
Keller ISD board accepts superintendent's resignation amid controversial district split proposal
Trustees held a special meeting Thursday morning to vote on accepting Tracy Johnson's resignation and approving the terms of an agreement with her replacement.
"This district is in utter chaos," said Trustee Joni Smith. "This community is in utter chaos. We are all hurting and it's not her that caused it. And so while I do not want to accept her resignation, I'm going to honor her request and I wish her the absolute best."
Interim Superintendent Cory Wilson, who previously served as assistant superintendent of education services, is now officially at the helm as the district navigates uncharted waters.
The board is considering a controversial proposal to divide the district in two. Several parents and community members at the meeting spoke out against that plan and against the decision to accept Johnson's resignation. They accused the board of pushing her out.
Johnson had told trustees at a January meeting that she didn't believe a split was right for the kids and she didn't want to be a part of it.
"I don't think Dr. Johnson wanted to go voluntarily, and it just breaks my heart because right now this is not what our district needed," said Trustee Chelsea Kelly, voicing her frustrations with the turmoil.
The trustees pushing for the proposal cite a $9 million budget deficit as a reason for the realignment. However, a report from a third-party consulting firm showed funding wouldn't really change for either of the new districts since the money follows students. The findings were presented at the Jan. 30 board meeting.
Now parents are demanding a cost report for the split and projections for expenditures in the new districts.
"I urge all affected individuals to demand transparency and financial accountability before any decisions are made," said one Keller resident during public comment. "Our students, educators and community deserve better."
During Thursday's meeting, the board did not mention the split proposal or when they planned to discuss the idea next.
"This is chaos and this is how our school board operates," said Laney Hawes, a parent to four Keller ISD students and co-founder of the nonprofit advocacy group Keller ISD Families for Public Education. "And this is how the board operates when they are committed to a political agenda rather than a community."
She doesn't have faith the board will be able to find a qualified permanent replacement for Johnson.
"No one is going to touch Keller with a 100-foot pole at this point," she said. "We're on our third superintendent in less than three years. We are embroiled in legal battles, political battles, embarrassment. No one wants to have a career in Keller ISD right now. Why would they do that to themselves?"
The district is currently facing multiple lawsuits.
One accuses trustees of violating the Texas Open Meetings Act with their private talks of splitting the district.
Another alleges the board's election rules violate the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
The Heritage HOA, representing a neighborhood in north Fort Worth, has also retained a law firm to fight the plan.
The Tarrant County District Attorney sent a letter last week, seeking guidance from the Texas Attorney General on whether a public election is needed to split the district or if school board trustees can make that decision on their own
Under Government Code section 402.042(c), the AG has up to 180 days to issue an opinion, but the AG can state it needs more time.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Handshake snub caps off heated District 4 candidate forum for Charlotte council
Candidates in the head-to-head contest for Charlotte City Council District 4 traded barbs on Tuesday over development, transparency and affordable housing. The Sarah Stevenson Tuesday Forum ended on sour terms when incumbent Renee Perkins Johnson didn't shake hands with challenger Wil Russell. They used their closing comments to defend their records and take final swipes at the other. Both focused on Russell's background as a construction manager for affordable housing. Whereas Russell touted his experience as a benefit to addressing the city's desperate housing needs, Johnson criticized him as standing to profit from a city leadership position. She also raised concern over Russell's delayed and missing campaign finance reports. The outcome of the September 9 primary election will determine who represents District 4 on city council for the next two years. The winner will not face a challenger in November's general election. This election marks a rematch of the heated 2023 primary in which Mayor Vi Lyles controversially endorsed Russell over Johnson, who's served alongside Lyles since 2019. Handshake: Why Johnson, Russell are at odds The forum's climactic ending saw Russell stand and extend his arm towards Johnson. She did not return the gesture. In the moments leading up to the exchange, Johnson used her closing comments to portray herself as a steadfast voice for her constituents, even if that means disrupting the status quo. She offered a contrasting image of Russell. 'He's a part of the system where his vote will be controllable. While he falls in line, I've been the one pushing back,' Johnson said. 'My opponent is backed by those same interests and developers who profit while our communities are being left behind and people are displaced.' Russell criticized Johnson's characterization, saying she talks about the need for more affordable housing while diminishing what he does for a living, he said. Russell questioned her record, too. He claimed 40% of her donations in the 2023 election campaign came from the development community. 'Transparency is important. You need to know who you're dealing with, and I don't have anything up my sleeves but armpits,' Russell said. Johnson attempted to rebut his statements but was cut off by moderators, who ended the forum. Rather than grabbing his hand, Johnson looked up at Russell and asked where his campaign reports were. Russell smiled, dropped his hand and turned away. 'I'm interviewing for a part-time job, and you're telling me I'm exploiting the community,' Russell told reporters after the forum. 