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School Board Candidates Debate How To Serve City Heights, SE San Diego

By Kyla Calvert
Logo for K P B S San Diego

Candidates for the San Diego Unified’s Board of Education outlined their visions for the school district at Knox Middle School Wednesday night.

Marne Foster and William Ponder are vying to replace Sheila Jackson as the board’s representative for Sub District E, which covers the southeastern region of the city, including Skyline, Paradise Hills, Encanto and parts of City Heights.

The two took audience questions for an hour and a half. Topics including charter schools, student busing, bullying and improving board members’ working relationship.

Foster is an administrator and instructor for the San Diego Community College District’s Continuing Education programs. And Ponder is a former teacher, college instructor and college administrator.

Despite the broad range of issues, Foster said she sees two critical issues she would focus on if elected.

“Student achievement is key,” she said, “making sure that every school is a quality school. Making sure that we close that achievement gap, while seeking funding and truly funding education in away that we have not done in so long.”

She touted her work targeting resources to serve students and returned many times through the evening to the theme of making decisions or supporting polices based on community input.

Topping Ponder’s list of concerns are the looming budget gap and the new phase of federally mandated reforms to close the achievement gap.

“Solving the fiscal issue – $122 million dollars,” he said. “This year we may be able to pay our bills but the next two or three years we’re not able to. Program improvement, we’re going into year three so that’s the second piece, because under No Child Left Behind the district has to focus specifically on interventions and programs to get us out of program improvement.”

Ponder pointed to his administrative experience as an indication that he knows how to bring unions to the negotiating table – one cost cutting measure San Diego’s teachers’ union has yet to agree to.

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