Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Where's Frank?

Massillon's Mayor for 185 days has never been one to let the buck stop at his desk.

A Target store moves into town, and he's there to take credit for the jobs created.

But when the city is short financially because of the deals he made, or the employee contracts he negotiated, it's not his problem.

Once again, the City of Massillon has embarked on it's annual 'Summer Financial Crisis.'

The city is once again over 2 million dollars short in it's budget, and it appears the mayor has abdicated his throne.

Massillon City Auditor Jayne Ferrero and City Council Finance Chair Paul Manson want to raise the city's income tax .2% to cover the shortfall.


Here's the funny part.

The voters of Massillon will have the final say.

Even if city council votes it through, the income tax increase is still subject to a vote of the people (that's us) in November. We can't imagine it being successful.

After seeing our tax dollars spent on the mortgage for a private hotel, the debt for the ill conceived expansion at the Legends Golf Course, and pay raises for the city's unions and elected officials, we don't believe the people will be willing to fork over any more money to city government.

And what does Mayor Frank Cicchinelli say about this proposal? After all, he is the leader of the city.

Absolutely nothing.

Raising taxes is politically unpopular and we have already heard that Cicchinelli is plotting a comeback in four years. After all, the term 'Mayor for Life' means just that, mayor for life.

We assume Cicchinelli is all for the tax increase, or else his loyalists, Auditor Jayne Ferrero and Councilman Manson would not have proposed it. They don't do anything without the big guy's blessing.

He just can't be held responsible.

And yes, he is coming back. (More on that later this week).

So, does the tax increase have the necessary five votes from council?

Absolutely.

Despite his protestations to the contrary, Taxman Dave Hersher loves taxes.

"Councilman Dave Hersher said Monday he had not ruled out the idea, but would oppose it at this point without more information" (The Independent, June 29, 2011).

"he had not ruled out the idea"

We bet he hasn't.

Ron Mang, who is retiring after this year, will be joined by David McCune in the rubber stamp bloc of Manson, Hersher, Mang and McCune.

One more vote to get.

Donnie Peters says no.

Larry Slagle will say yes.

Slagle, who brokered the budget compromise between council and the mayor earlier this year, will feel compelled to do something, anything.

He will vote yes.

The voters of Massillon will crush this tax hike proposal.

And Frank Cicchinelli, the man still drawing a paycheck as mayor, the alleged leader of the city, will be nowhere to be found.

Not his problem.

Raising taxes to cover up his mess is council's job, not his.

And the buck stops with Jayne Ferrero and Paul Manson, not with the mayor.

It never has, and it never will.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Life is Like a Box of Chocolates

"Better to remain silent and thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt."
- Mark Twain

Richard Goodright, assistant superintendent of the Wooster school system, was announced as Massillon's new school superintendent today.

We wish Mr. Goodright well.

Richard Goodwright will be the fifth superintendent of the Massillon City School system since 2008.

Fred Blosser
Chris DiLoretto
John McGrath
and Lisa Carmichael have preceded him.

The school board knew who it would appoint on Thursday, but made the public announcement at a special session of the board of education today.

School Board President Weinberg offered his insight into why Goodright was eventually chosen.

Was it academics?
School finance?
Improving our rating on the state report card?

Try none of the above.

"He said the new superintendent is familiar with the Massillon City School District, its traditions and culture, including its high-profile football program."

"He understands football, and not just the game, but its role in driving education with our study tables, with character development," Weinberg said. "He believes it's one of the assets we should market loudly" (The Independent, June 24, 2011).

"He understands football..."

This quote provides us with a clear, unobstructed view into the mind of Marshall Weinberg.

It's not about academics, college readiness, and providing our kids with the education necessary to compete in a global economy.

It's about football.

When asked by our local paper about the man he wanted to hire, Weinberg immediately starts talking about football.

Listen, we realized a long time ago that Weinberg's primary interest in the school system related to his interest in helping the "friends of the program" football boosters reassert control over "their" team.

Just don't say it out loud, because then we are compelled to listen.

You have put Mr. Goodright in a box.

You just made his job harder.

Now people are left guessing whether or not our new superintendent made some implicit deal with the friends of the program, in what many will assume to be an off the record, side conversation with "whoever," to secure his hiring.

We would now like to congratulate Head Football Coach Jason Hall on his soon to be made public hiring as athletic director.

Congratulations.

Most people realized that the next superintendent would have to "play ball" with the friends of the program in order to be hired.

Lisa Carmichael didn't, and this is why she is gone.

