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Stan, I think the first order of business is to get a solid local primary attorney in place, and then to look at their experience and skill set to see what specialized legal services we would anticipate needing from time to time beyond that skill set. We would then make appropriate arrangements as needed to cover those, and cost factors would be a consideration, but so would theiir ability to handle those specialized areas. I would be open to the most cost effective arrangement to obtain competent backup for those areas where the primary attorney's skill set may be lacking.

The Craven County School Board, for instance, has a local primary attorney whose policy viewpoints are in sync with the community and the board majority. The main area they farm out to a specialized firm is personnel disputes, and that is sent to Tharrington Smith, and occaisionally other matters may also be given to them to handle. Our schools in Beaufort County seem to have fewer of those personnel disputes than larger Craven County.
Commented: Friday, October 31st, 2025 @ 9:49 am By: Steven P. Rader
You are so right CT.

The great irony is that the Administration /School Board took the business from me, and gave it to a National Company for much more tax payer money; the same National Company that we took the business from during the tenure when Superintendent Don Phipps adroitly managed the Schools, simply because they were not getting the job done; the site's overall performance was poor. In the greatest of all ironies, the site, now managed by the overpaid National Company, eventually went downhill in fundamental performance, as determined by SNI months later when we monitored the platform, especially in the all important ADA puzzle piece of compliance, which is crucial for a government funded site.

This one bold stroke alone fiercely proved to me that the Administration /School Board was, and still is poorly managed.

As a tax paying citizen and a county commissioner representing all Beaufort County taxpayers, I would love to know just how much the school board spends on all informational platform technology in terms of their digital interface with the public at large, teachers, students and parents.

The site we gave them could do it all. We are local, and were much less expensive, and have proved to be more capable.

Because I am a proven Conservative, I have been banished from bidding any projects for Beaufort County Schools. In the past I was told that needed to neglect my services by the administration that they 'did not wish to anger' the incredibly corrupt, and now discredited "Black Lives Matter."

This mindset is our current administration of the Beaufort County Schools.
Commented: Friday, October 31st, 2025 @ 9:40 am By: Stan Deatherage
Stan, I think some heavy politics are involved in the school board taking contracts away from prominent Beaufort County Republicans and giving them for higher bids to competitors out of county. As I recall, they took the website contract away from your company and gave it to an out of state company which wanted a lot more money. Then they took away the school grounds contract from a company owned by the finance chairman of the county GOP and gave it, for more money, to a company from Pitt County. I suspect there are more like that but those are just the ones I have heard of. It all looks like political game playing against local Republicans to me.
Commented: Thursday, October 30th, 2025 @ 9:34 pm By: Concerned Taxpayer
Steve: When the Beaufort County Schools unwisely sued the Beaufort County Commissioners for elaborate funding, and eventually lost the case in NC Superior Court, the commissioners hired competent outside counsel without having outside counsel on retainer, thereby saving money.

This was a big, precedent setting case. Shouldn't the Schools do the same, and hire competent local counsel that can do more than sit like a lump at government meetings, and offering little else of value.

We never had that problem when we hired Billy Mayo as the county attorney back in my early days as a county commissioner.

Steve: Make sure they hire competent local counsel.
Commented: Thursday, October 30th, 2025 @ 7:13 pm By: Stan Deatherage
What also needs to be recognized are the significant changes in policy that were accomplished at the last school board meeting. The board unanimously adopted my proposal to amend our curriculum policy to prohibit the inclusion of the woke DEI ideology in our curriculum. My motion to remove "gender identity" and "sexual preference" as being part of "discrimination based on sex" both places it previously appeared in our policies was also passed unanimously. Now our Title IX policies are back to reflecting the way Congress wrote them, to protect women, not other groups whose interests are often contrary to those of women.

Success on issues like those reflects talking to and working with other board members. Some of them may not agree with me on every issue, but we agree on some issues, and by keeping open lines of communication, instead of throwing grenades, we can move forward on constructive policy that reflects the viewpoints of our citizens in Beaufort County.

