiler and Allen were picked because of their long histories of community service.

Allen's selection raised some questions because he is registered as a lobbyist representing Bencor Inc., a company that offers alternatives to Social Security for district employees.

Allen said he didn't view it as a conflict because he hasn't lobbied for the company for years.

So far, the panel has met with some skepticism. One teacher sent e-mail to Seiler, saying she was concerned that Notter and Dinnen "handpicked a three-man (no woman) commission for a 90-day fact-finding analysis."

But such panels can be a step toward restoring public confidence in a beleaguered institution, said Aubrey Jewett, a political science professor at the University of Central Florida in Orlando.

"I think that putting together a group like this is probably a good idea, especially where you've had many instances of alleged corruption or ethical violations," Jewett said. "… I'm not going to say that empanelling a group of citizens to look at this is going to solve all the problems, but it is a good step."

Kathy Bushouse can be reached at kbushouse@SunSentinel.com or 954-356-4556.

How did Broward Schools Supt. James Notter's
Three Amigos NOT already have some means
of broadcasting or webcasting Monday night's
meeting figured-out by 5 p.m. last Friday?
Seriously.
Talk about gross incompetentcy!


(FYI: That's at the SAME time and date as
Broward County's previously-scheduled first
official Census 2010 meeting of social/religious/
community activists, which happens to be at
the Hallandale Beach Cultural Center.
See http://www.broward.org/eventhighlights.htm )

If these Broward School geniuses had any
common sense, they'd grab
some of those
BECON TV cameras that Broward taxpayers
have
ALREADY paid for and truck them
to
Dillard to air Butterworth & Co. LIVE
on Channel 63.
That would be so easy, and yet...

I'd call Ann Murray's School Board office
to find out why this isn't taking place if I
thought I'd get a straight answer out of her,
but...

Maybe if every official person with a Ed.D.
after their name is shivering in that room at
Dillard Monday night, someone downtown
will get off their butt and finally fix the
thermostat that controls school room temps,
so it's not as cold inside as it is outside.

Wow, that should've been the media
lede last week:
clueless Broward Schools HQ!


See Akilah Johnson's blog post on that
from Thursday at bottom.

If you're going to tomorrow night's meeting,
I recommend a visit to Target beforehand,
and get some Coleman-brand hand warmers
-they're excellent.



South Florida Sun-Sentinel Schools blog
Broward classrooms just as cold as outside, teachers say

Posted by Akilah Johnson
January 7, 2010 05:40 PM

Students and teachers in many Broward County public schools didn’t shed their scarves and gloves once this week’s lessons began. Instead, they shivered inside classrooms nearly as cold as the weather outside.

Read rest of this at:
http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/educationblog/2010/01/broward_classrooms_just_as_col.html#comments

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Wither Ann Murray?; Broward County School Board's Edifice Complex: $17 Million TV Studio

Since the information below that was supplied
to me by a very thoughtful person-in-the-know
about the dismal shape of the Broward School
system is self-explanatory, especially as it
affects
students, parents and taxpayers who
live in this
part of the county, I just wanted
to take a minute
to raise a question:
W
hatever happened to Ann Murray?

Murray was elected to the Broward County
School Board last November by voters like
me in SE Broward precisely because we
were persuaded that she was a genuine
'agent of change,' and someone whose
interest in tangible reform was real.

Murray said that she was just itching for
the opportunity to bring to bear her long,
first-hand experience within the catacombs
of the Broward School system.

Experience gained from the ground-floor
up she constantly reminded us
, which
gave her an invaluable insight into knowing
not only where the bodies-were-buried,
per se, but, more importantly, where all the
taxpayer money has flown the past decade.

Murray said she knew or had a good idea
what the past mistakes were, and what
poorly thought-out strategies were to blame
for many of the chronic problems that have
long beset the system, which explains
in large part why Broward County Schools
are SO unappealing for many newly-arrived
transplants, and why some people refuse
corporate transfers to Broward County.

I have friends in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic
with really bright, thoughtful and talented kids
who fall into the latter category.
After they've come down for a visit or two,
while they've generally liked the work
accommodations and found the housing
situations semi-okay if pricey, they were
almost aghast at the second-rate school
conditions they saw that pass for normal
down here, plus the sheer apathy they
repeatedly heard about and the audacity
of a Broward school system that doesn't
want to admit that their product is, decidedly,
second-rate and falling fast.

