In June, a nine-member Board of Managers changed the Houston Unbiased College District’s Board of Trustees as part of the Texas Schooling Company’s takeover of HISD. Concurrently, the college district bought a brand new superintendent – Mike Miles.
The TEA additionally appointed these board members as a result of presence of a conservator assigned to HISD for greater than two years.
Since then, the Board of Managers has served as HISD’s faculty board and had the identical job roles and tasks because the earlier faculty board, which was elected.
Throughout this time, the positions of the elected trustees stay and can progressively regain management of the district as soon as HISD satisfies TEA’s exit standards.
On Nov. 7, elections had been held at HISD to elect a trustee from two districts. Districts 3 and 4 had been held by incumbent trustees Dani Hernandez and Patricia Ok. Allen, respectively. Hernandez beat contender Fe Bencosme with 78% of the votes, and Allen defeated Meg Seff, garnering 81% of the votes.
District 4 covers elements of southeast Houston, together with Yates Excessive College and Sterling Excessive College. Allen, 65, graduated from, taught and served because the principal of Madison Excessive College. She was elected as a trustee in 2019.
District 3 includes Carnegie Vanguard Excessive College to Chavez Excessive College. Hernandez attended an HISD elementary faculty and likewise labored as a bilingual instructor there.
In the meantime, candidates H. A. “Savant” Moore and Placido Gomez ran unopposed for Districts 2 and eight respectively, and had been appointed to 2 open seats. Their names didn’t seem on the poll. Moore changed Kathy Blueford-Daniels, whereas Gomez succeeded Judith Cruz, who didn’t want to run once more for her seat in District 8.
The brand new trustees might be sworn into their roles in January 2024.
The Board of Trustees now includes Elizabeth Santos, Sue Deigaard, Kendall Baker, Bridget Wade, and Myrna Guidry.
The Board of Managers contains Audrey Momanaee, Ric Campo, Angela Lemond Flowers, Michelle Cruz Arnold, Cassandra Auzenne Bandy, Janette Garza Lindner, Rolando Martinez, Paula Mendoza, and Adam P. Rivon. Amongst them, Flowers, an HISD educator; Auzenne Bandy, a graduate from HISD and PTO volunteer; and P. Rivon, an HISD mum or dad and navy veteran, are the three Black representatives.
What is going to these trustees do at HISD?
Elected trustees will serve in an advisory capability to the Board of Managers and advocate for the districts they had been elected from. They technically should not have any energy within the district. They may give attention to getting ready for the time when trustees do get oversight of the district once more.
If HISD meets TEA’s three standards and the Board of Managers has served for 2 years, the commissioner will announce a transition timeline to native management or prolong the board’s appointment for as much as two years extra, in June 2025 on the earliest.
If HISD meets these necessities, a 3rd of the elected trustees will substitute a 3rd of the unelected members of the Board of Managers yearly, till all of the trustees return to the college board.
These three standards embody:
To make sure no campus at HISD receives Ds or Fs as grades for a number of years,
HISD’s particular training program should adjust to federal and state necessities. TEA reported in 2020 that the college district did not observe federal and state pointers and in 2021, appointed conservators to oversee particular education schemes, and
To ensure the college board focuses on scholar outcomes.