We want the new guy to succeed.

Marshall didn't have to put what we suspected out on Main Street.

We are now forced to look at the elephant in the room, and can only be left wondering which assistant football coach will be assistant athletic director.

Stupid is as stupid does.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Tax Time

Massillon Councilman Paul Manson is planning to ask his colleagues on city council to raise the city's income tax rate. Any increase in the city's 1.8% income tax rate has to be approved by city voters.

Manson is suggesting this issue be placed, by city council, on the November ballot.

"It's something that's absolutely necessary to discuss," he said (The Independent, June 22, 2011).

While we don't think the voters will approve Manson's tax plan, it is his first contribution to the discussion of the city's precarious financial condition in a very long time.

During the city's budget debate earlier this year, Manson, as city council finance chairman, added nothing to the discussion, except parroting the line that city council needed to approve the mayor's unbalanced budget exactly as submitted.

We are now left believing that Mayor Frank Cicchinelli wants the income tax rate increased, but in the buck stops some where else world of our soon to be departing mayor, he wants someone else to propose it.

Enter Paul Manson.

We assume Manson and the mayor can get city council to approve this plan.

They would need just five votes.

The rubber stamp block of Ron Mang, David McCune, and the Taxman, Dave Hersher, would surely support Manson's plan. They only need to pick up one more vote.

Usually Larry Slagle, or Donnie Peters is the swing vote on council.

They only need one.

 Placing the tax increase on the ballot is only half the battle.

Getting the voters to support it is an entirely different matter.

The last time the city's income tax was increased by a vote of the people was 1995.

We voted to raise the income tax by .3%, with the money supposedly earmarked for parks and recreation, and a promise that our tax money would not be used to subsidize the city's golf course.

How did that work out?

Monday, June 20, 2011

Save us, Marshall!

"Call him bold, and independent. Call him fearless or stubborn or even self-righteous. Call him a hero, a villain, a leader or follower" (The Independent, June 17, 2011).

We choose hero.

"If serving as a board member or even as board president means making more enemies than friends he's more than happy to do it, he said. Just as long as he knows he's doing what's best for kids" (The Independent, June 17, 2011).

Because as we all know, with Marshall, it's all about the kids.

Portraying himself as a larger than life comic book superhero come to life in a recent newspaper profile regarding his controversial term on the Massillon Board of Education, School Board President Marshall "Lightning Rod" Weinberg valiantly and courageously stands up for the children of the Massillon School district, sometimes standing alone as a pillar of integrity against those people too ignorant to see his vision for a better school system.

"Am I a little frustrated that people won't stand up and get my back a little more? Sure," Weinberg said.

"But I gave my word as to what I was going to do, and I don't care what the haters say. I am going to be honorable in my actions and continue to raise the level of education in the Massillon City Schools in a fiscally responsible way" (The Independent, June 17, 2011).

Displaying a level of paranoia reminiscent of Massillon's Mayor for 195 days, the Extraordinary One, King Francis the defeated, Weinberg refers those who oppose his vision for the school district as "haters."

Haters.

Of Course.

Anyone who doesn't want the Head Football Coach to also serve as Athletic Director must be a "hater."

Anyone who doesn't see the wisdom of personally driving superintendent after superintendent out of the district must be a hater.

And any fool who doesn't understand that "Recent issues, including an assistant coach and booster club member growing and selling marijuana, could have been avoided, Weinberg said, if the football coach could report directly to the superintendent" (The Independent, March 30, 2010).

Yes, we have a hero fighting for truth, justice, and the Massillon way.

And he always does what is right, because it is right.

Always.

Sometimes we are just too stupid to appreciate his wisdom.

We forgot to add one final characteristic of any good superhero that Marshall Weinberg possesses in abundance.

Humility.

"I guarantee intelligent, educated and trained people in the room connect to me," Weinberg said. (The Independent, June 17, 2011).

Our school district is in good hands.

Heroic hands.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

We Need a Hero

In a school district without a superintendent,

without a high school principal,

without an athletic director,

and without a head basketball coach.

In a school district where the DREAM has died,

where a booster club member and volunteer football coach were caught growing marijuana on an industrial scale because the head football coach could not report directly to the superintendent,

where decisions were not made out of strength,

a city is desperate for a hero.


When all seemed lost, it happened,

like a bolt of lightening from the sky.


We found our hero.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Out of the darkness... comes the Knight

Where do we begin?

The night is darkest just before the dawn.

The dawn is coming.

Every city needs a hero.


"You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain."

