76th Annual FSBA Conference, Training, Board of Director and Assembly Meetings

76th Annual FSBA Conference, Training, Board of Director and Assembly Meetings

During an impactful week, FSBA unanimously votes to leave NSBA

Last week nearly 400 Florida school board members and superintendence gathered in Tampa at the 76th annual joint Florida School Board Association and Florida Association of District School Superintendents Conference that includes extensive professional development, organization committee meetings, Board of Directors, and General Assembly meetings. Speakers included Award-winning motivational speaker and author Simon Bailey, 2022 Florida Teacher of the Year, Sarah Painter, and award-winning documentary filmmaker and speaker Brett Culp. The conference also featured three separate panel discussions with superintendents, principals and assistant principals, and student leaders. These panels included important conversations about how all stakeholders can work together to improve student achievement.

Florida’s public education system continues to excel nationally. Florida is outperforming the nation in 15 of 18 K-12 Achievement measures as reported by Education Week and the Florida Department of Education. (Source: https://www.fldoe.org/newsroom/latest-news/florida-continues-to-shine-with-its-national-ranking-for-k-12-achievement.stml).  Just some of the highlights show: Florida is ranked 2nd for improving the high school graduation rate, Florida is ranked 3rd for improvement in grade 4 mathematics, Florida is ranked 4th for improvement in grade 8 reading, and Florida is ranked 4th for improving the grade 4 poverty gap.

The Florida Association of District School Superintendents President and Citrus Superintendent Sam Himmel, and Florida School Boards Association President-elect and Citrus County School Board member, Thomas Kennedy were all smiles this morning at the start of the 76th annual FSBA and FADSS Joint Conference.
Way to represent Citrus County!

I am most proud of the role Citrus continues to have in these important and influential organizations. Superintendent Sandra “Sam” Himmel is the current president of FADSS, and I am the president-elect of FSBA and will be sworn in as president of FSBA in June 2022. To have Sam Himmel and me chose to serve in these roles at the same time, from the same district, for the state’s most recognizable educational organizations is a testament to our Citrus county, our school district, our educators & teachers, our parents, and most especially our students.

Dr. Steve Gallon III of Miami Dade County who sat on both the NSBA Board of Directors and is Chairman of the Council of Urban Boards of Education (CUBE)

During the week, one of the most newsworthy events that happened this year was FSBA formally leaving the National School Board Association, after months and years of issues. It was not an easy decision for the organization, but it was the right thing to do. As FSBA President-Elect I serve as Chairman of the Long-Range Planning Committee and on behave of the committee I made the motion to the FSBA Board of Directors for FSBA to leave the NSBA. This motion followed extended evidence and testimony from our members involved in NSBA, most notably Beverly Slough of St. Johns County who sits on the NSBA Board of Directors, and Dr. Steve Gallon III of Miami Dade County who sits on both the NSBA Board of Directors and is Chairman of the Council of Urban Boards of Education (CUBE). As chairman of the NSBA’s Council of Urban Boards of Education, Dr. Steve Gallon may have the most to lose from the FSBA’s decision to leave the National School Boards Association, presented a substantial argument, driving home point after point as he read a letter he wrote to the NSBA that received no response from any of its members. During FSBA’s discussion of the motion Dr. Gallon stated, “Based on deep personal convictions, I cannot support the continued membership in an organization whose core leadership had willfully and knowingly undercut long established partnerships in their choosing of divisive partisan politics.”

The Board of Directors unanimously and non-partisan approved my motion for FSBA to leave NSBA. In addition, the Board of Directors unanimously passed three policy/by-laws revisions untying FSBA to NSBA. Since June 2021 the FSBA Executive Board, which as President-Elect I am a director, had withheld our current year’s due to NSBA dues which were due July 1, 2021. FSBA has been clear about reassessing the value of our affiliation with NSBA due to concerns surrounding NSBA’s governance, leadership, transparency, and failure to embrace non-partisanship. FSBA’s decision to leave NSBA was necessary, but not made lightly. The decision to leave NSBA was made in response to several years of persistent patterns of dysfunction within the NSBA organization and among those charged with its governance. Until this year, all 49 state school boards associations have maintained NSBA memberships, now to date, over fourteen (14) states have officially withdrawn from NSBA, and more are meeting this month to consider whether to stay or not. The FSBA board of directors no longer had faith in NSBA’s ability to effectively represent the interests of our state association and its members. For several years FSBA and many other state associations have repeatedly asked for corrective actions with governance and finances and received little to no action from NSBA that meets FSBA expectations.