On the issue of the school board attorney, there were two separate groups talking among themselves on trying to get a local attorney. When Daniel Hudson was the first to bring it up before the board, it offered an opportunity to put together a majority to do that. Indeed, our initial decision to put together a Request for Proposals (RFP) to do that was unanimous.

While I have not confirmed who actually wrote the RFP that was presented, it included a kink that divided the board. That was making the local attorney subservient to the out of town attorney, the reverse of the way most school boards and other local government bodies operate. Usually the local attorney is the primary attorney, and brings in specialized assistance from specialized attorneys as needed for lawsuits and some other matters.

I made a motion to rewrite the RFP to make the local attorney the primary attorney, consistent with the usual policy of local boards. The question was raised about Tharrington Smith being brought in as needed on specialized matters, something I had no problem with as it is the usual way legal representation for local government boards work. However, the member who seconded my motion clearly did not want Tharrington Smith involved at all and withdrew the second. Prior to that, I thought we had a reasonable chance of getting a majority to change the RFP. With the second withdrawn, another motion was made to approve the RFP as written, which then passed 5 to 4.

There is a reason why bringing in specialized counsel is sometimes necessary, and is often done by local attorneys for school boards, counties, and cities. Many legal matters are straightforward and have little of nothing to do with policy, but having an attorney familiar with the nuances of handling them makes the odds of success in the legal matter much better.

The example I used was a case I brought on behalf of a high school girl some years ago against Lenoir County Schools. The law and evidence were strongly in my clients favor and I was confident we would be granted the relief we asked for in our written pleadings. However, the local school board attorney, who clearly had no background in such proceedings bungled the school board's case so badly that in my oral argument, I asked for much more far reaching (and much more expensive for the school system) relief and the court granted it. The school system would have saved a lot of money if they had brought in someone specialized in such proceedings instead of having their local attorney try to wing it.

The reason it is important to have a local school board attorney who has similar policy stances to the local community and local board is that while many legal issues have no ideological, philosophical, or political aspects, there are also many issues that arise where law and policy are intertwined and the applicable law can be argued more than one way. When I attended the recent Law Conference put on by the NC School Boards Association, questions to presenters on such issues were always responded to with "ask your local board attorney". When such issues arise, it is best to have a local school board attorney who is in tune with prevailing local opinion of both the community and board.
Commented: Thursday, October 30th, 2025 @ 6:21 pm By: Steven P. Rader
Concerned Taxpayer: The majority on this Beaufort County School Board, with their current administration, prefers to use out-of-county vendors, preferably at a higher cost, while getting a far lesser value in quality. There are many recorded instances of such; however, I have heard that those of local RINO affiliation tend to do well, far better than the more talented, in terms of skills, yet still nonconnected.
Commented: Thursday, October 30th, 2025 @ 1:54 pm By: Stan Deatherage
Terry Williams, Word smithing does not work. The issue with the lawyer originated in the Conservative Club more that two years ago. You have sat there more than two years and done nothing about it. If you nit picked your job on the board like you do my writing you would be an effective board member.
I notice the school board meeting has been changed to the same night as the county commissioners meet so I cannon attend an take notes on you and the rest of the RINOs. I will do your nit pick for you on this one. You are going to claim the meeting was changed so athletes could attend to receive their awards from the board. Denying the public access to information and observation about how inept you and your cohorts are is a corruption of the system.
Commented: Thursday, October 30th, 2025 @ 8:01 am By: Hood Richardson
Having a lawyer from the Raleigh Durham area for a local government down here in eastern North Carolina just does not make much sense from the standpoint of the taxpayers who cover the cost. A big city lawyer's fees are almost certainly higher than an eastern NC lawyer. Then there is the milage, hotel, travel time charges, etc.

Until the present lawyer, our school board lawyers were always local, just like our county attorney and city attorney are. Our local economy would benefit when our local tax dollars are spent locally with a local lawyer not one way out of town.

