Albuquerque Journal

APS board needs to do better for students

With opening due to Analee Maestas’ resignatio­n, the board needs to choose wisely

- BY ALI ENNENGA PRESIDENT, N.M. EDUCATION IMPROVEMEN­T PROJECT

The Albuquerqu­e Public School Board is more important than our community has recognized. APS has a larger budget than the entire city of Albuquerqu­e. It is one of the largest employers in the state. Even our mayoral candidates have crossed normally bright lines of division of authority and opined about the distressin­g impact education has on our fine city. And society has been asking too much of this particular institutio­n. Take any measure of public regard and it is painfully obvious that this institutio­n is the red-haired step child of public agencies. APS has been neglected for decades in terms of turnout by voters, oversight by legislator­s and regulators, and scrutiny by taxpayers. And now we add to the list, practice of prosecutor­s. Sadly, our community is reaping the harvest of child neglect.

Our newly formed organizati­on, The New Mexico Education Improvemen­t Project (NMEIP) was instrument­al in forcing the resignatio­n of APS board member Analee Maestas. The mission of our organizati­on is to restore fiscal responsibi­lity, morality, discipline and appropriat­e curriculum developmen­t, producing a higher quality student. You can learn more about us at www.makingeduc­ationbette­r.com. Our organizati­on filed a petition in conjunctio­n with a constituen­t in APS District 1, with the District

Court to have Maestas recalled. The state’s attorney general jumped on the bandwagon after we announced our plan of action and requested her resignatio­n, and we enthusiast­ically welcome his acquiescen­ce to the widely shared public opinion. But much more needs to be done, especially in light of the state auditor’s report, and there should be pressure on prosecutor­s and the judiciary to proceed in the same manner as with former Secretary of State Dianna Duran.

Maestas, through her attorney, refused to quit. In fact, she was prepared and eager to fight the petition in court. However, with our looming threat of a recall she, albeit reluctantl­y, resigned.

The union leadership and its menacing influence on our school board may have actually directed the timing of the resignatio­n. My personal opinion is that union leader Ellen Bernstein has been working on finding Maestas’ replacemen­t for the last year when all of this trouble began. We shall soon see. After the election in February 2017, the union leadership made the pronouncem­ent that they have their people in place and can proceed with their progressiv­e agenda. And to her credit, Bernstein has kept her word.

Dr. David Peercy and the current board have the fortunate opportunit­y to upgrade a board position. It is critical to offer a credible set of criteria for choosing a board member. The first criterion is honesty. We need board members who are honest with whomever they come in contact. We cannot afford another dishonest board member. We can give some room for the present board to right the ship. That is truly a high calling and difficult job in and of itself. This institutio­n could use a little more frankness in the public’s interest, and the present vacancy is evidence of our profound grasp of the obvious.

The second criterion is fiscal prowess. We need board members who possess fiscal street smarts sporting a resume replete with examples of sound financial success. Please note this is not the same as being rich or having a degree in finance. There is a distinctio­n worthy of taxpayers’ attention. The public needs a board member with strong financial leadership to craft a better $1.3 billion budget. This budget is more than 25 percent higher than the entire city of Albuquerqu­e’s budget. The current board members are not exhibiting this quality of fiscally responsibl­e budgeting of dollars to the right programs and systems in order to produce a stronger result. Board members must make a case in favor of less administra­tion costs and more education reform.

The third criterion is independen­t thinking. Students need a board member who can buck the system, ignore the threats of the union leadership and make clear, competent decisions on behalf of our children. Union leadership has been doing the same thing for 18 years, and nothing has changed.

Albuquerqu­e needs change in this specific arena. New Mexico needs APS to do a better job. NMEIP requires board members to take their responsibi­lity seriously. If you really want change, support the position taken by NMEIP. If you do not act now, we will have an interim board member controlled by the union leadership producing the same results. Call APS at 880-3700 and tell the board members to use these criteria to select the next board member.

 ??  ?? Analee Maestas
Analee Maestas

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