On a frigid December day in the capital of Frankfort, Democrat Andy Beshear took the oath of office and announced he was on the verge of fulfilling several key campaign promises.
One of Beshear's first acts in office was to overhaul and appoint new members to the State Board of Education, swiftly replacing the 11 appointed by his predecessor, Republican Matt Bevin, who had a tense relationship with the state's educators.
"These members were not chosen based on any partisan affiliation, but based on their commitment to make our schools better. To put our children first," Beshear said in his inaugural address on Tuesday.
Beshear is the first governor to overhaul and reform the state Board of Education since the passage of the Kentucky Education Reform Act in 1990.
The new members appointed to the Board of Education include:
- Holly Bloodworth, Murray — Bloodworth is a former elementary school teacher who was named "Kentucky Teacher of the Year" in 2014. She's currently an instructor of elementary education at Murray State University.
- Patrice McCrary, Bowling Green — McCrary, whose name was misspelled in the executive order, recently retired after 26 years of teaching elementary school.
- Mike Bowling, Middlesboro — Bowling is a former state representative and attorney.
- Sharon Porter Robinson, Louisville — Porter Robinson is a former president of the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education and a former assistant U.S. education secretary under President Bill Clinton.
- Lu Young, Nicholasville — Young is a former Jessamine County Schools Superintendent who was named the "Kentucky School Superintendent Of The Year" in 2012.
- Cody Pauley Johnson, Pikeville
- Lee Todd, Lexington — Todd was the president of the University of Kentucky from 2001 to 2011. After that, he was on the school's faculty as an engineering professor until 2014.
- David Karem, Louisville — Karem was the head of Louisville's Waterfront Development Corporation until he retired earlier this year.
- Claire Batt, Lexington — Batt is an Intervention Teacher at Tates Creek Elementary in Lexington.
- Alvis Johnson, Harrodsburg — Johnson is a former high school teacher, athletic director and assistant principal, as well as formerly serving as the University of Kentucky's Assistant Athletic Director.
In response, the previous members of the Kentucky Board of Education filed a lawsuit against Beshear to challenge his executive order.
"We strongly feel that this action by the governor is of questionable legality and must be tested in the courts," said KBE member Dr. Gary Houchens in a statement. "Unlike other Kentucky government boards, the make-up of the KBE is governed by the Kentucky Education Reform Act, which provides a clear process for a new governor to appoint new members to the KBE on a staggered basis, every two years. Board members today are seeking to set aside the governor’s order and allow an orderly transition of board control over a two year period, as intended by KERA."
Teachers and educators played a major role throughout Inauguration Day, including as grand marshals of the parade. New Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman is a public school educator and will serve as the secretary of the education cabinet.
"Starting today, public education is a top priority in Kentucky," she said to cheers in her inaugural address. "That the voices of our classroom educators, the people on our front lines, will take a prominent role in shaping public policy."
In a statement, Kentucky Education Association President Eddie Campbell said the KEA supports Beshear's move to reconstitute the board.
"Under the previous Administration, board appointees were based more on political pedigree than on their experience and knowledge of educational issues," he wrote. "We have confidence that the Beshear Administration will make appointments based on merit, and choose board members who possess a foundational understanding of the challenges facing public education in the Commonwealth. The students of Kentucky deserve a board of education that works for the improvement of public education and not for partisan purposes."
In his speech, Beshear reiterated another campaign proposal, saying that the budget his administration submits next year to the legislature will include a $2,000 raise for teachers, which he has estimated will cost $84 million.
"Prioritizing our children also means prioritizing their teachers," he said. "If Kentucky is to compete nationally, not to mention with our neighbors, we need to pay our teachers a living wage."
Beshear also committed to signing an executive order on Thursday that would restore voting rights to "more than 100,000 men and women who have done wrong in the past that are doing right now." If he restores voting rights to people convicted of felonies who have served their sentences, it could reshape Kentucky's electorate. It would also overturn Bevin's overturning of a similar voting rights order issued by his predecessor Steve Beshear, Andy's father.