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

No Pizza and Pop

The Independent newspaper has listed the now seven finalists for Massillon Schools Superintendent;

Richard D. Goodright, assistant superintendent of Wooster City Schools
Paul A. Hickman, superintendent of Buckeye JVSD
Mark O. North, superintendent of Lebanon City Schools
Matthew Plybon, Whittier Elementary principal
Andy Riggle, assistant superintendent of Bellaire Local Schools
Philip H. Wagner, assistant superintendent of Beachwood City schools
Francis Scruci, superintendent of Wellington Exempted Village schools

According to extremely reliable sources, this finalist list does NOT include the two people who were invited to Marhsall Weinberg's secret interview, that Marshall complained was "misrepresented as secretive," even though Weinberg admitted the community and the media were not told of the meeting.

The two guys who were supposed to come for pizza and pop didn't make the finalists list.

Apparently, they didn't even apply.

They were smart enough to know not to apply.

Which probably made them good candidates for the job.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

It's Summertime!

Picnics, graduations, baseball and vacations. It's Summer in Massillon!

And what does Summer in Massillon mean?

Summer, as we all know, means that it is time for the City of Massillon's Annual Financial Crisis!

For those unfamiliar with this annual Summer ritual, here is how it works.

Massillon's Mayor for 207 days, Frank Cicchinelli, submits a budget that is unbalanced. To make the math work, so that expenditures do not exceed revenue, the mayor shorts the salary accounts for city employees, most notably the police and fire fighters. He doesn't budget for things like police and fire overtime, hoping that there won't be any crime or fires on off hours.

In June, the City's Auditor, Jayne Ferrero, announces that the city is (pick a number between one and three million) dollars short.

The mayor is "shocked" by this announcement, and demands that the auditor recommend spending cuts, and that city council finds new "revenue streams" (that's government speak for higher taxes). The mayor acts like this is every one's problem but his own, and seems to forget he submitted the unbalanced budget in the first place.

City council this year, well, at least some of them, trimmed the expenditures on the budget our Mayor for Six and Three Quarters Months submitted. He fought these cuts kicking and screaming, but they still were not enough to truly balance the budget.

We anxiously wait for Auditor Ferrero's pronouncement of the annual financial crisis. It is June, and it is time for this rite of Summer.

We even have it marked on our Massillon Review calendar.

June - Annual Financial Crisis.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

The Parks are Fine

Massillon tax payers owe almost $10 million dollars on interest and principal payments for the Legends of Massillon Golf Course.

The Golf Course is under the auspices of the 'Independent' Parks and Recreation Board because when the course was expanded from 18 to 27 holes, the debt load for the expansion coupled with the original debt was too much for the city's general fund to handle.

Massillon's Mayor for Seven Months, Frank Cicchinelli, pitched the idea of merging the golf course with the parks department in 2002. This was his plan for "streamlining" city government.

The truth is he wanted to unload the golf course debt on the parks department, and use the .3% voter approved income tax to subsidize this debt ridden white elephant.

The voters, who approved the .3% income tax for parks and recreation were shown a master parks plan which their .3% income tax would pay for.

The golf course was never part of the plan.

The golf course debt is now subsidized by the parks income tax.

Our parks are a mess.

Go look for yourself.

The Chester and Florence Campbell Walking Track, the 'rubberized' walking path at Reservoir Park, funded by the former Doctor's Hospital Service League, was left to deteriorate.

Instead of repairing this gift to the community, Parks Czar, and mayoral lackey Kenn Kaminski stripped the remaining rubber off the asphalt where it was in most need of repair.

Just stripped it.

The dam at Reservoir park is in serious disrepair. This isn't our opinion, but the opinion of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, who gave the dam a first-class hazard rating, meaning that it poses a risk of "probable loss of life."

'Landscaping,' a term we use loosely, at the parks means that maybe the grass gets cut every couple of weeks.

Equipment is in disrepair.

Contrary to what the Mayor for Seven months is still preaching, the parks are still a mess.

"Yet others, including Cicchinelli, reject the idea that the parks are in bad shape" (The Independent, June 1, 2011).

He rejects the idea.

Is he blind?

We have concluded he is deaf, at least politically deaf, because if he would have opened his eyes and dealt with the disaster that is the Massillon parks system, he may yet be mayor.

The debt on the golf course will not be paid off until 2031.

The payment due for this year is $524,000 dollars.

The parks are still a mess.

The parks department is subsidizing the golf course debt to the tune of $174,000 dollars this year.

