Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hearings to be public next week

- BY MARY CLARE JALONICK AND ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — Democrats announced Wednesday they will launch public impeachmen­t hearings next week, intending to bring to life weeks of closed-door testimony and lay out a convincing narrative of presidenti­al misconduct by Donald Trump.

First to testify will be William Taylor, the top diplomat in Ukraine, who has relayed in private his understand­ing that there was a blatant quid pro quo with Trump holding up military aid to

a U.S. ally facing threats from its giant neighbor Russia.

That aid, at the heart of the impeachmen­t inquiry, is alleged to have been held hostage until Ukraine agreed to investigat­e

political foe Joe Biden and the idea, out of the mainstream of U.S. intelligen­ce findings, that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 U.S. election.

“We all received an email from a Hamilton County teacher this morning [who] has requested the presence of the commission and the school board to come together for a town hall meeting with regard to issues that we are facing here in Hamilton County with regards to public education,” said David Sharpe, District 6 commission­er and chairman of the county’s Education Committee. “I think that this is a good idea. I know it’s something we have tried to do for quite some time over the course of the past couple years … I look forward to being there for the conversati­on and I hope my colleagues will join me.”

There have been calls from both governing bodies to work together, especially since the fallout of this year’s budget process. At the Oct. 23 commission meeting, school board member Tiffanie Robinson, of District 4, called on the bodies to come together.

“We have real problems in this community. And I think as elected officials, the nine of you, the nine of us, there are 18 people who care deeply about this community and we have to figure how to start solving these problems,” Robinson said.

Kendra Young, one of the teachers behind this month’s town hall and the open letter, said these calls to work together are encouragin­g, but haven’t seemed to come to fruition yet.

“It’s time to hash this out,” she told the Times Free Press Tuesday. “It’s time to have a productive conversati­on about things that are doable.”

At least five school board members have already agreed to attend the Nov. 17 town hall hosted by the teachers, but some commission­ers believe the issue of public education funding has been dragged out for too long this year.

“The chairman of the education committee last year tried to have two joint meetings which the chairman of the [school] board and superinten­dent were unable to accommodat­e,” said District 8 Commission­er Tim Boyd. “To have an employee of Dr. Johnson invite the commission to a joint meeting seems quite inappropri­ate. I’ve never met with a group of police officers at their demand. I’ve never met with a group of county employees at their demand. It always has a formal request and their administra­tive staff always hosts the meetings.”

Boyd, who is known to distrust the school board’s spending, said he would not attend the meeting called by a teacher.

“I see this as an opportunit­y to orchestrat­e some drama on the issue of teacher pay. I see it as a decisive move [by] this small group of teachers who are screaming and yelling,” Boyd said, adding that the commission was not the appropriat­e place to go with teacher pay concerns. “I’ll reiterate that you’re barking up the wrong tree. This commission gives a lump sum amount of money to the school board and they allocate it where they seem fit. If they want to talk about teacher pay, they don’t need to be talking to Tim Boyd.”

Boyd’s counterpar­t, school board member Tucker McClendon, told the Times Free Press that he believes it is an elected official’s job to hear from constituen­ts.

“I think our job is to be easily accessible to the people we represent. And I think it’s our duty to hear them out,” he said.

Board member Jenny Hill, of District 6, echoed McClendon and said she was glad that the group of teachers — who have not been endorsed by the district and do not represent Superinten­dent Bryan Johnson — are coming together.

“I am so happy that our teachers are recognizin­g the power of their collective voices and I believe that Hamilton County can be better when we have more of our citizens recognize their individual power and their role,” Hill said. “I think that a lot of people don’t realize that their voice matters. It does matter, and when people [who] have common concerns and common experience­s work together, that’s how people change the world together.”

Board member Rhonda Thurman, of District 1, counters her colleagues, though — echoing Boyd’s sentiments.

“Everybody needs to stay in their own lane, [the commission] give us the money and we spend it,” she said. “If teachers are the most important people in the classroom than we, the school board, needs to put them at the top of the list. … Going back to the commission and asking for more money is not the answer.”

District 3 Commission­er Greg Martin also acknowledg­ed the invitation during Wednesday’s commission meeting and said he had a potential scheduling conflict on Nov. 17, but would try to make it.

McClendon, Hill and board member Steve Highlander, of District 9, mentioned possible schedule conflicts but all said they were in favor of the conversati­ons, both with teachers and their colleagues on the commission.

The mayor mentioned school facilities as one of the issues that may come up during the Dec. 9 meeting, but said there will not be discussion on further taxes or “anything other than what we’re trying to do.”

The two bodies last met together to talk about the district’s preliminar­y facilities report on July 23. Last January, months before Johnson unveiled his budget, commission­ers met in the school district’s board room for a preliminar­y budget talk and a review of the district’s strategic plan.

At the time, members of both bodies touted the meeting as a sign of an improved working relationsh­ip between the school board and its governing body.

Both panels are scheduled to meet with the county’s legislativ­e delegation for their annual breakfast at 8:30 a.m. Thursday at the county’s McDaniel Building, 455 N. Highland Park Ave.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SUSAN WALSH ?? House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., second from right, talks with reporters Wednesday on Capitol Hill. He is joined by, from left, Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., Delegate Elinor Holmes Norton, D-D.C., Rep Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., and Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill.
AP PHOTO/SUSAN WALSH House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., second from right, talks with reporters Wednesday on Capitol Hill. He is joined by, from left, Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., Delegate Elinor Holmes Norton, D-D.C., Rep Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., and Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States