If we had a race for the worst state superintendent in the nation, there would be many contenders. One thinks immediately, for example, of Tony Bennett in Indiana or John White in Louisiana.
By worst, I mean someone who has done his best to destroy public education–which is a sacred trust in the hands of the chief state school officer–and to demoralize the teachers who do the daily work of teaching the kids.
One of the top contenders for that odious distinction is Tom Luna of Idaho. Idaho is a small state and it doesn’t usually get a lot of national attention, but Luna has thrust it into the forefront of the national movement to privatize public education.
He was elected with the help of contributions from technology companies. A brilliant investigative report in the Idaho-Stateman last year documented how he raised campaign contributions from the education technology industry and became their darling.
Not being an original thinker, he called his program “Students Come First,” like Joel Klein’s “Children First” and Michelle Rhee’s “Students First.”
Despite a shrinking budget, he bought a laptop for every student and mandated that every student had to take two online courses in order to graduate. A token of appreciation to all those corporations that helped pay for Mr. Luna’s election.
He led a campaign to eliminate collective bargaining and often refers to union members as “thugs.” His reforms, known as the Luna laws, impose merit pay, which has never worked anywhere. He does whatever he can think of to demoralize the teachers of Idaho.
Is he the worst in the nation? There are many other contenders. It’s a close call.
His proposals are up for a vote this year. We will see if the people of Idaho are ready to outsource their children and public schools to for-profit corporations.
[CORRECTION: LUNA IS NOT UP FOR RE-ELECTION UNTIL 2014; HIS PROPOSALS–KNOWN AS THE “STUDENTS COME FIRST” LAWS or PROPS 1, 2, 3–ARE ON THE BALLOT NOVEMBER 6].
A reader in Idaho sent the following information:
An interesting development in Idaho politics is that not a single Democrat supports the “Students Come First” bills, or Props 1,2,3 as they are now commonly referred to, but nearly every Republican does support them, even though many Republican voters don’t. A recent poll was taken that shows props 1,2,3 losing support among voters, the real question is whether that will lead to more Democratic legislators (85/105 Idaho legislators are Republicans). Another interesting development is that the “Vote yes” folks only raised less than half of what the “Vote no” folks did ($500,000 vs $1.3 million), and I’m not really sure why. I think part of it might be that the state is trying to pay very little for the laptops (I think we’re looking for laptops and maintenance for $309/unit) and no company has taken that, and I also think the state is trying to pay half the normal rate for online courses, so for-profit education has held off on contributions.

You mean Tony Bennett in Indiana, of course. You’ve been working too hard, Diane! 😉
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Yes, of course. Writing too much too fast.
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too much, too fast, without truly valid claims. You do not know Tom Luna.
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Austin- Sadly, we do. Hence the blog entry and comments.
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From what I’ve read about Tom Luna’s reforms in Idaho, they’ve been a good thing for the students. And aren’t the students what is really important to everyone on here?
Luna has given teachers $350 allowance to buy supplies, so they won’t have to use their own pocket money. The schools get new textbooks. And like it or not, computers in the classroom is a 21st century fact of life. These online classes that the students take help to gear them toward college. The college enrollment of Idaho students has been lower than most of the country and to give the kids an opportunity to take college courses in high school, gives them college credit and has increased college enrollment of Idaho students to 75%. He’s increased spending on education and by doing these things, educatioin will likely improve in Idaho.
Anyway, they couldn’t do any worse than they already are.
As far as collective bargaining goes. Let’s be realistic. Unions, collectie bargaining against a private company could put that company out of business if it doesn’t comply with the unions. When teachers’ unions strike, they are striking against their government, their fellow tax-payers, parents, and even themselves. Even Franklyn Roosevelt, a big progressive was against government employees having unions. He knew it would ultimately be a negative thing.
Teachers in Idaho have received higher pay without any involvement of the unions.
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Lyn,
A good thing for students? Luna has been damaging this system for over a decade with his philosophies (while my own were in Idaho schools). I did more than read about it; I lived through the horror. What is happening now is just more of the same “at a higher level.”
Our long-time chief economist quit his job after the governor and legislature ignored his budget predictions for the first time and created the “fiscal issues” that made the latest “reforms” necessary. Here’s what he had to say about our funding of education http://idahocfp.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Idaho-Public-School-Funding-1980-to-2013.pdf
$350 was pennies compared to the cuts we experienced after Senator Risch (then as acting governor) switched M&O funding to sales tax- just before the recession!
