Monday, October 24, 2022

Where Main Street Meets Mean Street

 
    In recent weeks candidate for Secretary of State, Tersephore Maras has repeatedly leveraged her position as a candidate to intimidate and threaten legal action in the form of a lawsuit against Katie and those she works with. We have put out information regarding her sister’s professional background and certifications that Maras herself claims to hold. 
    Yesterday eveningKatie received a message from one of Maras followers from the Telegram group New Ohio. This message stated Maras wanted to have a message delivered. This message was as follows, she claims to have found an alternate Facebook profile for Kathleen. Neither Katie nor I have alternate Facebook accounts. Please see accusations below from Maras last night, to learn what has unhinged Tore Maras. Please also see attached article to learn about her sister Marie Helen Maras.


    Not only that, Maras eludes to Katie's children, which are not old enough to vote in Ohio. This isn't the first time Maras has threatened those who push back with factual information. Please see the interview where Tore explains threatening Ruth Ann Buffalo's children, a Native-American North Dakota House of Representative congresswomen.  We don't simply want to expose Maras for the deceptive candidate she is, but we wish her to be ran out of Ohio on a rail, as she was by the good citizens of North Dakota!
 
  
 

   
 
 Katie & I have been told numerous times over the last year that we are MEAN. This has inspired us to form our own Mean Street conglomerate. We are already at the intersection of Idiotic & Crazy Street here in Ohio. We hope you can make room for Mean Street, because hard truths are required today in Ohio politics. Tore Maras can reach out to either myself or Katie at any point for a conversation, instead she chooses to send messages and perpetuate categorically false disinformation to her followers.


We look forward to our future endeavors. Stay Focused Ohio.....


 

Friday, October 21, 2022

Ohio Department of Education State Board Races

The state school board is made up of 19 members, 11 elected members and 8 appointed by the Governor. 

In a statement released in September from elected State Board of Education Members Christina Collins,  Meryl Johnson, Antoinette Miranda, and Michelle Newman expressed their "embarrassment" with the Shea Title IX Resolution stating it was "full of factual errors and religious pedagogy." Apparently these members find sincerely held religious beliefs under Ohio law and biological sex being an objective, scientific fact triggering. These board members DID get one thing right in their statement they SHOULD be spending their time discussing opportunities for Ohio's children in literacy, career readiness, school safety, preschool access, and STEM development rather than the CASEL approved SEL curriculum implemented during their tenure meant to utilize SEL as a lever for equity and social justice. 

It is time to engage and approach these state school board elections as we would all other races. We must understand how they are elected, which communities/counties they serve, and when we vote for them.

November Ballot Candidates 

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District 2 candidates: District 2 is made up of Senate districts 2, 11 and 13. This contains Erie, Huron, Lorain, Lucas, Ottawa and Wood.

Sarah McGervey (R) is a middle school teacher with a social media presence who wishes to ensure local control of schools, protect parents rights in schools, and revise standardized testing to more accurately reflect student knowledge. No doubt Sarah will have a useful resource in Kathleen McGervey, her mother, given her tenure on the State Board of Education serving District 2 from 2010 to 2018 . On McGervey's Facebook page, she shared, "We need to protect scientific factual information regarding biology, as well as -women’s rights in school and sports." 

  • McGervey seems a strong advocate standing against CRT and comprehensive sexual education. She seems like the kind of candidate you would want in your mom tribe, especially if you have daughters.

Teresa Fedor (D) is a present member of the Ohio State Senate representing Senate District 11, a former member of the Ohio House of Representatives for the 45th and 47th House District from 2011-2018, and recently defeated in the May 3rd primary as John Cranley's running mate for Lt. Governor. Fedor recently went on the record regarding Shea's Title IX Resolution saying, "This resolution hides under a very thin veil of ‘supporting families,’ but we must call it what it is: an unnecessary, unprovoked attack on Ohio’s children. The resolution is harassment — full stop. If adopted, our youth will be pushed into social isolation, stigmatization, bullying and potentially even self-harm."  Fedor is endorsed by the Ohio Federation of Teachers, a teachers union.