Just ask the top real estate folks in Broward
who specialize in corporate re-locations for
middle-management types -they all know!

In fact, that was even mentioned at the recent
Hollywood City Commission hearing I attended
about the city studying the possibility of a
city-run charter school, along the lines of what
Pembroke Pines has done so successfully.

Lousy Broward schools, especially Middle
Schools
, with apathetic parent-teacher groups
and dis-interested city halls, featuring frequent
media wars between teacher union officials
that citizens didn't know vs. School Board
bureaucratic log-rollers that citizens don't trust
-for good reason.
Message: Your product stinks!

In every case, after weighing what they told
me about what they saw and found,
and what I saw when i was with them,
my advice to my friends considering
elocating their families to Broward County
was that they stay put.
Stay where they were already happy.

So that was the background for me last year
when Murray showed up on the scene,
offering
herself as a solution and intimated
during the
campaign that she understood
that the system's
so-called PR problem
was actually based on
substantive
longstanding problems,
which have
resulted in parental dissatisfaction

among ALL demographics and cultures
in
Broward.

So, all that said, nine months after Murray
was elected, why does she have so little
positive tangible results to show for her
efforts?

She and her supporters -many of whom
are friends of mine
- argued successfully
last year that this insight and experience
of hers would enable her to begin
changing the dynamic of the chronically
un-responsive and out-of-control
School Board and school bureaucracy,
as great an argument FOR term-limits
for Board members as you could find
in South Florida, but for all the other
ones we already know of as well.

But like a large ocean-going ship,
the School system doesn't turn
on a dime, especially when there
are far too many entrenched Board
members barking orders about where
the ship ought to be making port of calls,
and what activities it ought to be offering,
based on what political supporters cum
lobbyists are whispering.

In her campaign last year against the appealing
Rick Saltrick, Murray stated repeatedly that
her background made her uniquely qualified
to stand-up for parents and taxpayers from
Southeast Broward against the entrenched
bureaucracy, and make them more responsive
to the customer.
So I voted for her.

But so far -and I've been looking far and wide
and asking questions
- I've seen no concrete
examples of her actually being the effective
reformer for increased accountability on the
School Board that she said she'd be.
No instances where a battle may've been lost,
yes, but where her logical arguments carried
the day with objective observers present.

Murray's supporters claim that it's still early
yet, but since she has to stand for re-election
next year -because of the circumstances
surrounding Eleanor Sobel's LIES to the
community to serve an entire School
Board term
- she is just like an interim
NFL coach who wants to keep the job
for next season.

So, when, exactly, does
Pre-season end
for her and when is she going to perform
up to our expectations?

I personally believe that Ann Murray
has
largely squandered her time in
office already
and has left the door
wide-open for others
in the community
to take advantage of her
mis-steps
next year.


Not surprisingly, given what I'm writing
here,
I even have a pretty good idea
of some
SE Broward residents and
civic activists
whom I think would
be good candidates
to replace
Murray if she continues listing
to the side.


Many of you know from my previous
emails
and my blog posts here that
I continually
grilled Murray about
the fact that for more
than six months
AFTER she was elected, this
proponent of grassroots communication

was paying so little attention to matters
that
she didn't seem aware of the fact
that her
email address didn't appear
on the Broward
School Board's own
website.


(Sort of like the incompetency that
passes for normal at Hallandale
Beach
City Hall, no? Oui!!!)

Naturally, she was the only School
Board
member in that very dubious
and embarrassing
situation.
But since she was
MY Board member,
and
I don't find laziness or stupidity
endearing
qualities, am I not allowed
to ask why it
took her and her staff
MORE than six months to resolve
the very simple problem???


For months, I've been working
off-and-on on a blog post detailing
what a great disappointment I
believe Murray has been,
and that will probably be up and
posted by Labor Day.

Having received (second-hand) a copy
of an invite
to a recent fundraiser she
had in Hallandale Beach,
the invite
was noteworthy for the names of
supporters
of hers whom many
Broward civic activists rightly
feel
are part of the problems, not the
solutions.

You'll see that invite in my blog
post, too.


By the way, you'll notice that in
Bob Norman's truthful account
of this school system TV station
fiasco, the very bad judgment
exercised by the
Broward School
Board on the TV station -which
I've previously criticized
- was
UNANIMOUS.

