Information is currency for democracy.                   - Thomas Jefferson

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Courage is the most important of all the virtues, because without courage you can't practice any other virtues consistently. You can't be consistently kind or fair or humane or generous, not without courage, because if you don't have it, sooner or later you will stop and say, "The threat is too much. The difficulty is ...too high. The challenge is too great. ~ Maya Angelou

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


So much for transparency ...

2010 Proposed Bond


Related Link:  More information here:  2009/10 - Proposed Bond

Related Link:  History regarding district bonds here


UPDATE:  May 27, 2010  --->

Quotes from Picayune article:  "Doesn't it kind of smell that there might be a problem out there if you have someone making a recommendation to the board where they might benefit financially from that recommendation?" - Clint Sayers

“I think that anyone who agrees to serve on a committee for the district should be willing to sign a conflict of interest statement so that we are not caught blindsided and the community is not caught off guard (by issues of possible conflict),” Sayers said. “There are reasons that we, as board members, have to disclose the fact if we do business with someone who does business with the district. There are needs for checks and balances.”

When asked by board member Ellen Balthazar where he thought the possible conflict of interest in the business partnership lay, Sayers responded, “ Doesn’t it kind of smell that there might be a problem out there if you have someone making a recommendation to the board where they might benefit financially from that recommendation?”

Board members Stone, Colleen Jones and Robert Durkee supported an investigation to see if the district needed to have a policy dictating possible conflict of interest procedures for committee volunteers.

Comments from Westlake Picayune regarding the EISD board meeting on May 25, 2010: 

First comment:  "At last evening's study session of the board of trustees, it was acknowledged that superintendent Wellman solicited 5k donations from community members to underwrite the cost of the bond survey. If that is the case, we are left wondering why David Perkins claimed to have personally shouldered the costs during his presentation. It seems obvious that the intent to fund this privately was nothing more than a strategy to keep the survey documents exempt from public disclosure. We also learned that Eanes board president Jim Strickland helped to write the survey questions. Why didn’t our district leaders come clean with these alliances prior to the school board election?"

Second Comment:  "Why wouldn’t Dr. Wellman fund the survey through the District? To avoid public records or a possible negative survey? Who else helped fund the survey? And why would a Superintendent request this type of thing?  Listen to some of the early study sessions in April when the survey was first brought up- see what Dr. Wellman has to say about it then and compare it to now.
Since the survey was done during an election it could be looked at as a push poll- a poll to get people to vote one way or the other. The only people who have talked about actually being polled have been people from the Eanes Elem and Cuernavaca areas- were other areas not polled?? If not, why these two areas??

UPDATE:  May 21, 2010  --->

1. First the superintendent appoints David Perkins (Chap Club Athletic Booster Club Board of Directors) to chair the “Community” Bond Advisory Committee which clears the way for him to review district information that he otherwise could not access … information that is hidden from the public.
2. Following the review, Mr. Perkins conducts a “phone survey” about the bond and claims that it is “private” thereby controlling the timing and extent of disclosure … all of this during a bond election. Now the public and even the elected officials are kept in the dark.
3. Finally, a ten minute Internet search (by KeepEanesInformed) turns up a business partnership between Perkins and WHS head coach Darren Allman. (Coach Concept, LLC created April 6, 2010 and phone survey conducted April 12, 2010)
4. Now we have Jim Strickland (EISD board president and sports promotion salesman) jumping to the defense of this whole plan (doesn’t he seem to CARE an awful lot?) … even kicking the one board member who dares to speak up for the public’s right to know.

There should be a clear distinction between an advisory committee and the governing board. When members of the bond advisory committee hold information, they hold power. When they intentionally hold information from board members, controlling the time and extent of release, that's a problem. During the May 10, 2010 meeting, EISD board members asked if the district could reimburse Mr. Perkins for the costs of the survey so that they could review all of the information. The answer was no. 

The EISD board of trustees should review the approach of other entities who have an effective and transparent process for selecting bond advisory committee members and then create policy to guide future selection.  The board should also require written conflict of interest disclosure when the Head Football Coach/Athletic Director opens a private business with a Chap Club booster club board member/Chair Bond Committee (or when any employee in a supervisory role or board member is involved in a business venture with booster club board members or agents of the district). 

Instead, the President of the Board of Trustees publicly slams the only board member who dared to speak up and defending an approach that keeps both the public and the board in the dark during the bond election cycle.  (Scroll down for more information about the CBAC and the phone survey.)