The FSBA board of directors has directed the FSBA Executive Director to work with other state associations to ensure that national training opportunities, advocacy at the federal level, and urban, and rural, programming continue, all within a non-partisan framework. The goal of the FSBA is a strong and unified national member-driven association, with local control of public education at the core.

I am grateful for the opportunity to serve FSBA and share the examples and influence of our local district to the state and national levels. Next year’s FSBA/FADSS Conference, in my role then as President, I have the honor to highlight our Citrus County students and Citrus County Schools. We are looking forward to sharing our students’ successes and talents with the state of Florida.

More details on FSBA leaving NSBA

Here is FSBA‘s official release:

Governor DeSantis tweets about FSBA leaving NSBA:

Dr. Gallon’s letter to NSBA and more on FSBA leaving NSBA

https://www.pineapplereport.com/miami-dade-schools-vice-chair-brings-down-the-house-during-scorching-speech-on-nsba/

Citrus Schools and YMCA partnership shared

Citrus Schools and YMCA partnership shared

So proud today to share with Dr. Kent (Every Child a Swimmer- https://www.everychildaswimmer.org/) and Rowdy Gaines (Step Into Swim – https://www.stepintoswim.org/) about the Citrus County School District & Citrus County YMCA – 2nd grade Water Safety and swim introduction program. This is now a near two-decade program that every second grader in Citrus County Schools participates in.

The Florida Health Department shares that, “From 2017 to 2019 combined, Florida was ranked the highest in the U.S. for unintentional drowning death rate among children ages 1 to 4 years (6.29 per 100,000 population). Florida had the highest unintentional drowning death rate of 3.28 per 100,000 population among children 0 to 9 years of age compared to other states. Annually there are enough children under the age of 5 lost to drowning (67 in 2017, 74 in 2018 and 50 in 2019) to fill three or four preschool classrooms.(Source: http://www.floridahealth.gov/programs-and-services/prevention/drowning-prevention/index.html)

I shared about this partnership when the agreement was approved by the school board. Follow this link to read more: School Board’s agreement on Y pool will save lives – https://thomastalks.org/school-boards-agreement-on-y-pool-will-save-lives/.

Chronicle Editorial Board also shared about the agreement saying at the time, “These types of partnerships benefit everyone. YMCA expanded the size of its pool and increased its impact on the community by taking over the swimming safety program. The school district is saving over $400,000 while also utilizing the facility for swim meets and practices. County businesses will also see a benefit with the influx of visitors to the swim meets.” Read more at https://www.chronicleonline.com/opinion/editorials/school-district-ymca-accord-good-deal-for-community/article_73d7e090-5bed-5cd9-a16e-37a79081b097.html

Happy Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving

At this time perhaps more than ever it is so vital that we take the time and thank each of those in our lives for the great blessings that they are each and every day. I am so grateful to the students in Citrus County who every day are meeting the challenges to be successful individuals. I am so thankful for the teachers, educators, and staff that support our students in every way. Thank you to our great community who are generous with their resources and their hearts for our students, schools, and community. I am grateful to our state and national leaders who are working to provide opportunities. I am so thankful that I live and serve in Citrus County. I am grateful to our community for their support of our family. And I am thankful to my wife, son, and daughter, and I am thankful to God for them in my life. God bless you all and have a happy Thanksgiving.

Thankful for these great organizations

Thankful for these great organizations

Thank you for all you do!

During this time of Thanksgiving, we have so much to be thankful for in our school district, community, state, and our great country. While we’ve had a couple of challenging years are community has and will continue to thrive. They are so many organizations and people that we are thankful for. There are just so many to name but here are just some of the ones that I happen to work closely with to help better meet the needs of our students, staff, schools, and community.

Citrus County Education Foundation and Shaunda Burdette and her teams for their tirelessly working to meet all the many needs of our students, families, teachers, and our schools.

Citrus County Blessings and Christina Reed, the leadership and BOD team, and the near 900 volunteers (yes that number is correct), including the Student Board Representatives and student volunteers that ensure our Citrus students’ bellies have food on the weekends, holidays, and summers.

