Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

District narrows superinten­dent search

- BRANDON SMITH

MOUNTAIN PINE — The Mountain Pine School District is closer to naming its next school superinten­dent, recently selecting six finalists from a pool of nearly 30 candidates.

The finalists include Bryce Harrison, principal at Poyen High School; Frank Janaskie, principal at Fountain Lake High School; Mack Skelton, operations administra­tor at the Harrisburg School District; Mike Radebaugh, principal at Hope Middle School; Nathan Sullivan, principal at White Hall High School; and Tish Knowles, superinten­dent at the Earle School District.

Janaskie and Skelton are also among four finalists for the open superinten­dent position at Fountain Lake School District.

Individual interviews began Wednesday with stakeholde­r focus groups consisting of both staff and community committees. Current Superinten­dent Bobby Applegate announced his retirement last fall, to be effective June 30.

“We actually had a working meeting to sit down and go through all of them,” Mountain Pine School Board President Shawn Blees said Wednesday. “There’s been some that have come in after we had already picked the six finalists. So if one of the six don’t [work out], we’re going to go back through and start the process again.”

Blees said the board’s main goal in the selection process is to have as many people from different background­s in the community participat­e.

“And the way we came [to these], we just looked through each one to see if there was any inclinatio­n that they might fit our little school, in our little community,” he said. “… When Mr. Applegate came in, I was not on the board, but he fit in the community well.”

Although there is no set timeline to select a final candidate, Blees said the interviews, which are open to the public, will be done on separate days, with the last one scheduled for Jan. 19. According to a news release, an executive session will follow each meeting in which comments given by the stakeholde­rs will be reviewed.

The community committee consists of three area ministers, along with District 12 Justice of the Peace Jeremy Brown and others.

“The community committee will also be talking with the applicants,” he said. ”They’re going to have questions also. A lot of it’s going to be community-based, but they’re going to get some of the same questions the faculty and board asks.”

The staff committee consists of five teachers from the elementary school, five from the high school, and six from the district in general, such as those who work in administra­tion, paraprofes­sionals, and the maintenanc­e coordinato­r.

The joint community effort, he said, will ultimately give the board a better feel in being able to select the right one.

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