The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Steve knudsen

Saying he can ‘bring an objective outside view,’ Republican emphasizes vision, stewardshi­p.

- By Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

With 25 years in the nonprofit sector, Steve Knudsen says his background is the perfect fit for the Gwinnett County Board of Education. He defeated Carol Ranft with 66.35 percent of the votes in the Republican primary and is a candidate for District 2.

“The school district has a myriad of experts ... I think the positive of not being in education is that I bring an objective outside view to the board of education. I like to overlay it with my nonprofit background.”

Knudsen cited vision and responsibl­e stewardshi­p. The current board has done a good job setting forth the right vision for the county, he said. But what makes him stand out is stewardshi­p.

“Many people look at a budget of over $2 billion and they don’t look at it as lim- ited resources . ... You can’t just spin out more widgets and create more revenue. You have to come up with a vision that people will buy in and support with their hard-earned money,” he said. “They forgo something in order for you to do what your doing at the nonprofit level. And so the stewardshi­p of what you do is extremely important.”

He said, “For 25 years it’s constantly been a part of the organizati­ons that I’ve been a part of.”

With rising property assess- ments, taxpayers are shelling out more and more to the county.

“I’m a taxpayer and the county of Gwinnett said last year my house is worth 50 percent more than it was before. I feel the pinch. And I want to make sure that as other people feel the pinch that we are doing the absolute best that we can with the money that they are sending to us to educate their children.”

He’s been married for 32 years to his college sweetheart, who is also a teacher.

“I know a lot about the ins and outs of what she’s been through in the class- room and how to balance the limited resources,” he said. “The best thing that a teacher brings to the class- room can’t be bought . ... It’s almost a calling.”

From his experience with the school system, Knudsen said he understand­s the role of the board members.

“One of the strengths of being an outsider is that I’m not going to be telling princi- pals and teachers what they need to do to achieve excellence in their classrooms. My job is to put policies and pro- cesses and the procedures in place along with the right per- sonnel so that they can have the creativity and freedom to pursue excellence in the classroom,” he said. “Those are things that you need a good common-sense busi- ness mind to do.”

He said he’s looking forward to allowing teachers to give feedback.

“At my job we call it a skip meeting where you ‘skip’ past your boss and go straight to the head of the organizati­on,” he said.

He’d like to give teachers an opportunit­y to directly to provide input without worrying about what supervisor­s will think if they say that the latest, greatest thing doesn’t make sense in the classroom.

As someone who deals with finances, Knudsen would like to see the board “bal- ance our instructio­nal dol- lars.” This was the first year in more than a decade that school systems were fully funded using the state formula. He’d like to be ready in case the cycle of auster- ity returns.

“We should look at what we had to do during the downturn. If we had to take on debt, I like to see us retiring some of that debt. It will free up dollars for a future bud- get,” Knudsen said. “I want to look at the budget with a fine-tooth comb. Let’s get rid of all the possible waste and see if there’s some things we might be able to pay off.”

 ??  ?? Steve Knudsen says he’ll aim for financial stability.
Steve Knudsen says he’ll aim for financial stability.

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