Phil Royal Legacy Foundation and April Royal and her teams for the incredible initiatives they are constantly supporting for students. Including but not limited to the Phil Royal EMT program at the CRHS Academy of Health Careers, the student bike safety & helmet program, the anti-bullying & safe students initiatives, and so so much more.

Sun Coast Swim Team and their coaches not only for supporting competitive swimming in our community but also for supporting all our high school swimmers and swim teams by donating their time timing high school swim meets and supporting the high school teams and coaches.

Lifesouth Community Blood Center and the many donators who make sure there is blood supply in our local community and throughout the southeast. In addition, the Lifesouth Foundation who provides scholarships and resources to our local communities and students.

YMCA Citrus Memorial Health Foundation and director David Reed and the other amazing leaders and staff who continuously provide essential low-cost to no-cost services for our students and community. In addition, their partnering with the school system has led to so many direct and indirect benefits to our students and community.

United Way of Citrus County for helping support our students and families in our community and working with the many not-for-profit‘s to ensure they are supported and needs are being met.

Citrus Builders Academy, the board of directors, Harold Walker, and the Citrus County Builders Alliance for their incredible support of our new construction engineer programs and the incredible mobile workshop.

The list of other great organizations and volunteers goes on and on and we are grateful to all of them.

We also need to give a special thanks to the many many businesses and individuals that are supporting our organizations and students.

If you are able to support any of these or other organizations that directly or indirectly support our students please support them with financial gifts, prayers, and continual volunteering.

Thank you to all of them and you for continually making Citrus great!

Upward Bound awards are back!

Upward Bound awards are back!

After nearly 18 months of being paused due to the pandemic, this week the Ray Darling Rotary Upward Bound Awards ceremonies were back for elementary, middle, and high school. I was so grateful to be able to attend both the elementary and middle/high school awards.

For over 25 years now these quarterly awards now named for its founder Ray Darling are given to students at the elementary, middle, and high school level by their schools for making individual strides and accomplishments. Many students in our school system quietly make significant improvements in their academic and personal lives.  These accomplishments might go unrecognized if not for the Upward Bound Award.

Click here to learn more about Raymond “Ray” Darling

We are so grateful to the Citrus County Rotary Clubs and the Rotarians who support, sponsor and volunteer to make these awards and ceremonies possible for our Citrus students.  This quarter’s host was Central Citrus Rotary Club.

Special thanks to Citrus County Sheriff’s Sergeant Jon Holtzhouse who is one of the leaders of the CCSO School Resource Program for his great message to our middle and high school students.

Veteran’s Day 2021

James E. Kennedy, Sr.

James E. Kennedy, Sr. Pvt., US Army National Guard,147th AAA Detachment Operations, 1954.

Veteran’s Day 2021

“11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month”

Today on Veterans Day, we thank the many Veterans of our great country for the service and sacrifice made for our freedom.

Come to the Veteran’s Day Parade in Inverness on Tuesday (11th/11th/11th) at 10:00am and ending on the 11th hour.  This is one of our country’s largest Veteran’s Day Parades and is always well attended and involves many of our students and schools.

I want to pause and take a personal moment to thank just a few of the Veterans in my family for our freedom, some who has now passed and others still living;

  • James E. Kennedy, Sr. (Father) US Army National Guard, Korea
  • James E. Kennedy, Jr. (Brother) US Army
  • Frank Kennedy (Grandfather) US Army, WWI & WWII
  • Thomas Cobb (Father-in-Law) US Army, Vietnam
  • Earl Cobb (Grandfather-in-Law) US Army, WWII
  • Kenneth Mallette Sr (Uncle) US Army, Korea
  • Sue Sturgeon (Aunt) US Army, Vietnam
  • John Kennedy (Cousin) US Marines
  • Joseph Mallette (Cousin) US Army
  • Michael Mallette (Cousin) US Army
  • Don Mallette (Cousin) US Army
  • Henry Kenaston (Uncle) US Army

A few of the Veterans in my family. We have many more cousins and other relatives. I am so grateful for all there service,

The list of very close friends and extended family is even longer. Thank you for the great lives and freedoms we enjoy each and every day!

God Bless America!