New books? Not in the schools around me!
College credit at taxpayer expense? Yeah, that’s a sure fired way to put public dollars in private on-line campaign contributors’ pockets. Hail the free-market. Pillage in the name of “quality education.” Where’s the assurance – the accountability?
“…increased college enrollment of Idaho students to 75%.” I don’t have a clue where you came up with that “fact.”
This state needs collective bargaining more than ever to help fight the one-party system that has bullied through these false reforms while completely ignoring the outcry from its citizens – this was not a union vs non-union fight. This was and is the voice of ordinary people being ignored. One party rule is the definition of fascism. Welcome to the real Idaho!
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But let me say something good about this state; it’s too beautiful a place to let it go. I hope we will see the people rise up and beat down the greed-driven privatization of the only institution that can give our children the chance they deserve – public education.
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You are clearly a racist, Tom Luna is the first Hispanic to ever be elected to a state administrative post, why continue to harass someone who has broken the cycle of poverty common to Hispanics in Idaho. You should be singing praises of a pioneer like Luna. Maybe his policy changes were a bit too agressive but he has learned and adjusted to better fit the needs of Idaho’s educational goals. We should elect more minorities in Idaho. Go Tom!
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This is a ridiculous comment. No one is aware of Tom Luna’s ethnic heritage outside of his home state. His policies kowtow to the tech corporations that funded his campaign. His “Luna laws” were rejected in every single county in Idaho because they were bad for education.
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Chuck, I’ve lived in Idaho for 23 years. I did not know that Luna was Hispanic; I thought he was Hawaiian. And as far as “breaking the cycle of poverty” here in Idaho; we have the largest number of minimum wage jobs of any state in the U.S., we are 49th in per capita income (we have several ultra-rich including Senator Risch who float us off the bottom), we are 49th in per-student spending and made some of the most severe cuts to education in the nation during the recession, over 63% of our schools state-wide are Title 1, and in my majority Hispanic community – 83% of our students are free & reduced lunch students and the lunch ladies would probably tell you it is more but many fail to apply.
Is this really what we want for America? Being as Mr. Luna was the head of the Council of Chief States School Officers and a Chief for Change, I can tell you that his Luna Laws are what we are moving towards as a nation if they are not stopped.
Idaho has been a testing ground…and there is more to come.
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More Luna-cy.(Sorry, couldn’t resist!)
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It’s great how easily punned the names of these LUNAtic Rheeformers are. Too bad our schools are in such a state of deKlein.
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I need some education…..
In our state, the Commissioner of Education is hired by the State Board of Education, which is composed of people appointed by the governor. The BOE members have a 4-year term, I believe, so that when a new governor is elected they remain on the board until their limit is up (or they resign their post). This is rotational, also, so that not everyone is replaced at the same time. This seems to be a checks-and-balance approach in our state.
However, when I read about what is happening to other states, I get the sense that many commissioners/superientendents are elected officials. This seems to be especially true with all of the non-sense that’s happening in some places (Louisiana, Idaho, Indiana, and I’m sure others). This leads me to believe that this craziness I’m reading about is driven more by politics (ALEC-connected, I’m sure) than real educators.
Am I correct in my assumptions? Can anyone provide some insight here?
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In CT, our appointed Education comissioner gets to appoint people with the title of Special Master to oversee “failing” districts. The Commissioner has no educational background, and the Special Master has been working without any kind of valid certification. Legislation was written just for him to make sure he gets the state teacher pension, though.
In some cities, like Bridgeport, the elected BOE was illegally replaced by an mayor-appointed one, and they brought in the infamous Paul Vallas.
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Idaho is one of only 14 states that elects its state superintendent of schools. Two of those other states do it as a non-partisan position…Not us here in Idaho. We have been a one party state. If the country wants to know what they will get if they follow our philosophies here in Idaho, just check out our “circumstances.” There is much I could tell you – here’s a bit http://www.equalvoiceforfamilies.org/idahoans-put-education-reform-on-the-ballot/
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Here in Wisconsin, we have an elected Superintendent of Public Instruction, Tony Evers, but he is clearly fearful of our ALEC owned governor and has began to support initiatives that are damaging to public schools and teacher education. Just a couple of examples are the forced implementation of TPA as well as an out of nowhere announcement of a new “experience based teacher licensure” program. Both of these seriously undermine our nationally respected University of Wisconsin System teacher education tradition.
