Tuesday, October 31, 2017

What is this message really about?





The LEA leadership endorsed the worst candidates for students.  


They are trying to fill the Board with the worst abusers of nepotism.  They are trying to create a 100% conflicted Board. They are trying to prop up a corrupt "machine" that was rejected last year. 


They are trying to rid the Board of any members without conflicts of interest.  They are trying to rid the Board of any members with children in the schools. 


They want a special interest group and people that don’t live in Lodi to steal this election.


Prepare your neighbors for what they have coming on Saturday.


Take pictures.  Document what is said to you.  Any efforts on behalf of candidates must be reported with ELEC.


And ask the LEA leadership two very important questions:  why wouldn't they negotiate and what percentage are they looking for?


It's time for everyone to work together and settle a fair contract asap

Jonathan Carafa has resigned from the Board.




Like Joe Licata, Jonathan Carafa voted for the $7.5M administration building knowing he would not be in Lodi to pay for it.





Click on link below:




Monday, October 30, 2017

Voters have the right to know what is going on with the Superintendent’s contract and the "machine" candidates...





Here is a short summary:


The “machine” wants the superintendent to get a $33,614 raise this year.


The “machine” wants the superintendent’s salary to go from $192,458 to $226,072.


The “machine” wants the superintendent to get a $271,543 payout at the time of retirement for unused days.  Everyone else is capped at $15,000.


The superintendent’s contract was supposed to be negotiated in June.


The superintendent wanted to choose his own negotiating team and allow members with conflicts of interest to participate.


Members without conflicts objected to rules being violated.


We are awaiting a decision from the School Ethics Commission.


Candidates Nancy Cardone, Joe Leto, and Donald Scorzetti have promised to deliver all of the above for the superintendent.  Don’t take my word.  Ask them yourselves. 


There is an orchestrated effort on behalf of the superintendent and the “machine” to feed stories to the papers about PARCC improvements in order to make the case that the superintendent deserves a $226,072 salary.  PARCC scores were available months ago.  A story appeared on the front page of the Record last week, the same day as our meeting.  There is a perception that the superintendent has influence over the papers and the timing of when things are printed.  It is clear to everyone that the superintendent is cherry picking performance data to build the case for his $33,614 raise.  The PARCC improvements are a big deal and a great story.  But there is a lot of other data that the superintendent would rather not discuss.


I haven’t come across one Lodi voter that supports giving the superintendent an 18% raise.  I haven’t come across one voter that thinks it’s alright for those with conflicts of interest to negotiate contracts.  I haven’t come across one voter that thinks it’s alright for someone to handpick who will negotiate their own contract.


Lodi can’t afford Cardone, Leto, and Scorzetti!