W.Va. School Board President, Vice President Resign

The president and vice president of the West Virginia Board of Education resigned Tuesday night, effective immediately.

The state Department of Education issued a release that included statements from departing President Michael Green and Vice President Lloyd Jackson.

Green said although he does not have a background in education, he felt his seven years on the board allowed him to “hold my own” in handling education issues. He said he leaves “with a heavy heart” and hopes Gov. Jim Justice and the legislature will make the best decisions for the state.

Jackson, who served on the board five years, said it’s apparent Justice wants to pursue a different course.

Michael Martirano, the West Virginia superintendent of schools, has previously announced he will step down at the end of the school year. The board hasn’t begun a search for his successor.

Last week, Justice announced three appointments to openings on the state Board of Education. They are to be sworn in at the next meeting.

They are Miller Hall, Barbara Whitecotton and Chuck Hatfield, all educators.

 

Justice said then that the state’s politicians and bureaucrats “have failed to listen to our teachers, so I appointed three educators with significant classroom experience.”

Morgantown Businessman Elected Head of W.Va. School Board

The West Virginia Board of Education has a new president in retired Morgantown businessman Mike Green, but his nomination and subsequent election Thursday came with a small spark of controversy.

Green, the board’s current Vice President, replaces former First Lady Gayle Manchin as the body’s leader. Manchin completed her second term as board president Thursday, holding the post since July 2013. Her nine year term as a member of the board expires in November.

Green will be joined at the head of the table by former state Sen. Lloyd Jackson who was elected Vice President and Tina Combs who was re-elected to her seat as Secretary.

All three officers received only one nay vote which came from Dr. William White of Bluefield. White, who caveated his no vote by saying he still intends to work with the team in full cooperation, said he could not vote for board leaders who were nominated after private discussions.

White said a select group of the board’s nine members were included in conversations about the nominees for the posts before the meeting. He said he was not interested in one of the positions, nor did he believe the outcomes would have been different had an open conversation taken place.

“It’s about transparency,” he said after the meeting. “All nine members’ voices should have been heard.”

White said his first recommendation for the new president was to create a nominating committee for future votes.

Exit mobile version