So, even though we have an elected Superintendent, he is slipping into “accomplice” status by refusing to stand up to those in (as well as out of) our state who wish to destroy our public school and public university teacher education systems. The Superintendent just doesn’t have the power to stand up to a ruthless and vindictive governor. Wisconsin public teacher education is crashing… to the Right’s delight.
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Some state superintendents are appointed by the Governor, some by the state board of education, some are elected.
The privatization movement is driven by ALEC, which is powerful behind the scenes no matter how the superintendent is chosen.
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He’s pretty bad. My mother in law works in the Boise schools. They do not like him.
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“He led a campaign to eliminate collective bargaining and often refers to union members as “thugs.”” He uses the same demonizing vocabulary as Chris Christie, Mike Bloomberg, Scott Walker, Jindal, Kasich, etc., ad nauseam.
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He drinks from the same kool Aid and doesn’t have his own thoughts to save his life. He has never taught yet he is running our state’s education. The only reason he has a degree is it was a requirement to run. So he got his liberal arts degree just in time to get on the ballot. He ran a platform that stated Idaho schools are doing fine they just need a little work. Right after being elected suddenly we weren’t ok and massive reform needed to happen. I teach technology in a middle school in Idaho, I used to be proud to say I teach. He has turned my profession into a joke.
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Thanks for pointing out the lack of a degree. How could he have done the following without?
source: Wikipedia
Luna served on the Nampa School Board for seven years, three as chairman, and on the Idaho Achievement Standards Commission and Idaho Assessment and Accountability Commission. From 2003 to 2005 Luna worked for the U.S. Department of Education as an adviser to then-U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige. He is the owner and president of Scales Unlimited, Inc., an industrial truck scale company
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no degree necessary for these appointments! On line degree. Check out the edit history on wikipedia as state staff tried to edit the picture there.
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Mark,
Weights and measures expert Luna is a politician. He was a political appointee to all of the positions cited except the Nampa school board. He is a political operative in Idaho’s dominant political party. He successfully pushed his ALEC designed bills through a legislature dominated by his political party. He means to privatize public education and is doing it by declaring war on Idaho’s teachers – or thugs, as he refers to them and their representatives.
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In Oklahoma we have Janet Baressi, a DENTIST who is now the State Supt. of Public Education. After she was elected, and at her first State Board of Ed. meeting, she appointed her campaign staff to the top positions in the SDE. None of theses appointees had any education work experience. The woman she appointed to be the Legislative Liaison was pregnant and would be on maternity leave during the majority of the legislative session. She also gave them all pay raises over the previous persons in these positions. In two years all of these appointees have been fired or quit. When State Board members objected or complained, the Governor replaced them with a hand picked State Board to rubber stamp the superintendent’s decisions. Baressi has always been a proponent of charter schools and virtual education. She has withheld large sums of the public school budget to fund initiatives in these arenas. While education funding has been cut to levels from more than 5 years ago, our student load has increased by over 20,000. Our dentist has reached a point of incompetence and abrasiveness, that even her hand picked State Board voted unanimously against implementing her incredibly flawed A-F grading system. She then got in the face of one of the Board members after the meeting, pointing her finger in her face for daring to ask why information had not been provided in a timely manner. Baressi has taken funds given to the SDE for specific purposes such as NBCT scholarships and stipends, then used it to fund her reform objectives. She has told schools to use monies earmarked for textbooks to pay other expenses such as salaries. Our public education system is simultaneously being starved for resources while being drowned with testing, converting to Common Core, and the new mandated teacher evaluations. We are doing this while battling continuing efforts to defund the Public education system through tax cuts supported by Baressi. Our dentist/State Supt, has an agenda and it is not at all to promote the Public education system. Instead of fighting for the students, public education, and public school employees, she is actively engaged in sending monies out of State to virtual schools, private for profit charter schools, and testing corporations. She has lost over 40% of the Staff at the SDE. It is a revolving door of incompetents who are in way over their heads. (There are some exceptions such as the curriculum directors who for the most part are superb) The rest of the dept is geared more towards getting Baressi reelected and pushing the privatization agenda. Therefore I nominate Janet Baressi, for the position as the “Worst State Superintendent in the Nation”
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Fred, I was going to nominate Dr. Barresi, our dentist-turned-Superintendent. Thanks! Don’t forget her blatant violation of FERPA rights! She published the names, personal information, and IEP disabilities of students who did not earn diplomas because of End-of-Instruction test scores. The only way to get a hearing before the State Board was to waive FERPA rights. But no one expected to go to the OSDE website and see all that information. OSDE still maintains that was permissible. I second your nomination!