Update:  May 19, 2010: Westlake Picayune ---> Eanes eyes pared-down bond proposal

Faltering in the shadow of the axe for the upcoming bond after Monday’s discussion are $76.2 million in plans for new facilities – an elementary school on the western River Hills tract, the Eanes Elementary School renovation, the separate special education facility, the student activity center, the swim center and the facility to house dance, cheer and wrestling programs. With the exception of the special education facility, all of those facilities are now included in the district’s master plan.


Update:  May 18, 2010: Austin American-Statesman --->  Eanes ISD weigh cutting bond proposal

Don't miss the comments.

Excerpt:  Eanes school district officials say the district does not have the full results of the survey, which they said was paid for by David Perkins . Perkins, who led the district's community bond advisory committee, has said he supports an indoor athletic facility.

He did not return several calls for comment.

Perkins also recently formed a business with Westlake High School head football Coach Darren Allman.  Allman said their company is a coaches' clinic. "That survey and David's involvement with the survey and with the district and helping them get that done and all, that doesn't have anything to do with me or the coaches' clinic," Allman said. "It's a coincidence that the timing plays out like it does with his survey and when we decided to take this football clinic and run with it. ... But there is no relation between the two."


2010 PROPOSED BOND PROJECT - Document used during May 17, 2010 board meeting


Update, May 13, 2010:   What do David Perkins and Darren Allman have in common?


2009

- KeepEanesInformed requests information regarding the Community Bond Advisory Committee (CBAC) and the proposed bond.
- District superintendent Nola Wellman hires a a private attorney to work to withhold the information regarding the CBAC and the proposed bond from the public.   The Office of the Attorney General (OAG) accepts the district's argument, rules that the CBAC is "a part of the governmental body that created it" and allows the district to withhold public information regarding the CBAC and the proposed bond from the public.  The superintendent appoints David Perkins as Chair of the CBAC.


2010

- CBAC Chair David Perkins (appointed by Eanes ISD superintendent) presents to board (May 10, 2010) a phone survey regarding the proposed bond.  The presentation is in fact included on the school board meeting agenda.  However, Mr. Perkins informs the Board of Trustees that he alone controls the results of the survey.  He will decide when and if the public and the school board members an see the full the results. 
- Keep Eanes Informed requests a copy of the phone survey and any information related to the survey.
- Eanes administration responds that the results of the phone survey regarding the proposed bond are private and under the control of Mr. Perkins. So which is it?  Is Mr. Perkins an agent of the district as Chair of a committee that is"a part of the governmental body that created it" ... or simply a regular citizen who is taking political action? And how can it be that after Mr. Perkins is appointed by the Eanes ISD superintendent to chair the Community Bond Advisory Committee (CBAC) and after he is allowed to review district information regarding the proposed bond which he otherwise could have not have accessed, Mr. Perkin then conducts a phone survey about this very issue (the proposed bond), labels it privates, and then hides the results from the public and to a significant degree, the board of trustees as well? 

Keep reading ...

In fall 2009, Keep Eanes Informed requested public information related to the proposed bond.  Nola Wellman (Eanes ISD superintendent) hired Ellen Spalding a private attorney in Houston, Texas to hide the information from the public.  The district convinced the OAG that the members of the Community Bond Advisory Committee (CBAC) are not merely citizens. 

Quote from the OAG ruling dated December 2009:
"In this case, we understand the committee was appointed by the district Board of Trustees, and the district informs us that the committee consists of citizens and employees who provide advice and recommendations to the district on a potential bond election.  Based on the facts presented in the briefs concerning the function of the committee and its relationship with the district, we conclude that the committee is, for purposes of the Act, a part of the governmental body that created it."

However, it is important to note the board did not appoint the CBAC members as set forth in the OAG ruling. In fact, the board is having trouble accessing information from CBAC.  In fact, Keep Eanes Informed requested public information that would indicate that the board appointed the committee and the district responded that there were "no responsive documents."  However, there are documents that indicate that the district administration chose and appointed the board members. 

