Kentucky Community and Technical College System
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Ky. College Gets New President

Fletcher appoints Fox to lead Education Cabinet

 

Community College Week
November 24, 2003

Ky. College Gets New President

Dr. Jay K. Box was recently tapped to be president of Hazard Community and Technical College in Hazard, Ky. Box most recently served as vice president of instruction for McLennan Community College in Texas. He received his associate's degree from Howard Community College in Big Spring, Texas, his bachelor's degree from Southwest Texas State University, his master's degree from Texas Tech University and his doctorate from Baylor University.

 

The Courier-Journal
November 21, 2003

Fletcher appoints Fox to lead Education Cabinet

LEXINGTON, Ky. — In his first cabinet appointment, Gov.-elect Ernie Fletcher tapped the former executive director of Kentucky's public television system to oversee the state Education Department and affiliated offices.

Virginia Fox, who helped launch Kentucky Educational Television in 1968 and who resigned as its executive director last December after 11 years, was named by Fletcher yesterday as his choice for secretary of the Education, Arts and Humanities Cabinet.

"Education is one of my highest priorities and it's most fitting, I think, to announce the secretary of education as the first announcement of cabinet secretaries," Fletcher said at a news conference at Northern Elementary School in Lexington, where he and Fox were surrounded by dozens of students. "As I've worked with Ginny Fox, I've just found her to be a tremendous leader, someone who has a great deal of intellect, a tremendous amount of innovation."

Wes Irvin, a spokesman for Fletcher, said there is no specific timetable for the announcement of other cabinet secretaries. "We want to take our time and make sure we get the best caliber and quality of folks around us as we can," Irvin said.

Fox, 64, changed her party affiliation from Democrat to Republican on Wednesday, according to the state Board of Elections. Irvin said that was Fox's personal choice.

Fletcher had earlier appointed Fox as leader of the transition team reviewing the education, arts and humanities cabinet and to his 15-member Blue Ribbon Commission studying the efficiency and organization of state government.

Fox said yesterday that because she knew Fletcher wanted her to consider the cabinet job, she has taken a hands-off role on the cabinet review and won't be involved in the reviewers' final report.

Fletcher formally asked her to become the secretary late last week, Fox said. She said the transition team is asking cabinet employees about the cabinet's mission, the roadblocks to achieving the mission and resources needed to achieve it.

The cabinet includes the nearly 700-employee Education Department, the Teachers' Retirement System, KET, the Kentucky Historical Society, the Department for Libraries and Archives and several smaller offices.

In the case of the Education Department, the education, arts, and humanities secretary oversees the agency. But state education policy is set by a governor-appointed board that hires the education commissioner.

Fletcher, the Republican congressman from the 6th District, was elected governor on Nov. 4, defeating Democrat Ben Chandler, the state's attorney general, by a 10-percentage point margin. He will be inaugurated Dec. 9.

At the news conference yesterday, Fletcher and Fox focused their comments on education. Asked whether he plans to spin off arts and humanities, Fletcher said the cabinet is still under review, but "at this point I suspect (arts and humanities) will remain a part of this cabinet."

Fox said she is waiting to see what the blue ribbon commission recommends for the cabinet. But she said as secretary she would call attention to the need for education from "womb to tomb."

"Providing seamless education and seamless learning opportunities is a very important discussion," Fox said. "It will not be solved in one day, one month or one year."

Sen. Lindy Casebier, R-Louisville, chairman of the Senate Education Committee, said he hoped the Education, Arts and Humanities Cabinet would remain intact "because arts and humanities are an integral part of the education of the total child."

During his campaign for governor, Fletcher said his education priority would be to make sure all students enter the third grade being able to read at that level. Fox said she looked forward to meeting that challenge and cited Northern Elementary, where more than 80 percent of the students read on grade level last year, as an example.

"This is a school where children are self-disciplined," Fox said. "They take responsibility for their own behavior and their own learning, with the guidance of expert teachers who have the resources in their classroom, right in the classroom, not up here in the principal's office, not in (the superintendent's) office."

Fletcher's education platform called for expansion of the state grant program for early childhood reading programs and for testing of first-graders' reading levels. And he pledged to review how much state money sent to school districts is used in the classroom.

Meantime, the state is facing an estimated $262million revenue shortfall in the current fiscal year, and departing Gov. Paul Patton said he won't order cuts to cover it before he leaves office. Fletcher has said he can balance the budget by making government more efficient and cutting waste while not raising taxes or cutting services, including education.

But some school officials have called on the state to provide more funding. The Council for Better Education, representing more than 160 school districts, has sued the General Assembly, arguing that the state has failed to adequately fund education.

Fayette County Schools Superintendent Ken James, who attended Fletcher's news conference, said state funding for education, as a percentage of the General Fund, has dropped from 48 percent to 41 percent in recent years. He said the local government's contribution to his system increased $2million from last school year to the current year, while the increase at the state level was $125,000.

James said his district is planning for a cut this year of between 2 percent and 5 percent of the more than $58million the state provides. A 5 percent cut would be about $2.9million.

Fox said her focus as secretary would be on early childhood reading and adult literacy. She said "the single most important determining factor" of early success in school is whether parents read to the child.

Asked if she would seek changes in the Kentucky Education Reform Act, Fox said, "We're looking at that and taking the best advice we can get." But she said that she's hearing that KERA "is done remarkably well."

KERA is the 1990 law that established high curriculum standards for students and an accompanying testing program.

Under Kentucky law, the state Board of Education, and not the cabinet secretary, sets state education policy. The board is appointed by the governor and approved by the General Assembly. The state board hires the education commissioner, who is responsible for ensuring that the Education Department carries out the policies established by the board.

Four of the 11 appointed members of the state board — Commissioner Gene Wilhoit and Council on Postsecondary Education President Tom Layzell also sit on the board because of the offices they hold — expire in April.