'I think it's keeping it consistent with her character and the issue with professionalism and being open and honest. This is a campaign. There are going to be disagreements and contrasts, and we have to be professional enough to understand that.' Johnson told reporters she was caught off guard by Russell's closing statements and did not intend to snub his handshake. 'I am a professional. I would've shaken his hand, but if you noticed, I was shocked,' Johnson said. 'He talked about my campaign reports when his campaign reports aren't even viewable.' The Mecklenburg County Board of Elections website shows Russell has not yet filed his thirty-five day report, which was due on Aug. 5. A thirty-five day report shows campaign finance information 35 days before an election. Records also show Russell was a year-and-a-half late in filing a year-end finance report for his 2023 campaign, which he just filed this month. District 4 candidates on affordable housing needs Russell highlighted his experience building more than 500 affordable housing units in Charlotte. That's given him an insider understanding of the issue unlike others on council, he said. Developers often recoup construction prices through higher rent prices. Since rent on affordable housing is capped, Russell said developers have a hard time finding ways to finance these units. The city does a good job of building affordable multi- and single-family homes, Russell said, but he would like to see more investment in smaller-scale units. Those projects would cost less to create and can be built more quickly for families who need them. Johnson wants to provide more incentives to developers to help with construction costs, she said. She also wants to improve wages so people can afford to live in the city, she said. She had a hand in raising city employee minimum wage from $23 to $24 an hour this spring and wants to see more work done on that front. Though, she said the city is limited in how it can impact private employers' pay. Johnson proposed the city adopt higher procurement policy standards for organization Charlotte contracts with, which could include an expectation for higher employee wages. Solve the daily Crossword


The Hill
9 hours ago
- The Hill
House Republican calls for ‘action' from Johnson to end redistricting
Rep. Kevin Kiley (R-Calif.) called for 'action' from House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) amid a redistricting battle in his state. Johnson on Monday had gone after California Democrats' proposed House map and said he was taking measures to halt the new congressional lines. 'Democrats across the nation have played politics with redistricting for decades, and this is just the latest example. Republicans who are following state and federal laws will not be lectured by people who abused the system,' Johnson said on the social platform X. 'I have instructed the NRCC to use every measure and resource possible to fight the California Democrats' illegal power grab,' he continued. 'I will continue to lead efforts to defend our House Republican incumbents and grow our majority so that we can continue to deliver on our commonsense, America First agenda.' In response to Johnson's post, Kiley said, 'these are nice words but we need action.' 'You can stop Newsom's Redistricting Sham and save our taxpayers $250 million by bringing my mid-decade redistricting bill to the Floor,' he added in his Tuesday post on X. On Monday, California Democrats unveiled legislation to go ahead with their plan to combat a Republican redistricting proposal in Texas with new congressional maps in the Golden State. 'We decided as a delegation that we could not just stand there and allow [President] Trump to distort the next election, and continue to harm the people who we represent. And so we have worked to try and identify a map that is consistent with the goals that we believe in,' Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) said during a press conference.
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Best Crypto Investment Ideas According to CEO of $1.6T Asset Manager Franklin Templeton
Bitcoin (BTC) aside, the best investment in crypto is its 'picks and shovels,' according to the CEO of $1.6 trillion asset manager Franklin Templeton. Jenny Johnson, the third-generation leader of the manager, spoke at the SALT conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming on Tuesday, doubling down on what in her opinion will be the biggest use cases of blockchain technology and where investors should put their money. In her view, bitcoin functions as a 'fear currency' — a financial refuge for people in countries where governments can block access to funds or where national currencies lose value over time. But despite its appeal in those scenarios, she sees it as a distraction. Bitcoin, she argues, is the 'greatest distraction for one of the greatest disruptions that is coming to financial services.' That disruption, she said, lies in the underlying infrastructure — not in digital assets themselves, but in the systems that support them. That's where she believes capital should be focused. 'The picks and shovels are the baseline of the strong, layered apps,' Johnson said. 'I like the rails as a starting point,' she added, referring to blockchain networks. 'Then there are some great consumer apps that are coming out that I think are really exciting.' She also sees promise in the role of validators, the entities that maintain blockchain networks. For active investment managers, they could offer a new layer of transparency and are a 'game changer'. 'Just imagine seeing on public equity all the transactions that go in and out of that company and how much information that gives you,' she said. Johnson led the asset management firm into digital assets after taking over her family's company in 2020. Under her leadership, the firm has launched multiple crypto exchange-traded products and introduced the OnChain U.S. Government Market Fund, a tokenized investment vehicle. She expects financial products like mutual funds and ETFs to eventually move to blockchains, where they could operate more efficiently and at lower cost. But for now, regulation remains the 'biggest inhibitor' to that shift, she said. Part of the hesitation, she added, comes from the sheer number of digital assets likely to fail — a level of risk regulators aren't yet prepared to manage.