The parks department also paid an additional $50,000 dollars to finish purchasing the restaurant at the golf course, Club Legends.

$224,000 dollars that could have been used for park maintenance.

But we don't have to worry.

Because the parks are fine.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Word on the Street

Word on the street is that when Superintendent Lisa Carmichael leaves at the end of June, former Massillon Schools Superintendent Al Paris will be appointed as interim Super.

Word on the street is also that when Head Football Coach Jason Hall is appointed as athletic director, there will be two assistant athletic directors hired, not just one.

So much for the cash surplus in the athletic department.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Don't Bother Applying

Washington High School Athletic Director Tim Ridgley's contract will expire at the end of June.

The Massillon Board of Education took no action to renew, or not renew the contract.

Ridgley's contract is being allowed to expire without action because it was clear to everyone that the Board of Education would not renew it.

A majority of the school board has other plans for the athletic director's position;

"Look, everybody likes to label people," (Board President) Weinberg said, "but there is a whole lot more to Jason Hall than just his ability to coach a football team. If we have looked at him in the past - and we may look at him again in the future - it has less to do with pure football than his ability to recognize, motivate, initiate and drive success athletically and academically" (The Independent, May 27, 2011).

It has everything to do with "pure football" and has absolutely nothing to do with driving success "athletically and academically."

This is all about completing the DREAM project, and by DREAM we mean putting football back at the top of the Massillon school district hierarchy "athletically and academically."

Soon to be former Superintendent Lisa Carmichael's problems began when she wouldn't support the plan to "reorganize" the Washington High School Athletic Department.

The Superintendent is gone.
The High School Principal is gone.
The Athletic Director is gone.
The Boys Basketball coach is gone.

The inmates are running the asylum, and the administration of our school system is being vetted through the 'friends of the program' football boosters.

If anyone is thinking about applying for the Washington High School Athletic Director's job, don't.

The decision has been made.

It was made over a year ago.

Head Football Coach Jason Hall will be the athletic director.

The end.

"It's (the athletic director's position) the lynch pin in the entire DREAM project" (Marshall Weinberg, The Independent, March 30, 2010).

There will be one or more assistant athletic directors.

They will be football guys.

All of this... ALL OF THIS has to do with "pure football."

We pointed this out over a year ago.

And the cards are falling into place.

Our school system is nothing more than a toy that the 'friends of the program' football boosters tinker with in order to perpetuate their one and only concern.

And that concern is not the education of our children.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Memorial Day















And they who for their country die shall fill an honored grave, for glory lights the soldier's tomb, and beauty weeps the brave. - Joseph Drake

Thursday, May 26, 2011

A Decision Made Out of Strength

In 2010, the Massillon School Board made newly elected school board member Tom Seesan the Board's president.

This did not sit well with board member Marshall Weinberg.

He had a better candidate in mind for the presidency.

Himself.

"Weinberg, when asked if he'd considered serving as board president, said he had. In fact, he had hoped to be president this year (2010), being the only veteran board member who hadn't yet held the title. The board opted instead to appoint Seesan."

"It is one of the issues that is tearing at the board," Weinberg said. "Unfortunately, because of the issues of legality, I can't discuss it in specifics, but it was not a decision made out of strength. Now, we are all seeing the ramifications" (The Independent, August 12, 2010).

In 2011, The Massillon Board of Education corrected this injustice, and made a decision out of strength.

They appointed Marshall Weinberg school board president.

And in the words of Marshall Weinberg, "we are all seeing the ramifications."

Superintendent Lisa Carmichael fled town for another job. Her disdain for Weinberg being a well known contributory factor to her departure.

Washington High School Principal Mike Babics jumped ship for another job.

The Athletic Director was terminated.

The Boys Basketball Coach was terminated.

No Superintendent.

No Principal.

No Athletic Director.

No Basketball Coach.

Marshall Weinberg's leadership was on display at last night's school board meeting.

Massillon Cable Channel 11 broadcast the replay tonight.

The Massillon Review Staff got together at the Massillon Review corporate headquarters to watch.

And were treated to the most painful two and one half hours of television in recorded history.

Firstly, We Surrender.

We will no longer question Marshall's honorable intentions in conducting a rogue search for superintendent.

"At the end of the day" you were correct ethically, legally, and morally.

PLEASE JUST STOP TALKING ABOUT IT, because "at the end of the day," we can't take any more of your non-stop, never ending, full throated, interminable defense of your actions.

You were right. Just stop talking!

Please.

Secondly, everyone, and we mean everyone, got to have their say at the meeting during public speaks.

