The Signal

And the winner is ...

Hart district chooses educator Cherise Moore to fill vacant board spot

- By Christina Cox Signal Staff Writer

After more than an hour of public interviews and deliberati­ons, members of the William S. Hart Union High School District Governing Board selected Cherise Moore as the newest board member to fill the board’s vacant Trustee Area 3.

“I’m overwhelme­d, I’m excited. It feels amazing to get to serve in this way in the district that I love,” Moore said after her provisiona­l appointmen­t. “I’m most looking forward to continuing the good work the board has done and serving in this amazing district.”

Three of the four governing board members — Linda Storli, Steve Sturgeon and Joe Messina — selected Moore on their individual ballots for the appointmen­t. However, the decision to appoint her after the ballots were counted was unanimous.

A total of five candidates — TimBen Boydston, Kenneth Dean, Cherise Moore, Hilary Schardein and Teresa Todd — were still in the running for the board seat Wednesday. Applicants Ann-Marie Bjorkman and Noe Garcia had dropped out of the race Monday and Tuesday, respective­ly.

The board seat was made available by the resignatio­n of Rob Hall who stepped down to take a 15-month assignment with his company’s Singapore office.

Moore will hold her position on the board for the remainder of Hall’s term, set to end in December 2018. She will take her oath of office at the beginning of the Hart Board’s following meeting April 19.

The five applicants were interviewe­d in 10-minute sessions with questions they were provided with ahead of time. They sat in the Hart District staff room during prior interviews, but were permitted to sit in the boardroom once their interview was completed.

Each applicant gave a “campaign speech” and a closing statement, in addition to answering questions about their own personal strengths, their thoughts on prior board decisions, managing the district’s large operating budget and capital budget, communicat­ing with members of the public and deciding where to increase or decrease district spending.

“I’m here because I want to make a difference in the community through serving the public,” Moore said. “I truly understand the value and benefits of public education and want to make sure that our students have access to an amazing education, and the taxpayers have a great return on their investment.”

Moore has 30 years of experience working in education as a classified employee, teacher, site-level administra­tor and district administra­tor. She holds a bachelor’s degree in political science, a master’s degree in urban planning, a master’s degree in educationa­l administra­tion and a Ph.D. in Public Administra­tion from ASU.

Currently, she acts as a senior researcher for the American Institutes for Research (AIR) where she works on national and state level projects in postsecond­ary education, adult education and career technical education for administra­tors and teachers.

“My profession­al experience has provided me with the depth of knowledge that I believe truly prepares me

for this position,” she said. “I see this, based on the work that I’ve done before, as being sort of a culminatin­g experience for me, as it is the right time and the right moment for the district.”

Moore also has experience working in the Hart district as an interim administra­tor at Golden Oak Adult School, a board member of the Golden Valley High School Parent Advisory Committee and a board member of the WiSH Education Foundation.

She also currently serves as a Hart district Career and College Readiness teacher, a position she will now be resigning from in light of her new appointmen­t to the board.

“I’m a public education advocate, I know the value of a public education and I understand the tradition of excellence we have here,” Moore said.

During her interview, Moore also noted her knowledge or education code and law, budgetary and fiscal management, specialize­d programs, adult education, English Learners, school accountabi­lity and the Local Control Funding Formula.

Jayme Allsman, president of the Hart district teacher associatio­n, also spoke before the board’s decision to voice her support for Moore, as she was the only candidate who reached out to the teachers’ associatio­n to have an open discussion about the future and current issues facing the district.

“She came to our office and spent time in in-depth conversati­on,” Allsman said. “That willingnes­s to spend the time demonstrat­es the understand­ing of the relationsh­ip between teachers and the board and how that impacts our students.”

 ?? Katharine Lotze/The Signal (See additional photos on signalscv.com) ?? (From the left to the right) Board member candidates Teresa Todd, Hilary Schardein, TimBen Boydston, Cherise Moore, and Kenneth Dean take their seats following 10-minute interviews before board members voted on their choice to fill Robert Hall’s seat...
Katharine Lotze/The Signal (See additional photos on signalscv.com) (From the left to the right) Board member candidates Teresa Todd, Hilary Schardein, TimBen Boydston, Cherise Moore, and Kenneth Dean take their seats following 10-minute interviews before board members voted on their choice to fill Robert Hall’s seat...
 ?? Katharine Lotze/The Signal (See additional photos on signalscv.com) ?? Members of the board listen to candidate Hilary Schardein at the William S. Hart District school board meeting on Wednesday.
Katharine Lotze/The Signal (See additional photos on signalscv.com) Members of the board listen to candidate Hilary Schardein at the William S. Hart District school board meeting on Wednesday.

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