From my own perspective,
it's NOT a very positive sign for
Ann Murray's political future when
she blows a very simple lay-up
like that.

Folks, pre-season has been over
for months!

It's time Ann Murray got her head
into the game and made a difference
-while she still can.


BECON homepage: http://www.becon.tv/


Meanwhile, you'll never guess who's
following BECON via Twitter
, according
to http://twitter.com/BECONTV

Notter, Gottlieb, Kraft and Dinnen.

------------
Broward Palm Beach New Times
Broke School Board Plans $17 Million Television Studio
By Bob Norman
Tuesday, Aug. 4 2009 @ 1:42PM

Maybe they can call it the "Stephanie Alma Kraft Media Center."

The Broward County School Board, which is wallowing in debt, has approved plans to build a new $17 million TV studio for BECON, its propaganda cable channel. Readers of this blog have an idea how I feel about that station, but no matter what you think of the programming, the idea to spend that kind of money on a luxury when the district doesn't even have enough money to fix school roofs and is laying off teachers in droves is ridiculous.


Read the rest of the post and the comments at:

http://blogs.browardpalmbeach.com/pulp/2009/08/broke_school_board_becon.php
------------------

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Commentary
SCHOOL DISTRICTS FEUD OVER COVETED CH. 19 ON COMCAST
RALPH DE LA CRUZ
December 9, 2008

On Monday, Palm Beach County students and families trying to access the familiar Palm Beach County education channel - known countywide simply as Ch. 19 for its location on cable - learned a lesson all right.

In the hard-ball politics of television.

The Palm Beach County schools' station was forced out of its iconic spot in the cable lineup after Broward County schools demanded a lower channel assignment from Comcast in Palm Beach County.

BECON, Broward schools' educational television, had been on Ch. 97 in our county. As of Monday, it got the coveted Ch. 19. Palm Beach schools' TV was kicked back to 97.

"It was a bitter disappointment for all of us," said Judith Garcia, station manager for The Educational Network (T.E.N.), the official name of the Palm Beach County station.

Wait, wait, wait.

Isn't school TV supposed to be above the mutt-eat-mutt confrontations of commercial TV? Isn't it supposed to be a cooperative effort?

"That was completely my understanding," said the obviously wounded Garcia.

So, what happened here? Who made this public relations nightmare of a decision to stomp all over the Palm Beach district's TV station?

"The finger pointing goes from Broward to Comcast and Comcast back to Broward," Garcia predicted.

Was she ever right.

In an e-mail response to my request for an interview, Comcast said Broward had a legal claim to a lower channel. And after Broward "chose to exercise its right and requested a lower channel number," Comcast had no option but to bump T.E.N.

Broward's demand "made it operationally necessary" to give it Ch. 19, read the statement, and T.E.N. was told in May.

That may be true. But in a follow-up letter in June, Broward Superintendent James Notter practically pleaded for Comcast to find a lower-channel alternative.

"We are cognizant that your intention to displace the [Palm Beach County] station is fraught with political repercussions for all involved," Notter astutely pointed out. "Accordingly, the School Board continues to be willing to delay the relocation of its station for a short period of time in order to give Comcast time to explore alternative solutions. I wish to make it perfectly clear, that the School Board did not seek out, nor insist on, a displacement of the [Palm Beach] station from Channel 19, and continues to be open to other possible lower channel positions."

Notter pointed out that Broward would be happy with channels 16 or 24, numbers it's had in Miami-Dade.

But Comcast didn't find an alternative.

"Comcast thoroughly researched the possibility of moving the [Broward] station to channel positions other than [Ch. 19]," wrote Marta Casas-Celaya, director of government and community affairs for Comcast. "Those positions were not viable."

Ch. 16 is WSFL, which is owned by the Tribune Co., which also owns the Sun Sentinel. Ch. 24 is Lifetime.

For their part, Broward school officials still maintain it was Comcast's decision to re-assign Ch. 19. That the district had already postponed its move for too long, and was well within its rights to finally accept the new placement.

As I pointed out to Keith Bromery, spokesman for the Broward district, nobody is questioning whether Broward can legally move into Ch. 19. It has legal priority to the lower channels.

