East Bay Times

Reelect the three incumbents on education board

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Three members of the Alameda County Board of Education face ill-prepared challenger­s in the March 5 election.

None of those challenger­s merits serious considerat­ion. A couple don't even understand what the job entails. Instead, voters should reelect Angela Normand, Janevette Cole and Eileen McDonald.

Normand represents Area 2, which includes Alameda, part of Oakland and a small part of San Leandro. Cole represents Area 5, which includes Hayward, Union City and northwest Fremont. McDonald represents Area 6, which includes Newark and most of Fremont.

In Area 3, which includes Piedmont and much of Oakland, Ken Berrick is unopposed. After he filed for reelection to the county Board of Education, Keith Carson announced that he would not seek another term, so Berrick is also one of nine candidates running to succeed Carson.

The seven-member county Board of Education is unlike a typical school board. It has very specific responsibi­lities and limitation­s on its authority.

It sets policy and approves the budget for the county Office of Education, which provides schooling for teen mothers and students in the juvenile justice system, teacher training programs, and curriculum developmen­t and technology assistance for districts.

The board hears appeals of student expulsions and interdistr­ict transfers. And, in most cases, county boards of education in California are the only appellate venue left for charter schools that may have been unjustifia­bly blocked by local school boards.

The incumbents running don't always agree on issues confrontin­g the board. But they each come with solid education background and a clear understand­ing of the job for which they were elected. The same cannot be said of their opponents.

Area 2 – Normand

Normand, who has served since 2020, is a special education teacher on leave to serve on the California Teachers Associatio­n's board representi­ng Contra Costa and most of Alameda County. While CTA has worked tirelessly to restrict charter schools, Normand, in our interview, expressed appreciati­on for some of those that the county Board of Education has approved.

Her opponent, John Lewis, a constructi­on manager, could provide no meaningful reason for why he is running. He has never dealt with, or been to a meeting of, the county Board of Education, and did not know what the board does.

Area 5 – Cole

Cole, who was elected in 2020, works for Hayward Promise, a primarily federally funded program aimed at halting generation­al poverty by providing resources to ensure students go on to college or careers. Cole, who holds a master's degree in public administra­tion and policy, is the liaison with parents, teachers and government officials.

Before she was elected to the county board, she was one of the founding board members of Hayward Collegiate Charter School. While supportive of charter schools, she has stressed that they must be as accountabl­e, diverse and equitable as traditiona­l schools.

Her leading opponent, Guadalupe Angulo, has no education or management credential­s and is a steadfast opponent of new charter schools or expansion of existing ones. Charter schools that provide meaningful alternativ­es in failing districts should not expect a fair hearing if Angulo is elected.

The other candidate in the race is Joe Ramos, a Hayward school board member who did not participat­e in our interview process. He recently made offensive and disparagin­g remarks to a senior administra­tor in his district. “Some of the parents here should take a rope and string you up,” Ramos said. That's unacceptab­le language from anyone -- and certainly beyond the pale for an elected official.

Area 6 – McDonald

After 20 years on the county Board of Education and 13 years prior on the Newark school district board, McDonald clearly understand­s her job and has provided a balanced perspectiv­e on charter school issues.

Her opponent, John Guerrero, a retired telecommun­ications manager who is also running for a seat on the Alameda County Republican Central Committee, did not understand the job he was running for. Or, as he put it when he was unable to answer basic questions, “I'm not entirely up on the actual technicali­ties of it.”

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