  • Her comments ignore gender affirmation may have little to no effect on these individuals mental health according to key corrections of an American Journal of Psychiatry study. This candidate seems a habitual candidate and endorsments by teachers unions is in the negative column as these unions have seemingly forgotten they educate students not execute leftists agendas. 

District 3 candidates: District 3 is made up of Senate Districts 4, 5, and 6. This contains Butler, Preble, Montgomery, and Miami.  

incumbent Charlotte McQuire (R) is running uncontested.  Charlotte has worked for over 40 years in nonprofit organizations and government, including as community affairs director for Dayton and is affiliated with Dayton Right To Life. She and her husband launched the Excel Afterschool Program, which assists parents to help improve elementary school achievement and attendance. She and her husband also founded and lead a nondenominational church.

District 4 candidates: District 4 is made up of Senate Districts 7, 8, and 9. This contains Warren and Hamilton counties.

 incumbent Jenny Kilgore (R) teaches undergraduate education majors at Miami University and education graduate students at Indiana Wesleyan. Kilgore has been a strong and outspoken member on the board focusing on keeping the schools free from distraction and focusing on academics rather than indoctrination. 

  • Jenny seems a consistent calm voice of reason, rational logic, and common sense. She is a no nonsense candidate that clearly and concisely conveys her position. 

Katie Hofmann (D) taught music in Cincinnati City Schools for over 30 years. She has been involved with the Cincinnati teachers union for decades and served as the collective bargaining chair for the teachers' union previously. Hoffman has secured endorsements from Ohio Federation of Teachers, Cincinnati Women's Political Caucus, and Ohio Education Association.  

  • This candidate was difficult to research. Beyond her union circle and a few facebook posts, she has said little about her candidacy.
     

District 9 candidates: District 9 is made up of Senate Districts 18, 29, 28, and 32. This contains Stark, Portage, Trumble, Ashtabula, Lake, and the east side of Geauga county. `

incumbent John Hagan (R) has also been a strong outspoken leader among board members speaking at an anti-CRT rally in June and participating in education discussion panels across the state. Most recently prepared to support Shea's Title IX Resolution, Hagan was recently quoted as saying, "If the intent is to kill this [Shea's Title IX Resolution], and I believe it is, then this is the motion you want to vote for, to send it to committee [Executive Committee]." 

  • Hagan seems a strong fatherly presence on the board. Watching and listening to him on discussion panels he seems solid and unwaivering in his desire to bring the board back to serving students first.  

Robert Fulton (party affiliation unknown) is a retired teacher serving on the Streetsboro School District Board of Education. Fulton plans to help develop a policy for equal funding across all school districts, to strengthen education to incentivize corporations to stay or relocate to Ohio, and wants to work on developing internships for students. He would also like teachers to be able to have input when determining whether a child is proficient on standardized testing. The Repository did an interview with Fulton you can read here

  • This candidate was also difficult to research dispite having served in neighboring local districts that surroung my own. Robert has no social media presence beyond the Women's League of Voter survey he filled out, his school board directory information, and the Repository interview.

 District 10: District 10 is made up of Senate districts 21, 27 and 28. This contains the east side of Cuyahoga County, west side of Geauga County, and all of both Summit and Portage counties.

incumbent Tim Miller (R) was appointed to the State Board of Education by Governor DeWine on Jan. 8, 2021, to complete the last two years of a four-year term. Tim currently serves as Vice Chair of the Emerging Issues and Operational Standards Committee, is a member of the Budget Committee, a member of the Teaching Leading and Learning Committee, a member of the EMIS Committee, and is part of the Business Partnership Strategies workgroup. Tim recently stated of Shea's Title IX Resolution, "I think we owe the people a more open discussion on this....These kids exists. And there's been absolutely no discussion about what we can do for these kids. That bothers me more than anything else in this whole discussion." 