A local lawyer is also going to understand Beaufort County which somebody from Raleigh or Durham is not likely to do. That is particularly true of a lawyer heavily engaged in party politics of the party opposite of the way our county votes. There are very different values involved there.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 8:15 pm By: Concerned Taxpayer
Jeff: Whether Steve started this conversation on the board of education or not, Steve would have finished it if the conversation on changing the attorney had not gone particularly well in the affirmative on doing what is ultimately right.

I do know Steve Rader at least that well.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 5:03 pm By: Stan Deatherage
Williams has been on the BOE for how many years and has had the opportunity to change the outside atty? Only NOW is there ANY discussion and all brought about by changes to the BOE, specifically Mr. Radar.

Am I correct?
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 4:57 pm By: Jeff Williamson
TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome) is a debilitating condition for the Left, leading them to far too often care so little about others around them other than those also suffering from that same debilitating condition, so that they all wallow in the same misery.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 4:28 pm By: Stan Deatherage
The policies of the EU's European Commission, an unelected, unaccountable, and undemocratic body that runs the EU are as bad or worse than those of the Biden regime. They are all globalists who want to destroy national sovereignty through flooding western countries with Third World migrants. It is good to see their machinations made public.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 3:31 pm By: borderhawk
Trump is getting the job done. An active deportation campaign has the effect of encouraging illegal aliens to go home voluntarily themselves. It is not surprising that three times as many of them leave on their own as are actually deported. This is a model that Europe, which has an even worse problem than we do, needs to follow. It is good to see that the Trump administration is making some changes at ICE to get the job done faster. That will also speed up the self deportations.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 3:25 pm By: borderhawk
"Homelessness Industrial Complex:" That phrase sums up much in the definition of this new Leftist ideology.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 3:16 pm By: Stan Deatherage
The Non Patriot Left will vote Illegals given the opportunity to do so.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 3:07 pm By: Stan Deatherage
Well, it was at least refreshing to see that Steve Rader corrected you on your statement that Daniel Hudson and myself was "trying to steal Steve Rader's fire" on suggesting we hire a local attorney. It was indeed Daniel Hudson who brought it before the board after he and I discussed this multiple times. Secondly, your comment that "I stated I would never vote for anyone other than Tharrington and Smith to represent the school board" is grossly incorrect. I stated I would not vote to remove them from retainer but voted to search for a local attorney to use on a day to day basis. Thirdly, your comment that CPS Principal was incorrect on stating that Snowden parents and students are completely happy at CPS, an "A" rated school, shows you haven't been at the school. I've visited the school at least 10 times since August and see how much these students are benefitting. Maybe try visiting the school yourself. Your readers deserve better or better yet watch the video themselves.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 1:58 pm By: Terry Williams
There are many people that once believed that Bill Gates was smart.

I "abandoned that ship" years ago, and stopped using Microsoft products, mostly because they are expensive and inferior.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 1:52 pm By: Stan Deatherage
This abhorrent civil behavior by the Non Patriot Left will be coming to a head in many Leftist controlled cities near and far from US here in Eastern NC.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 1:49 pm By: Stan Deatherage
Bill Gates abandoning the climate alarmist cause is just a rat leaving a sinking ship.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 1:23 pm By: Rino Hunter
He may have passed the title on to a successor, but the leopard does not change his spots. He is still a Democrat partisan and should not be an attorney for a governmental body in a predominantly Republican county.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 10:09 am By: Rino Hunter
Consider this query: Just how Leftist does one have to be to make the grade of Chairman of the Democratic Socialist party in the Sanctuary County, by local choice, of Durham?
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 9:03 am By: Stan Deatherage
The site for the Durham County Democrat Party incicates someone else is leader of the Durham Democrat Party. The lawyer is no longer there.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 7:07 am By: Hood Richardson
This is not surprising about the sea level rise claim. Every scare story from the climate alarmists that has passed the date it was supposed to happen has failed to happen, even a little bit, and there have already been dozens of scare stories that have just failed to happen. They have not been correct even once. The are batting zero on their scare stories. The climate alarmists are Chicken Little on steroids, the biggest grifting doomsday cult in history.
Commented: Wednesday, October 29th, 2025 @ 8:50 am By: Concerned Taxpayer
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