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Claudia, how could I forget that? Wow… For those who are not familiar, The OK SDE was forced by public outcry to institute an appeals process to allow some of the 2000 students who were denied a HS Diploma for not passing the required number of End of Instruction tests to graduate HS. This despite meeting all the other requirements. These students passed all the classes, garnered all the mandatory credits, and met the attendance minimums. So approx 86 Students appealed the decision. They had to sign a waiver so their personal information could be discussed by the appeals committee. The Oklahoma SDE took the liberty of creating a webpage and PUBLISHING all the personal info about each student, including transcripts and IEP’s. The students HAD to sign the waiver in order to appeal. Which is the part that may be illegal. You should not have to waive your rights to gain your right to appeal. I would bet that there are lawsuits in the works over this fiasco, and once again Oklahoma will be spending education dollars defending Baressi’s misconduct instead of putting it to use in the classroom.
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It seems there is no love lost between Tom Luna and Idaho’s Secretary of State, Ben Ysursa.
Idaho secretary of state sues education reform group for donor info
BOISE — Idaho Secretary of State Ben Ysursa filed a lawsuit late Monday in state court to force disclosure of donors who contributed to a nonprofit supporting public schools chief Tom Luna’s education overhaul.
http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2012/10/idaho_secretary_of_state_sues.html
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Washington’s State Supe is elected. At least in recent years, ours have all been educators so far. They’ve not been fabulous, but they’ve done less harm than many others.
Arizona’s supes also elected, and they haven’t had an educator in that position – or a good State Supe – since C. Dianne Bishop back in the 80’s/90’s. Instead it’s been a progression of right-wing unqualified persons who either want to destroy public ed (Lisa Graham-Keegan – who brought in the charters) or racists like Tom Horne (now the Attorney General) who were merely looking to move up the political ladder. Latest incarnation is John Huppenthal – also an idiot and non-educator. Sad to see the state of education in Arizona these days. I am a product of Arizona’s public schools (elementary – college) and feel that I had a great public education. In fact, when I started teaching up here in Washington, I was appalled that so many things I had taken for granted in Arizona back then were not present in my own school district – like an art room and true art teacher, PE 3 times a week and music 2 times a week – and a well-stocked, well-supported library. Now I hear regularly from some AZ friends I went to school with about how things have changed, how the charters recruit the high scoring students from the public schools, and most recently, about how the rich people can now get public funding to send their child to a private school. I am grateful that, thus far, Washington State has been spared some of what the other states have gone through. We have our issues, but in comparison to other places, I’d rather have our issues. Here’s hoping I-1240 goes down so that we can focus on what we need to rather than deal with the addition of charter schools to the mix.
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This was not a tough assignment.
Here is the list pulled from the Chiefs for Change:
Janet Barresi, Oklahoma State Superintendent of Public Instruction
Tony Bennett, Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction & Chair of Chiefs for Change
Stephen Bowen, Maine Commissioner of Education
Chris Cerf, New Jersey Commissioner of Education
Deborah A. Gist, Rhode Island Commissioner of Elementary and Secondary Education
Kevin Huffman, Tennessee Commissioner of Education
Paul Pastorek, Former Louisiana State Superintendent of Education & Member Emeritus
Gerard Robinson, Former Florida Commissioner of Education & Member Emeritus
Hanna Skandera, New Mexico Public Education Department Secretary-
Eric Smith, Former Florida Commissioner of Education & Member Emeritus
John White, Louisiana State Superintendent of Education
And here is the list of Council of Chief State School Officers
President Thomas R. Luna, Idaho
President-elect Mitchell Chester, Massachusetts
Past President Christopher Koch, Illinois
June Atkinson, North Carolina
Tony Bennett, Indiana
Michael P. Flanagan, Michigan
Terry Holiday, Kentucky
Patricia Wright, Virginia
Larry Shumway, Utah
And there you have it. Worst state sell out superintendents
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Do note, Bennett makes both lists. Perhaps this is why no one can get an answer from the IDOE. Between being a member of every faux-reform group and fundraising in New York and in Florida, he doesn’t have time to do his own job.