The superintendent appointed David Perkins as Chair of the Community Bond Advisory Board (CBAC). The charter of the CBAC, according to Eanes ISD, is to provide advice and recommendations to the Board of Trustees.  However, after Mr. Perkins was appointed by the Eanes ISD superintendent as the CBAC Chair and after he was privy to district information regarding the proposed bond which he otherwise could have not have accessed, Mr. Perkins conducted a phone survey about the proposed bond, the results of which he has chosen to keep from the public and to a significant degree, the board of trustees as well. Incredibly, the district administration and the attorneys support his position that the the phone survey (conducted by the CBAC Chair who has special access to district information) is PRIVATE.  Yes, the Eanes ISD administration and Mr. Perkins now claim that Mr. Perkins has the power to decide who is privy to the results of the phone survey as well as when and if to release the results to the elected school board members and the voting taxpayers.  And questions still swirl around regarding how Mr. Perkins was chosen and appointed to lead the CBAC committee, who actually initiated the phone survey, the validity of the statistical methods used, and the source of the funding for this survey. Here's one thing we know for sure:  The public remains in the dark.

As one community member stated "To me the question is less what the survey says, and more about what sort of administration or board would allow this to happen. He who controls the data controls the information." (Westlake Picayune article, May 13, 2010)

And to take it a step further:  He (or SHE) who controls the information controls the bond election.  Eanes ISD continues to hire private attorneys to fight transparency and battle the public's right to know.  Whether it's bond information and phone surveys at issue, travel expenses converted to salary, deleted voice mails, or documented routinely stamped as "drafts", or board members kept in the dark, or cherry-picked committee "Eanes Link" members, the results are the same.  The public is excluded from the process.  So much for transparency.  

Dianna Pharr, Keep Eanes Informed

Quote from  Westlake Picayune article, May 13, 2010:  “With the bond advisory committee not willing to share the entire results of the poll with the board and the community, they are not acting in good faith and above board. So much for transparency when they are hiding the results.”  - Clint Sayers, Eanes ISD board member


Public request for information and the district's response:

On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 1:47 PM, Dianna Pharr wrote:

The OAG ruled on December 16, 2009 in OR 2009-17815, based on the district's legal request to withhold public information related to the proposed bond, that the Community Bond Advisory Committee (CBAC) is, "for the purposes of the Act*, a part of the governmental body that created it." The OAG also wrote: "In this case, we understand the committee was appointed by the district Board of Trustees, and the district informs us that the committee consists of citizens and employees who provide advice and recommendations to the district on a potential bond election." Eanes ISD convinced the OAG that the members of the CBAC are agents of the district.
 
David Perkins was appointed as the chair of the CBAC.  He conducted a phone survey of Eanes ISD taxpayers regarding the proposed bond.

I request a copy of the documents used to create the phone survey and any and all documents related to that survey, including but not limited to the results of the survey.

Thank you,
Dianna Pharr

* Texas Public Information Act

 

On Wed, May 12, 2010 at 3:59 PM, OpenRecords OpenRecords <OpenRecords@eanesisd.net> wrote:
Dear Ms. Pharr,

The CBAC committee was not involved with a phone survey of Eanes ISD taxpayers. It is my understanding that Mr. Perkins conducted and paid for the survey in his personal capacity.

Except for the audio recording of the study session, the District does not have records responsive to your request. The audio recording will be posted to the District website soon.
 

To:  OpenRecords OpenRecords <OpenRecords@eanesisd.net>,Nola Wellman <nwellman@eanesisd.net>,trustees@eanesisd.net
Date:  Thu, May 13, 2010 at 3:22 PM
Subject: Re: TPIA


David Perkins is, as the district argued to the Office of the Attorney General (OAG), an agent of the district in his appointed role as Chair of the Community Bond Advisory Board (CBAC). The district argued his status as an "agent" of Eanes ISD when seeking an OAG ruling to withhold public documents related to the proposed bond from the rest of the Eanes ISD taxpayers. And further, according to the OAG ruling letter, the charter of the CBAC is to provide advice and recommendations to the Board of Trustees.

Quote from the OAG ruling dated December 2009:
"In this case, we understand the committee was appointed by the district Board of Trustees, and the district informs us that the committee consists of citizens and employees who provide advice and recommendations to the district on a potential bond election." 

So now the district's position is that Mr. Perkins is not an agent of Eanes ISD for the purpose of the phone survey related to the proposed bond even though he conducted the survey after he was appointed by the superintendent as the CBAC Chair and after he was privy to district information regarding the proposed bond which he otherwise could have not have accessed. And Mr. Perkins will now decide who is privy to the results of the phone survey and when and if to release the results to the elected school board members and the voting taxpayers?

Yes, I would like a copy of the May 10 board meeting audio please. Are you able to provide the audio by email? I would also like a copy of the Power Point presentation that Mr. Perkins presented at the board meeting. The May 10 school board agenda item is: Report on Community Research into Potential Bond Election.

Thank you,

Dianna Pharr
 


 

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