Wednesday, January 08, 2014

Deasy’s Dozen/’Empanelling the Committed’: SUPERINTENDENT REACHES OUT TO A HAND PICKED COHORT TO ADVISE HIM HOW TO RUN BOARD DISTRICT ONE

  1. Because, as we all know, superintendents step in and run Board of Education offices when they are vacant, and

  2. Advisory committees are non publically (sic) formed bodies subject to the Brown Act, and

  3. Apparently grammar, spelling and syntax don’t count.

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Letters posted by KPCC | The rest of the letters can be viewed here.


Supt. Deasy creates 'advisory committee' outside Brown Act to inform on LaMotte district

Adolfo Guzman-Lopez | Pass / Fail | 89.3 KPCC http://bit.ly/1lQVwns

Los Angeles schools Supt. John Deasy

Krista Kennell/AFP/Getty Images | Los Angeles schools Supt. John Deasy speaks during a press conference at South Region High School #2 in Los Angeles, California February 6, 2012. Deasy is creating an advisory committee to inform on who should fill the seat left by LAUSD board member Marguerite LaMotte, who recently died.

January 7th, 2014, 5:21pm  ::  LA Unified Superintendent John Deasy has inserted himself into the growing debate over what to do with the school board seat left vacant after the sudden death of board member Marguerite LaMotte on December 5th.

Deasy sent a letter to twelve prominent African American leaders on Jan. 3, inviting them to join a District 1 advisory committee he’s created to give him “information, advice, and direction” until a board member is chosen.

Deasy wrote that, as an advisory committee, the group would fall outside of California Brown Act transparency requirement. He also said any members of the committee should not plan to run for the open school board seat.

“The letter is reprehensible,” Larry Aubry, co-chair of Black Community-Clergy and Labor Alliance. “He’s not the board, he’s not a policymaker.”

Aubry said many of the people who received the letters are connected in some way to L.A. County Supervisor Mark Ridley Thomas, who’s pushing for a special election to fill the board seat.

Aubry is part of a group of African American leaders, which includes Congresswoman Maxine Waters, that wants long-time district administrator George McKenna to fill out LaMotte’s term until the district's scheduled 2015 election. They say it's critical for someone to be in place as soon as possible as the board is weighing budget and curriculum matters.

LaMotte’s team of about ten staffers continues to work on District 1 matters. The school board district includes neighborhoods in L.A.’s Crenshaw, Palms, and Koreatown neighborhoods.

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