Except local parliamentary expert Scott Graber.

The Board meeting included Smith Elementary school 2nd graders singing, Marshall and fellow board member Gary Miller on their soap boxes, and questions from everybody in the audience, except Graber.

And why didn't President Weinberg allow Graber to ask a question?

According to Weinberg it's because, "I get to be president."

Yes, you do.

Which was clearly "a decision made out of strength."

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Creamer Sacked

To the surprise of, well, to the surprise of absolutely no one, Massillon's Head Basketball Coach, Matt Creamer, was given the sack tonight.

School Board members Weinberg, Elum, and Miller voted against renewing Creamer's contract.

http://www.indeonline.com/newsnow/x2085342658/Creamer-non-renewed-as-Massillon-hoops-coach

Let's see. In Marshall Weinberg's nearly five month reign of terror as School Board President, the Superintendent and High School Principal have jumped ship.

The Athletic Director and Boys Basketball Coach have been sacked.

What can he possibly do for an encore?

Who's next? Choir Director? French Club Advisor?

You can watch this episode of Marhsall Weinberg & Friends, also known as the televised school board meeting, tomorrow (Thursday) at 8PM on Massillon Cable Channel 11.

We are supremely confident that his majesty the President will refer to the Creamer termination as a "business decision," which is Weinberg's cover for any controversial vote he makes.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

This Is How We Do It

School Board President Marshall "It's about the children" Weinberg finally provided a plausible explanation to his rogue search for a new school board superintendent.

He has finally offered an explanation to his behind closed doors approach to finding someone who we believe will put football before academics.

His quest is to find a superintendent who will "complete the DREAM," the DREAM being making the head football coach the athletic director, making the assistant athletic directors (plural) football coaches, and officially putting football at the top of the food chain, not just in athletics, but academics as well.

A superintendent who will be acceptable to the 'friends of the program' football boosters.

A superintendent who will know his role, and defer to the "experts"  as it relates to "their" team.

And what was Weinberg's excuse for perverting the selection process into a quest to find a superintendent who will "play ball" with the football boosters?

This is how we do it in Massillon.

"This is how we do it in Massillon," Weinberg said. "This is how it's done. This is how we go out and find football coaches. The best (applicants) do not just apply - we have to go out and find them" (The Independent, May 24, 2011).

Illuminating.

Sad, but illuminating.

This is how we do it in Massillon.

This is how we go out and find football coaches.

Uh, Marshall.

You are not hiring a football coach.

You certainly don't realize this, but a school superintendent is infinitely more important to the success of our children's education than who coaches ten football games a year.

This is the problem.

The "this is how we do it in Massillon" mentality.

Your priorities are screwed up beyond any rational explanation.

You have run off multiple superintendents.

You have run off a principal.

You have, for all purposes, sacked the athletic director so that the head football coach can have more control.

And word on the street is that you are about to sack the basketball coach.

But, we should all be relieved at your insanity manifesting itself into the governance of our schools because...

This is how we do it in Massillon.

This is the problem.

No school administrator in their right mind would come here and work for you as superintendent.

But you don't care.

As long as the football team is run according to the whims of the friends of the program football boosters.

Because this is how we do it in Massillon.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Stupid Is as Stupid Does

SECRET -
Adjective: Not known or seen or not meant to be known or seen by others: "a secret plan."
Noun: Something that is kept or meant to be kept unknown or unseen by others.

Massillon School Board President Forrest Weinberg didn't think he was having a secret meeting.

"The discussion with potential superintendent candidates was canceled, Weinberg said, because it was misrepresented as "secretive," and that caused the two potential candidates to back out" (The Independent, May 19, 2011).

Misrepresented as "secretive."

Misrepresented.

"Weinberg admits the meeting was supposed to be a private conversation... The community and the media were not supposed to be made aware of the meeting and Weinberg said he did not directly contact all board members to inform them" (The Independent, May 19, 2011).

"Only two board members - Weinberg and Elum - were to attend because if more than two members attended, they would be required by law to post a public meeting notice" (The Independent, May 19, 2011).

"The meeting could not be made public, Weinberg insists, because the identities of the potential candidates needed to be protected since they are both currently employed in successful school districts" (The Independent, May 19, 2011).

Nope.

Doesn't sound secretive to us.

We were mistaken.

"For some reason, everything we do ends up being amazingly controversial," Weinberg said (The Independent, May 19, 2011).

Hello. My name's Forrest. Forrest Gump. You want a chocolate?