  • No one is saying kids aren't confused about their "gender identity" these days, they aren't unicorns (well maybe 😏). How could we go wrong with "intersectionality" and "the gender spectrum" muddying biological gender in Ohio schools!?! Expecting  more from Tim in the future goes without saying. 

Cierra Lynch Shehorn (R) is no stranger to politics having worked as a regional field director for the Ohio Republican Party in 2018, a government relations staff assistant with a government relations firm, and a assistant to the Executive Director and Stakeholder Liaison at the State Medical Board of Ohio. Lynch Shehorn refers to herself as the "student first candidate fighting for common-sense decisions at the state level that benefit students, parents and taxpayers.”  Lynch Shehorn is married to Andrew Shehorn, the Assistant Director of the Summit County Board of Elections and the Executive Director of the Summit County GOP, whom she is endorsed by. 

  • A potentially good person, this candidate has the pedigree of a Summit County swamper in her early to late 20's. Having no children herself, Shehorn has no pony in the race other than her political career. Lynch has experience in media and marketing which lends to her young professional Republican appeal, however, will she be able to stand against the establishment she serves?

Tom Jackson (D) has a degree in education and is on the Solon City Schools Strategic Planning team and Chairman of the Board of the Solon Chamber of Commerce. Find Tom's endorsements here, which includes Ohio Federation of Teachers. Recently interviewed, here is what Tom had to say on education, "Ohio legislators are attempting to defund public education so it’s time to put folks like me in a position to advocate for fair school funding, better working and learning conditions, and upgrading our school buildings to meet the needs of the future.” 

  • Clearly he forgot the 4.4 billion in pandemic relief funding Ohio schools were infused with. Some districts received sums amounting to 50% or more of the cost to operate their schools for a year. While 20% must be used to address learning setbacks, the rest can be used on nearly any cost school officials deem “reasonable and necessary.”   

As discussed above, these races matter to protect the innocents of our children and to get back to the basics of reading, writing, and arithmetic in Ohio schools rather than radical gender bending political agendas and SEL curriculum! We are only as good as the candidates we put into these races. We can not continue to "hold our nose and vote for...." because the lesser of two evils is still evil. Quality candidates are key! You can find each state board members terms on their biographies here. Get involved, go to a school board meeting, engage the process.  Local school board races happen in odd number years and 2023 is around the corner! 

Stay focused Ohio.....

Monday, October 17, 2022

Action Alert: Stop Biden's Arm-Twisting of Ohio Schools!

Once again President Biden and the liberal left show they will stop at nothing when it comes to forcing their social engineering on the masses! 

In response to President Biden using & perverting the intent of Title IX to attack and deprive vulnerable children with food insecurities of necessary nutrition assistance to arm-twist his gender bending policies, Ohio Department of Education State Board Member, Brendan Shea, drafted a straightforward Resolution rejecting it. 

The Resolution to Support Parents, Schools, and Districts in Rejecting Harmful, Coercive, and Burdensome Gender Identity Policies was amended during the meeting in an attempt to water it down. Yet in it's watered down form the State Board of Education lacked the spine necessary to protect our children and referred it back to the Executive Committee at the end of the day. 

You can watch the entire meeting at The Ohio Channel with discussion opening regarding the Resolution at just after 2:00:00 and the vote at 7:01:22 mark

Now more than ever in the name of our children it is time for parents and patriots alike to again use our voices to stand up to these weak kneed board members and express Ohioans values to vote this Resolution out of committee unchanged!

Call to Action 

Contact the Ohio Department of Education Executive Committee to express your desire for this committee to refer the Resolution out of their committee to be adopted by the board by using the contact information below.

 📞📧Executive Committee Contact Information 📞📧

 
Charlotte.McGuire@education.ohio.gov                        PH. (937) 287-3603
 
Martha.Manchester@education.ohio.gov                      PH. (419) 303-2672

Paul.LaRue@education.ohio.gov                                     PH. (614) 728-2754

Mike.Toal@education.ohio.gov                                        PH. (937) 726-2197

Antoinette.Miranda@education.ohio.gov                      PH. (614) 292-5909

Jenny.Kilgore@education.ohio.gov                                 PH. (513) 382-9869

Brandon.Kern@education.ohio.gov                                PH. (937) 879-2336


Stay focused Ohio.....