No. The real question is whether it's right, or just, for Broward schools to take an action that would damage a neighboring district's educational broadcasting. The Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach channels have been part of a consortium that collectively works on technical issues and even produces a program together: Celebrating South Florida.

All that, Garcia said, is now in question.

"It's changed the complexion of the relationship," she said.

Take on Comcast if you like, Broward. But don't let an innocent bystander, an ally, get caught in the cross-fire.

In these days of high unemployment, economic instability and suffocatingly tight government budgets, school districts need to show they can work together to increase efficiency and keep costs down. This petty in-fighting is ugly and damaging to all.

Makes me want to say: Kids, do not attempt this at home.

These stunts can only be pulled off by highly trained adults.

Ralph De La Cruz's column appears Tuesdays and Thursdays in the Local section and in Sunday Lifestyle. He can be reached at rdelacruz@SunSentinel.com, 561-243-6522 or 954-356-4727.
----------
Meanwhile, south of the border...

Miami Herald
WLRN: Use stations' tools to face education challenges
March 20, 2008
By DON MACCULLOUGH

Comments at a recent Miami-Dade County School Board meeting suggest that some people believe that WLRN is in the "broadcasting business." In fact, for 50 years, WLRN's only business has been education.

From 5:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekdays and more on weekends, WLRN-TV programs Ready to Learn, the U.S. Department of Education initiative to prepare preschoolers for success when they enter school. It provides the content and skills training that helps preschool teachers and the aunts and grandmothers who care for the preschoolers of working parents get those children ready to learn. It is programming that won't sell advertising or bring in donations. If the School Board doesn't do it, no one will.

In 1976, the School Board recognized that there were thousands of adults who wanted to learn about the arts, economics, science, government and more, but whose life responsibilities would not permit attending community and adult education programs. For 30 years, WLRN-TV has been responding to that mandate, and the "entertainment" programs are scheduled to attract the audience and the donations that pay for the educational programs.

It's all about education, and that's why the proposed sale of WLRN-TV and radio to meet a school budget crisis is a bad idea.

Listen to the callers to WLRN-FM open-phone programs. They are as diverse as the Miami-Dade community and are seeking to learn about subjects that both enrich and are crucial in their daily lives. For them, wanting their citizenship decisions to be based on fact and reasoned opinion, NPR programming on WLRN-FM is the most reliably unbiased source of news and information on local radio. Then there are the programs that deal with adult and community education, responding to the arts, science and cultural needs of county residents.

It's all about education.

The future of WLRN-TV/FM has arisen as the board faces a budget shortfall that has long-term implications. Rather than conduct a fire sale, the board would do better to seek ways in which its technologies can save, extend and expand services in the face of falling revenues.

Unparalleled opportunity

In the 1950s, when a burgeoning school population overwhelmed the county schools, that School Board turned to television, which for several years filled the gap until construction caught up with the numbers of new students. Now the technologies are becoming more pervasive and powerful, but the principle remains the same. It was an imaginative use of a technology to solve an otherwise unsolvable problem.

The new digital WLRN-TV with up to four video channels becomes available to home viewers after all TV stations go digital in 2009. Combined with the board's wireless and computer capabilities, there will be an unparalleled opportunity to deliver education to students wherever they are.

The Broward County School Board has acquired its own television channel and is developing its wireless system to expand services to students and the community. Palm Beach schools are extending their services to students using their wireless assets.

It is certainly rational to consider every alterative to minimize the pain of the current budget shortfall. But the board needs to balance short-term needs against the longer-term potential for extending, restructuring and supporting service to the learners. The board's radio, television and wireless stations now reach into every classroom and every home with a television or FM radio. More than one million homes and listeners tuned in during recent surveys.

Use imagination, competence

In the new multi-channel and digital environment, programming capacity to homes and businesses will more than double, access to classrooms will increase by 60 percent, and learners throughout Miami-Dade will have access to learning programs anytime.

It is unimaginable that, in contrast to business and industry practice, Miami-Dade's professional classroom teachers and administrators cannot find ways to use these powerful communication tools to meet and overcome the educational challenges of the future. But imagination and professional competence can play no role if to solve a short-term problem, the board disposes of assets that have long-term value.

Don MacCullough, an educational telecommunications consultant, was Miami-Dade public schools' executive director, media programs, and WLRN general manager for 30 years.