![]() “People will be asking questions, and so the community will get to hear firsthand from the administration and from the board how the decisions are made and how we come to where we’re at.” “I think it will be very healthy for the community, because it probably means that information that people maybe take for granted - that everyone knows because it’s just been that way for so long - will be bought back up again,” Dillon said. She said she thinks the new board will bring a fresh set of eyes and ears to the board table. ![]() “I’m also looking to partner with the board and superintendent on our strategic plan for LT.”ĭillon is not especially concerned about the relative inexperience of the new school board. “Equity is a primary focus of ours and I just hope to continue that work,” Dillon said. “There’s an appetite for there to be different perspectives and people coming from different backgrounds right now, and I think that’s what the election results showed us,” Dillon said.Įquity has emerged as a major issue at LTHS and will be a priority for the school board, Dillon said. Kelly, like Cushing, is a graduate of LTHS and when she ran in 2019 she was aligned with incumbent candidates Barbara Rosinsky and Phil Palmer, while Dillon was more of an outsider who ran an independent campaign. She is the first female school board president since Heather Alderman served as president from 2013 to 2015.ĭillon’s election as board president is perhaps indicative of the new atmosphere on the board. She works in marketing for company called Synergy Creative that specializes in higher education marketing. Dillon, 48, lives in Indian Head Park and is the mother to two LTHS students, a junior and a freshman.
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