Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Farmington Superinten­dent Up For Co-Op

- By Dave Perozek

Superinten­dents of two Northwest Arkansas school districts are finalists for the director’s position at the Northwest Arkansas Education Service Cooperativ­e.

Charles Cudney, the director since

2014, is retiring at the end of June. Those interested in the job had until Monday to apply.

Four educators applied and one withdrew her applicatio­n, Andrea Martin, president of the cooperativ­e’s board and Greenland superinten­dent, said.

“I was expecting more candidates,” Martin said.

A board subcommitt­ee decided Thursday to interview Rick Neal, Pea Ridge superinten­dent, and Bryan Law, Farmington superinten­dent, according to Martin. Those interviews will be Jan. 6-9.

The cooperativ­e provides training and programs for teachers and administra­tors on all aspects of teaching, learning, school operations and state laws. Superinten­dents of the 15 school districts in Benton and Washington counties and the Huntsville district comprise its board.

The cooperativ­e has 99 employees and a $7.5 million budget, according to Cudney.

The chosen candidate will become the cooperativ­e’s fifth director since 1990. The board will set the director’s salary upon hiring, per the cooperativ­e’s policy. Cudney’s salary is $132,000 with a $6,000 travel allowance, Martin said.

The finalists for the job have similar background­s as leaders of small but rapidly growing school districts.

Law, 57, has overseen the Farmington district since 2012. He was assistant superinten­dent for seven years before that. He has a master’s degree in education from Harding University, according to his resume.

Neal, 58, has been Pea Ridge’s superinten­dent since 2011. He replaced Mike Van Dyke, who left for the cooperativ­e director’s job. Prior to becoming superinten­dent, Neal was principal of Pea Ridge High School for five years and was a middle school principal for five years before that. He has a master’s degree in education, with a specialty in educationa­l leadership, from Northeaste­rn State University in Tahlequah, Okla.

Cudney, 66, is a Green Forest native. He has worked 44 years in education, starting as a teacher in Prairie Grove. He was a superinten­dent for 25 years in Missouri, including 15 years in the Monett School District.

Cudney retired from Monett and returned to Arkansas in 2008. Tom Kimbrell, state education commission­er at the time, hired him in 2010 to lead the Greenland School District just as it was emerging from state control, the result of severe financial problems in the district.

Cudney guided Greenland back to financial stability before being hired as the cooperativ­e’s director in 2014. He called retirement a “mixed blessing,” adding he’s loved being in education.

“He is definitely a gem,” Martin said about Cudney. “He has incredible rapport across the state with other superinten­dents and cooperativ­e directors. He’s a wealth of knowledge.”

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