Pubdate: Thu, 16 May 2002
Source: Hartselle Enquirer, The (AL)
Copyright: 2002 Hartselle Enquirer
Contact:  http://www.hartselleenquirer.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1884
Author: John Stephenson, Lee Weinman, Allen Stoner Poll shows

COMMUNITY TREND

Editor,

In response to Councilmen Jones, Carter and Stoner calling for Dr. Hartsell 
to resign. Have Jones, Carter and Stoner seen the Enquirer's online poll? 
Close to 90 percent want Dr. Hartsell not to resign. Over 80 percent 
disagreed with the council's handling of the school controversy.

Some people have compared Jones, Carter and Stoner to Larry, Curley and 
Moe. I personally think that is an insult to the Stooges.

John Stephenson

Hartselle

School Board Doing Good Job

Editor,

I have held the Hartselle School System up as and example to my community 
leaders numerous times. The Hartselle system has put it all together. They 
have excellent academic credentials, recognized sporting programs for all 
age levels and sexes, highly regarded technical programs and a community 
that has supported the programs since the days of J. C. Pettey. Hartselle 
and its school system have for years prepare their students for continued 
education or to become an immediate productive member of society.

 From my distance and only outside reading in, the current City Council 
appears to want to micromanage the city's support systems. Before the 
school system trauma it was the utilities board. The reports read in the 
Hartselle Enquirer lead in the same direction.

Both those boards were made independent and appointed for a reason. That 
reason is so that they would not have to be concerned with their own 
political agenda or that of the current city government. Boards should 
focus on the task assigned to them without worrying about political 
repercussions for making a hard decision. If the citizens allow the council 
to put a member of the council on the board or decide to elect a school 
board, the focus now becomes, "what do I have to do to be reelected," not 
"this was a hard and unpopular decision, but it was the right one."

Dr. Hartsell and the school board made the correct decision regarding the 
two students that passed out. The only people needed to be involved were 
the students, their parents, medical personnel, and school administrators 
if the students broke school rules or there was a danger to other students.

I am in agreement with the council pressing the school board for clear and 
appropriate policies and procedures regarding drugs and emergency 
situations. That's not micromanagement. That's voicing general concern and 
an expectation for the board to act accordingly. I am also in agreement 
with members of the council that wanted to call a "no confidence vote," but 
question the body the vote should be applied to.

Lee Weinman

Gardendale

Editor's note: Due to the overwhelming number of letters to the Editor 
received this week, space limitations prevented the Enquirer from 
publishing all the letters. The remainder of the letters will be published 
next week.

Councilman Defends Position

Editor,

My name is Allen Stoner. I am a city councilman for Hartselle, citizen of 
Hartselle, and a parent of two children, one of whom is already a student 
in the Hartselle school system and another who will be entering the 
Hartselle school system in August 2002. My mother's family has resided in 
the Hartselle area since the founding of this city in the late 1800s.

My father, Richard Stoner, served on the local school board in Hartselle 
during the 1960s, while it was still a part of the Morgan County school 
system. He was chairman of the school board when Hartselle made the 
difficult and controversial decision to separate from the county school 
system in the 1970s. I am certainly proud of my family heritage in 
Hartselle and honored to stand on their shoulders in my efforts to make a 
contribution to Hartselle's progress. I also happen to love this town and 
am not afraid to question its most "sacred cow," particularly when I 
sincerely believe it will result in positive change for the administration 
of the school system.

In regard to the current debate about our school system I have considered 
every step I have taken with careful thought and prayer. Unlike others in 
this city who think that every disagreement is "negative" and every 
argument "strife", there are many times when open discussion is good. That 
is called the democratic process - open and free debate about the issues 
that affect our lives.

Referring to our current debate as "war" is an overstatement. Asking 
questions about who, what, where, when, how and why is not creating strife 
or being negative, it is called seeking the truth

There are many in this city who want to keep Hartselle's debates "in the 
family" and away from the eyes of the public. Too many Southern stories 
have been written about dirty little family secrets that eventually destroy 
the family from within because no one wants to discuss the problem openly 
and fix it. The same thing is happening in Hartselle today.

