The Des Moines school board election was one of the most bitterly contested in Iowa this year. Eight candidates, including three incumbents, ran for three seats. One incumbent who was not up for re-election, Jonathan Narcisse, publicly supported a trio of challengers. The campaign was marred by anonymous fliers attacking Narcisse as Narcisse slammed some of his colleagues in print and on the radio.
The three incumbents were re-elected with relatively high turnout at 12.7 percent:
Ginny Strong, 8,017 votes
Dick Murphy, 7,863 votes
Jeanette Woods, 7,200 votes
Kittie Knauer, 6,979 votes
Steve Flood, 5,699 votes
Mike Pike, 5,504 votes
Kristine Crisman, 4,385 votes
Larry Barrett, 1,741 votes
The fourth-place candidate, Kittie Knauer, is a retired high school principal in the district and probably has a decent chance to win a seat if she tries again in the future. Speaking to the Des Moines Register, she did not rule that out.
Flood, Pike and Crisman were the three challengers backed by Narcisse:
Flood, who some observers thought had the best shot among the challengers to break through the status quo Tuesday, said the incumbents’ sweep is a loss to those school children who are less fortunate.
“I didn’t lose tonight,” he said. “The children of Des Moines that weren’t born into privilege lost tonight. The children of Des Moines that don’t have a voice lost tonight.”
Crisman, Flood and Pike said they did not think their affiliation with Narcisse hurt their chances at the polls.
“I didn’t run to get elected. I don’t have the ability to tell the lies you need to tell to get elected,” Flood said. “I ran to reveal the truth about what’s going on in our school district. That’s all Jonathan does every day.”
Crisman said she was disappointed by the results, which show “apparently people keep wanting to go with status quo,” which she said includes high schools that are “dropout factories.”
Narcisse has been an irritant to fellow school board members for two years, and by his own admission has “contributed to a toxic environment in ways.”
He gave it his best shot, and the incumbents won. Now Narcisse should work on repairing relationships during the coming year. (He is up for re-election in 2009.)
Board chairman Dick Murphy is not helping matters by putting a vote to censure Narcisse on the agenda for the school board’s first post-election meeting:
Specifically, the censure motion charges that:
– A publication tied to Narcisse, the Iowa Bystander, received advertising money from the school district, a conflict of interests.
– Narcisse did not review bills as required before he asked for an approval vote.
– He did not attend expulsion hearings, as board members must do.
– Narcisse alleged that the board violated open meetings laws with legally private sessions called to discuss Superintendent Nancy Sebring’s contract.
Sebring and Narcisse sparred earlier this year over comments he made about the district’s dropout rate.
Narcisse said Friday that he was not notified when it was his turn to review the bills and moved to approve payment. He said he did not solicit business for the Iowa Bystander, told members last fall that he had connections to the paper, and has since dissolved his financial interest in it.
Narcisse also said he was not notified of the expulsion hearings.
What constructive purpose does this censure motion serve? Murphy should withdraw it from the agenda. He is only exacerbating the tensions on the board and in the community.
I agree with former school board member Jon Neiderbach that censuring Narcisse is a waste of time and a distraction from work that needs the board’s attention.
After the jump I have posted an open letter from Neiderbach, which a friend forwarded to me.
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