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Dr. John King in New York is a “charter school king”, and he is hooked at the hip to Arne Duncan.I guess he is not on the “First Worse” list, but he could be on the “Second Worst” List” because he certainly does not support public education.He hired his assistant from ReForm Ed, a privatizer group.She has a bachelors in Political Science and is a designer of our teacher evaluation regylations..
The Chancellor of the Regents is a dance teacher with her own studio. Only one other Regent has been a real teacher. We do have a Regent who still teaches a college Chemistry course. The others arealso nice people who make important decisions ( that they are told to make) and like being called “Regents.
I thought that if you are the “State Ed ” employee that, your job is to be “for the public schools.” Here it looks as though they all want to go to Washington D.C. with the Governor in 2016. ( We have a lot of wishful thinking in our “Emperor” State.
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Diane – Take it from us in Idaho, Tom Luna is indeed the worst school superintendent in the nation, for all the reasons you have outlined above. Would love you to come speak here some time on what good education reform could look like! Penny in Boise
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May I add one more please? Nevada State Superintendent James Guthrie. Nevada citizens at one time elected our superintendent. It is now a position appointed by our (anti-teacher, anti-public education) govenor Brian Sandoval. Shortly after being appointed by Sandoval, Mr. Guthrie wrote a letter to the news paper titled
“A dozen empirically verified things to know about public school teachers.” Following is the link for those interested in reading. More to follow.
http://www.lvrj.com/opinion/a-dozen-empirically-verified-things-to-know-about-public-school-teachers-149408755.html
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While I read this blog everyday (it’s addicting!!) I have been quiet too long, as have my colleagues in Nevada (especially Clark County School District – the 5th largest in the nation) Mr. Guthrie’s goals for education in NV:
Among his goals for Nevada:
– Doubling the number of charter schools in the short term, from about 30 to 60, with the aim of having at least 120 in the not-too-distant future.
– Instituting vouchers and a “parent trigger” law to give Nevada families the authority to reboot failing schools.
– Shutting down lousy campuses and letting charter schools move into those buildings.
– Scaling back the state’s unwieldy education bureaucracy, including eliminating the Commission on Professional Standards in Education, the union-stacked outfit that sets protectionist teacher licensing standards. In fact, he wants to do away with teacher licensing altogether to better allow professionals and scholars to transition into teaching careers.
“You do not learn how to teach in an education school,” he said.
– He wants to weed out the worst teachers and provide significant pay raises to the best instructors. He envisions a system in which the highest-performing teachers – about 10 percent of the total – are recognized as “master teachers” and paid salaries equivalent to principals and administrators, into six figures.
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One more empirically verified fact (this one for real):
Guthrie is currently the Senior Fellow and Director of Education Policy Studies at the George W. Bush Institute.
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Tom Luna wanted to run for the highest educational office in the the state but he found out it required a Bachelors Degree. So he took online courses getting a degree in “Weights and Measures.” This qualifies him to pump gas, really, look at the seal on the gas pump next time. He has no experience in public education. His children were home-schooled or sent to a private religious school.
He went to Florida and Jeb Bush gave him an ALEC written law and he thought that the good “Rs” of Idaho would just roll over for him. Turns out they respect teachers and care about their kid’s education.
He just signed a $22.5 million per year contract with HP to give every 14yo in the state a $300 computer. He has budgeted $2.5 million. I know the anti-tax citizens of Idaho will not want their taxes to be raised so the extra 20 million will have to come from the education budget and then other state services.
This is just the first installment of why Tom Luna is the worst Superintendent of Education in the country.
Do you want to fold now or raise me?
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Diane,
I have long enjoyed your writing and take on the state of public education in America. What Luna is doing to Idaho schools is not something many if any educators or academic scholars would support. I am reminded constantly about the constitutional mandate to provide a “thorough and uniform public school system” and wonder if Luna’s Student’s Come First legislation will pass the constitutional test. Luna touts the idea of online learning as a leveling of the playing field for students in the far reaching parts of rural Idaho, enabling access to advanced or specialized curriculum’s not currently available in their home school. While I agree that online learning opens up access to a plethora of new classes, I don’t buy the idea that learning in an online environment is “thorough and uniform” when compared to learning in a face to face environment. Is it possible that the student who attends an AP Calculus class face to face will do better than a student who receives instruction via the interweb? If this is the case, then how can we say that we are providing a “thorough and uniform public school education?”
Thank you Diane for shining a brighter light on Tom Luna and the state of education in Idaho.
Tim
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Janet Barresi should stay at the top of the list……not just because it is alphabetical.
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