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Just Spit It Out

"Last year, Weinberg and Elum both raised concerns about "promises" made to head football coach Jason Hall during the interview process. They were "promises" the two contended, that weren't in his contract, but were made in good faith" (The Independent, May 19, 2011).

We wish the Independent would just spit it out and not resort to all this cloak and dagger verbiage about "promises."

We all know what the "promise" is.

The "promise" to Jason Hall was to make him the athletic director as well as the head football coach.

Marhsall Weinberg turned on soon to be former Superintendent Carmichael when she wouldn't agree to "reorganize" the athletic department, make the head football coach the athletic director, make the assistant athletic director former offensive coordinator Alex Wood, and "complete the DREAM," making football the total focus of Washington High School sports.

That was the "promise."

Just spit it out.

"Weinberg dismissed the idea that any "promises," either intentional or not, could be made to a potential superintendent candidate in face-to-face meetings or telephone conversations" (The Independent, May 19, 2011).

Then why all the secrecy, Marshall?

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Football

When Marshall Weinberg campaigned for the Massillon Board of Education four years ago, he claimed he would bring his business expertise to our schools. He would run our school system like a business. It would be academics first, because it was all about the kids.

Well, at least it was all about the kids who play football...

It was a smokescreen. Weinberg's campaign was a smokescreen to cover the fact that he was going to lead the football boosters and assorted self proclaimed 'friends of the program,' back to their role as the prominent and dominant faction in the governance of our schools.

He then set about to run Superintendent Lisa Carmichael out of town, because she wouldn't "get with the program," the football program, that is.

She wouldn't "complete the DREAM," the DREAM being a plan to make the head football the athletic director, and the assistant athletic director the offensive coordinator.

She had to go.

Because it's "all about the kids."

At least the kids who play football.

So then the quest for a new superintendent began.

The Ohio School Boards Association was brought in to make the search for a new superintendent a clean, fair, and transparent process.

It was, of course, a smokescreen.

Who was to be tricked?

Us.

The taxpaying public.

The real search was going on behind the scenes, behind closed doors, in secret, so we could recruit a superintendent who would "get with the program."

The football program that is.

Someone who would bow to the wishes of the 'friends of the program,' and those people who believe they own our high school football team.

Someone who has been properly vetted and is acceptable to the football boosters.

Someone who would agree to the 'reorganization' of the athletic department, who would make the head football coach the athletic director, who would employ one, possibly two assistant athletic directors, who would be football coaches, who would complete the "DREAM."

The DREAM being a plan to put football once again at the top of the athletic department, and actually at the top of the school system.

But they got caught.

http://www.indeonline.com/topstories/x1357377142/2-BOE-members-plan-secret-super-meeting-Thursday

And why were they doing this?

One word.

Football.

The rest is just a smokescreen.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Better Than Diamond Rings

"According to Massillon Board President Marshall Weinberg, each of the board members is actively involved in ensuring the best possible candidates are in the application pool...

"The best people for the job are not always the people who apply on their own," Weinberg said. "Sometimes, the best people are the ones  you have to go out and get." (The Independent, May 10, 2011).

You know, "go out and get."

We also call this recruiting.

And Marshall has been out recruiting!

Today is the last day potential candidates can apply for the Massillon Superintendent's job.

And without a single (official) interview conducted by the school board, the Massillon Review is preparing to release the names of the finalists for the job.

How can we possibly know who the finalists are, after all today is just the application deadline and no (official) interviews have occurred.

No "official" interviews.

Maybe we had help.

Monday, May 16, 2011

It's the Sport of Kings

The search continues for the new Massillon Schools Superintendent.

Last week, the Independent very prudently weighed in;

"We remain hopeful that the Board of Education is not trying to placate anyone or atone for past misjudgments in implementing the focus group initiative. Here's hoping they regroup, put aside their own agendas and those of special interest groups in town, consider Ms. Lasota's (Ohio School Boards Association representative) recommendations and take another stab at getting this important decision right" (Editorial from the Independent, Wednesday, May 11, 2011).

"placate anyone" and "special interest groups in town"

Who, oh who could they be referring to that needs placated?

Special interest groups?

Hmmm...

We shouldn't worry about these things.

We are confident the selection process is in good hands.

"According to Massillon Board President Marshall Weinberg, each of the board members is actively involved in ensuring the best possible candidates are in the application pool" (The Independent, May 10, 2011).

"ensuring the best possible candidates are in the application pool"

And we assume properly vetted and approved.

By those who may need "placated," and by the "special interest groups," whoever they may be.