The dirty little secret? The collapse of two students at Hartselle High 
School and the manner in which the superintendent, principal/athletic 
director, and a well-known athletic coach handled it. These are the facts: 
a positive drug test by a student athlete, the suppression of that positive 
drug test by the school superintendent by telling the public one thing and 
the mayor another; the failure to take any steps to punish (or help) the 
student/athlete; and the refusal (or failure) of four school board members 
(Tom McHugh, Kathy Goodwin, Joe Berry, and Susan Puckett) to see any 
problem worthy of their investigation into any of this. How to fix it, when 
private efforts are not successful? That good old American democratic 
process - open discussion and public debate.

The only real victim in this debate has been the "truth." I know what Mayor 
Knight, Councilman Carter, Councilman Jones, and I have done during this 
whole debate - an honest investigation and search for the truth. I am a 
firm believer that knowing the truth will set you free (and not just in 
spiritual matters).

Dr. Hartsell did not tell the truth about the positive drug test and 
everybody knows it but nobody wants to talk about it openly and fix the 
problem because they do not want to be accused of causing strife or being 
negative about the school system. (See the children's story, The Emperor's 
New Clothes) The same can be said about the appearance of unequal 
enforcement of the school drug policy and the appearance of a complete and 
utter failure by the four school board members to diligently investigate 
any of the above questions until after an open discussion and public debate 
(not war) brought the issue to a head.

As the superintendent of the school system Dr. Lee Hartsell is head of the 
school system, but he works at the pleasure of the school board. It is not 
any different than a corporation, where there is a president and a board of 
directors. In a corporation the president runs the daily operations and the 
board of directors sets policy and makes sure the president is doing his 
job effectively. The same applies to the Hartselle school system - Dr. 
Hartsell oversees the daily operations and the school board sets policy and 
oversees the superintendent. Since the school board hires the 
superintendent he is their responsibility.

If the board is unhappy with the superintendent, they can rightfully demand 
that he account for his actions. Since the city council appoints the school 
board members they are our responsibility. If the council is unhappy with 
the school board, the council can rightfully demand that the board members 
account for their actions (or lack thereof.)

For those of you who will immediately remind me that the school board is 
independent and beyond the control of the city council I would respectfully 
remind you that these school board members are appointed by elected 
officials (your city council) who place great trust in the persons they 
appoint. The boards that carry the greatest weight and bear the most 
responsibility/controversy are the Hartselle City School Board and the 
Hartselle Utilities Board. When we city council members are dissatisfied 
with the actions/inactions of these boards we, as elected officials, have a 
responsibility and obligation to ask who, what, where, when, how and why.

If you, the citizens of Hartselle, are dissatisfied with this arrangement, 
then you can either elect city council members who will never question the 
school system (even when the truth screams for someone to shine the light 
on it) or you can ... elect your school board members and forever remove 
them from any "pressure" by the city council. By electing school board 
members you solve all of the above problems and make the board members 
answerable only to the public (that means you.) I am personally opposed to 
an elected school board system because I still believe that an appointed 
school board is the best way to ensure that the best interests of the 
school children are always the primary goal of our school system. How to 
avoid this? By not forgetting that citizens in a free society will abandon 
the appointment system in favor of an elected system, when they believe 
appointed school board members no longer listen to their concerns or are 
otherwise not answerable to the public.

To put it more bluntly: when citizens get that bad feeling that the fix is 
in, the truth is being suppressed, and their intelligence is being insulted 
by a school superintendent and "appointed" school board, whether these 
perceptions are real or not.

Finally, I should do a little house keeping before I close this, my very 
first letter to the editor.

I did not ask for the resignation of school board chairwoman Susan Puckett 
or any other board member. Even though I have only been in politics for 18 
months I guess it was inevitable that I would eventually claim I had been 
misquoted. I did state, however, that Dr. Hartsell ought to consider 
retirement because I questioned his continued effectiveness (but then I 
have made suggestions to other people in the past and they ignored those, 
too). I still want to know what Coach William Booth knew and when he knew 
it concerning the positive drug test, when he came to a council work 
session on March 25, with the baseball team in tow and demanded an apology 
from us. Contrary to one recent opinion writer my skin is not so thin to 
take criticism, but I am irritated when an entire city council is forced to 
listen and watch the currently-popular Booth pound the podium and lecture 
the council without being able to respond with the truth due to laws 
governing juveniles and student confidentiality. What did he know and when 
did he know it? That question just continues to nag me.

Allen Stoner

Hartselle
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MAP posted-by: Beth