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37

www.CharlestonBrides.com

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www.MountPleasantBrides.com

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www.MountPleasantMagazine.com

F

or as long as most people

can remember, the Charleston County

School Board has been featured on the

front page of local newspapers for all

the wrong reasons. Its meetings have

been punctuated by petty arguments,

meaningless, meandering discussions,

vicious vendettas and unfounded accusations. In October,

less than a week before a new board was to be elected,

the old board forced the district’s longest-serving super-

intendent to resign, despite the district’s academic success

during her tenure.

The two newest members of the school board repre-

senting East Cooper want to change all that. Kate Darby

and Chris Staubes, both entering the political arena for the

first time, were elected to four-year

terms to the board on Nov. 4 and

were sworn in six days later.

“We want the front page news

concerning the school district to be

about academic achievement and

awards our students win, not about

fighting among school board mem-

bers,” said Darby, the director of administration at J. Henry

Stuhr funeral home. “The most important focus should be

on student achievement. That should be our goal.”

“The infighting was a distraction,” Staubes, an attorney,

added. “We want to bring stability to the school board.”

Though neither Darby nor Staubes has run for

elected office in the past, both have a vested interest in

and previous connections to the county school system.

Darby’s two sons are graduates of Wando High School,

and she has chaired the School Improvement Council at

Mount Pleasant Academy, Moultrie Middle and Wando.

She also was president of the PTA at Mount Pleasant

Academy and served on a committee tasked with com-

ing up with ways to solve the problem of overcrowded

East Cooper schools.

Staubes was the real estate attorney for the school dis-

trict for a decade, resigning from that position so he could

run for a seat on the board. He has three children in the

system: a 15-year-old at Academic Magnet High School,

a 13-year-old at Cario Middle School and a 9-year-old at

Pinckney Elementary School.

Darby and Staubes agree that the job description for

a school board member should not include managing the

day-to-day operations of the district. That responsibility

belongs to the superintendent, or, in the case of Charleston

County, the interim superintendent.

“The job of the board is to set policy and supervise the

superintendent. It isn’t to micromanage,” Staubes said.

“The board is a liaison between the public and the

superintendent,” he added, pointing out that he is already

fielding phone calls from various groups that want to

provide board members with information about their posi-

tions on issues related to education.

“Our role is to hold the superintendent accountable

and have oversight over the budget,”

Darby stated. “We’re not there to

micromanage.”

Much of the work of the board’s

nine members will be done in the

Policy, Strategic Education and Audit

and Finance committees. Darby is a

member of the Policy Committee,

while both Darby and Staubes serve on the Strategic Edu-

cation Committee.

Staubes also was elected by his fellow board members

to be vice chair. He meets with the chair, Cindy Bohn

Coats, and the superintendent to set the agenda for each

board meeting. He also will be responsible for handling

what in the past was one of the most contentious parts

of school board sessions: when the general public gets to

voice their opinion to their elected officials.

Staubes pointed out that the Charleston County

School District has many pressing needs, but the most

important are choosing a new superintendent and decid-

ing which schools will be built or expanded to serve the

needs of a sprawling district with 48,000 students. He and

Darby agreed that a nationwide search for a new leader is

appropriate, but neither ruled out the possibility of offer-

ing the job to someone who is already in the Lowcountry,

such as Interim Superintendent Michael Bobby, Chief

Academic Officer Lisa Herring or even McGinley.

Charleston

exce l l ence i s ou r s t anda rd

County

SCHOOL DIS

T

RICT

“The job of the board is to

set policy and supervise

the superintendent.”