Dear Friends,
My name is Debra Kerner and I am running for Harris County Department of Education Board of Trustees, At Large Position 5. Thank you for visiting my web site.
I truly believe that I am the best candidate for this position and if you check out this website and learn more about me you will see why and I know you will agree.
I bring excellence and experience in education to the table for a position that demands those qualities.
As a speech/language pathologist, I have dedicated my life to individuals with special needs. I manage Southwest Speech, a private practice in speech/language pathology, and work at a private non-profit school for children with Autism.
My passion is education, especially for children with special needs, and I am running for the Harris County Department of Education Board to help improve services to meet the education needs of ALL residents in our county.
For more than a century the Harris County Department of Education has been a non-profit tax assisted body. It is dedicated to helping our school districts advance and improve public education through a myriad of programs like Head Start, which I support.
The Department of Education works with the school districts and helps provide services so each district won’t have to spend more money for them.
I’m committed to saving money while we get the best we can for our schools and I promise to be unyielding in my efforts to improve our children’s education.
I’m asking for your help and hope you’ll support me, volunteer to work for my campaign, contribute to it and help me win this election.
Each moment worked, each dollar donated and each vote cast in support of my campaign is a prayer for our children’s interests and their education.
Please vote early or on November 4th.
Thank you for your support and your vote,
Debra Kerner
Kind words about Debra Kerner, Jim Henley and the HCDE from Charles Kuffner
[The HCDE] is a nonprofit tax-assisted organization dedicated to the equalization of educational opportunity and to the advancement of public schools. HCDE has been serving the county's public schools for 115 years. The organization impacts the educational community through visionary leadership, shared resources and innovative programs.
Basically, they administer federal Department of Education grants for various programs, and they have the power to levy a tiny tax to fund some other services. In short, not very exciting for most people.
"So why is this year unlike other years for the HCDE elections? Two words: Michael Wolfe, whose ongoing clown show has had the HCDE in the news more in the past year than they've likely been in their previous 114 years of existence combined. Wolfe, who could give Orlando Sanchez a run for the title of Least Hardest-Working County Official, managed to get a pair of his cronies elected in the GOP primary for the two seats that are up this year, knocking off a pair of longtime trustees (including HCDE President Ray Garcia) in the process. One of those cronies is Mike Riddle, husband of State Rep. Debbie "Pit of hell" Riddle; obviously, a great fit for an elected office that administers public education funds.
In doing so, Wolfe's gambit changed the nature of these two races. The Democratic candidates - former CD07 candidate Jim Henley, who recently retired after a long career as a champion debate coach at Lamar Middle School; and special education specialist Debby Kerner - are both well qualified for the positions, but in a race against two longtime incumbents, that would have been somewhat of a wash. I would have expected that kind of race to be of less interest, lost amid the other high-profile races and largely determined by Presidential coattails. But against a couple of unqualified, hostile to education Republican hacks who owe their spots on the ballot to Michael Wolfe, that's a different story. All you need is the money to do a couple of compare-the-candidates mail pieces, with a little of Wolfe's greatest hits thrown in, and you've got a compelling case for the Democrats."
Basically, they administer federal Department of Education grants for various programs, and they have the power to levy a tiny tax to fund some other services. In short, not very exciting for most people.
"So why is this year unlike other years for the HCDE elections? Two words: Michael Wolfe, whose ongoing clown show has had the HCDE in the news more in the past year than they've likely been in their previous 114 years of existence combined. Wolfe, who could give Orlando Sanchez a run for the title of Least Hardest-Working County Official, managed to get a pair of his cronies elected in the GOP primary for the two seats that are up this year, knocking off a pair of longtime trustees (including HCDE President Ray Garcia) in the process. One of those cronies is Mike Riddle, husband of State Rep. Debbie "Pit of hell" Riddle; obviously, a great fit for an elected office that administers public education funds.
In doing so, Wolfe's gambit changed the nature of these two races. The Democratic candidates - former CD07 candidate Jim Henley, who recently retired after a long career as a champion debate coach at Lamar Middle School; and special education specialist Debby Kerner - are both well qualified for the positions, but in a race against two longtime incumbents, that would have been somewhat of a wash. I would have expected that kind of race to be of less interest, lost amid the other high-profile races and largely determined by Presidential coattails. But against a couple of unqualified, hostile to education Republican hacks who owe their spots on the ballot to Michael Wolfe, that's a different story. All you need is the money to do a couple of compare-the-candidates mail pieces, with a little of Wolfe's greatest hits thrown in, and you've got a compelling case for the Democrats."