Grosse Pointe Board of Education starts year with new alliances
A new superintendent, and a new board, took their seats Monday night (Jan. 23) at the Grosse Pointe Board of Education meeting. And if anyone doubts the landscape is a different one, following the retirement of Superintendent Suzanne Klein and the election of two new board members last November, the actions at Monday's meeting were a reminder.
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Falling aid may trigger pay cuts for Grosse Pointe teachers by 2013
When members of the Grosse Pointe Education Association ended a long labor impasse with their approval of a new contract last year, one that linked their compensation to state aid to the district, all were aware that teachers could face pay cuts somewhere down the road.
In run for Grosse Pointe school board, Roeske says he's a 'Boy Scout'
Dan Roeske, 49, says he hopes to bring a “Boy Scout demeanor” to the Grosse Pointe Board of Education. Roeske, left, who has lived in Grosse Pointe for just over 20 years and has three children in the public schools, enjoys racing sailboats, skiing with his family and giving back to the community through participation in Boy Scouts and PTOs.
What do you think is your most important qualification for the school board?
I think that the biggest thing I would bring to the board is a sense of working collaboratively. I’ve been a board observer, and I think that the board can work without being divisive. And I hope that the ability to be collaborative and work together in a cohesive manner – to make sure that we’re all kind of lining up our arrows pointing the right way – is what I’ll bring.
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Lois Valente touts corporate skills as assets for school-board post
Grosse Pointe Board of Education candidate Lois Valente, left, hopes to use her background in strategic planning to better integrate technology into the school curriculum, focus on setting annual goals and increase communication among individual schools. A 24-year resident of Grosse Pointe with three teenagers in Grosse Pointe schools, Valente has been a frequent observer of school board meetings and involved with parent organizations.
Why should voters elect you to the school board?
I’ve been active with the board for many years. I have three children in the district. One of my children has special needs, so I’ve been involved with the Partnership for Different Learners, which is a special-needs parent group that a lot of people don’t know exists. So I’ve been participating at that level for quite a while as well as at my children’s other schools.
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Karabetsos making a second run at Grosse Pointe school board
GrossePointeToday.com starts a series of profiles of various candidates for contested offices in the November election. Today: Grosse Pointe Board of Education contender Diane Karabetsos, left. She answered questions via email.
This is your second try for a board seat. What's different this time?
Although I'm not running against an incumbent, my platform remains the same. I continue to advocate against open enrollment from outside the district and for residency checks. I want to bring back the board discussion meetings and dialogue with the community. All the candidates agree on fighting School of Choice. But no one else is talking about a plan of action if Senate Bill 624 is forced on he schools. We still have issues about local residency. (This year a report has not been generated.)
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Grosse Pointe school board members not warm to retiree in HR seat
With Tom Harwood's ascension from human resources chief to superintendent of the Grosse Pointe public school system, Harwood wants to bring back a familiar face – Larry Lobert, who held the HR job in the district from 2002 to 2007, when he retired to take a similar position in suburban Chicago. Harwood asked the Board of Education at its Monday (Oct. 24) meeting to consider hiring Lobert as his replacement.
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Grosse Pointe Board of Education candidates Diane Karabetsos, Dan Roeske and Lois Valente appeared at a League of Women Voters forum Thursday at South High School.
Board candidates make their case at League of Women Voters forum
The Grosse Pointe Board of Education has been one of the Pointes' most divided and contentious panels of late, but the League of Women Voters doesn't do division and contention, so Thursday's candidate forum at South High School was a polite, measured affair.
But differences among candidates Lois Valente, Dan Roeske and Diane Karabetsos asserted themselves anyway, and it became clear this slate fell on both sides of the divide -- at least on some issues.
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Grosse Pointe Board of Education votes to restore clerical staff
The Grosse Pointe Board of Education voted Monday (Sept. 26) to reverse recent cuts in clerical staff, drawing enthusiastic applause from the audience.
The board had reduced clerical staff in July to accommodate reductions in state funding. Tom Harwood, assistant superintendent for human resources, said the cuts amounted to four full-time workers.
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Grosse Pointe school board committee approves 30-month deal for Harwood
The last hope of Grosse Pointe's school board minority to defeat a Tom Harwood superintendency likely died Tuesday (Aug. 2), when a member failed to insert language in his draft contract that would allow the board to easily terminate his employment.
Board treasurer Brendan Walsh, part of a three-member board committee working on Harwood's contract, tried to get fellow members John Steininger and Joan Dindoffer to consider a so-called convenience clause that would allow the board -- which may change significantly with the November elections -- to dismiss Harwood at will.
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Grosse Pointe school board continues to divide, with audience participation
The bad blood continued to boil Monday night (July 25) as the Grosse Pointe school board’s schism hardened in the wake of the superintendent search, this time over staffing cuts and the controversial Head Start program for Poupard Elementary.
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