School board meetings have been combat zones since Dee Perry was prevented from becoming president. Her colleagues had understandable reasons for this, but it gave longstanding critics like Howard Hills a drum to beat. It also seems like Dr Viloria triggered his own tsunami of opposition with expansion plans that struck a lot of people as too ambitious, expensive, disruptive, and unnecessary. Did other factors give Hills and Morgan an advantage over the voters who felt that they would be poorly-suited for the role?
It is still unclear what the majority, led by Hills, wants aside from power. The power to set the agenda, for example, still doesn’t reveal much about their agenda.
Laid out so well, thank you for plotting this timeline for us, definitely makes me have a lot of questions.
Follow the timeline
Thank you for this convincing assessment.
School board meetings have been combat zones since Dee Perry was prevented from becoming president. Her colleagues had understandable reasons for this, but it gave longstanding critics like Howard Hills a drum to beat. It also seems like Dr Viloria triggered his own tsunami of opposition with expansion plans that struck a lot of people as too ambitious, expensive, disruptive, and unnecessary. Did other factors give Hills and Morgan an advantage over the voters who felt that they would be poorly-suited for the role?
It is still unclear what the majority, led by Hills, wants aside from power. The power to set the agenda, for example, still doesn’t reveal much about their agenda.
Thank you!
So well written, thank you!