 


 

 

 

Wednesday, October 5, 2022

INFORMED CITIZENRY

 

Informed citizenry is essential when expecting to engage in politics at any level. If you fail to understand how your local government works, it's safe to say, you probably won't be an effective change agent. Being an agent of change can be a long and hard road, as those of us beginning to engage in local politics are coming to wrap our minds around in our Ohio hometowns. 

I started engaging in local politics because my children were highly affected by bad policies amid the pandemic. We experienced lock downs with soaring depression and suicide rates among tweens and teens. Realizing mom's would change the landscape of our communities, we began to see mom's renewed interest in activism on behalf of issues affecting their families. Women are the center of the nuclear family and where mom goes, so goes the family. I've often been told where we are called to serve we will be so  equipped. So I took these words to heart and ran for school board in a rural district that thought I was crazy. The mindset of the masses with generational ties to their community and its traditions is hard pressed to overcome. I lost my seat, but the seeds I planted continue to play out among my community today. As I said above, being an agent of change is often a long game. When I clearly defined what the roles of the school board members were I began to understand how local government and public bodies operate. I began to understand how public policy plays out in real time, and how important public input into the policies that are affecting them in real time can be.  

ROBERT'S RULE OF ORDER 

For the better part of the last two years I am one of hundreds of Ohioans that have been educating people on how to engage politically on a variety of Ohio issue. Understanding Robert's Rules of Order is certainly the hardest part of this journey for me, it can be a real snooze fest. The information, although no riveting contemporary thriller, is vital to engage in any public body holding public meetings. You didn't learn to play any game without first understanding the rules, and that's exactly what Robert's Rules of Order are. Think of them as the standard operating manual for public meetings.

OHIO SUNSHINE LAWS

In routine conversations with people as issues are presented I hear, how can I get that document from this public body?  Ohio Sunshine Laws provide Ohioans access to government and public documents. Ohio's Public Records Act and Open Meetings Act,  also known as Ohio Sunshine Laws provide the public with a transparency and accountability piece to the business of our government. Obtaining the records you seek is as easy as asking for a Retention and Disposition of Records Schedule and finding on that schedule the record you seek and asking for it. A records retention schedule is simply a list of records the body/organization must keep by law and for the specified legal time period. There is no fancy template or verbiage necessary, just simply ask in accordance with Ohio Sunshine Laws for the document. I was able to obtain records from my district confirming mold growth in our HVAC system, which led me to educate parents on the respiratory dangers of mold spores among district children. These public documents are useful to educate the community on the issues you wish to rally support for. This can be a lengthy process taking frequent follow-up, that's why the retention and disposition of records schedule is helpful in aiding you in your efforts. It's difficult to tell the public, "we don't keep those records" or "we don't have anything called that" if you have the retention schedule in hand from the public body/organization you seek records from.

FRIEND OR FOE

There is no shortage of voices to listen to right now in Ohio. I always challenge others to know those they are engaging with and where they are deriving their information. Asking questions regarding the accuracy or legitimacy of the information you are given is vital. Asking what stake the individual providing information may have in what they provide is crucial. Essentially the old adage, follow the money. Time and time again I find myself looking at finance and affiliations among people and groups. When approached by anyone for anything I always ask them, "why are you interested in this issue"? It tells you a lot about their stake in the issues they champion or reject. Access to trusted and loyal sources in political circles is a rarity and a trusted team should be treated like the diamonds they clearly are. People in these circles often don't necessarily like one another, however, working with a foe toward a common goal isn't unusual either. And, of course, you will see in political circles "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" also applies. Some people are put in your path for a season and a reason, and others you will forge a long and prosperous partnership accomplishing common goals. Stay focused Ohio....

 

 Stay tuned for future lessons I learned while circulating petitions........