Thursday, November 17, 2016

Reader: Just how many people does Turner have a vendetta against?

A commenter a short while ago to the Turner Report post on my belief that the Joplin R-8 Board of Education will hire a strong superintendent suggested that will not be the case and that no one would want to work here as long as someone with a "vendetta like Turner" is around.

I briefly considered responding to the comment, but had decided against it when another commenter did it for me and did it far better than I would have.

The comment, which is also on the earlier post, is printed below:

So Turner's "vendetta" is going to keep good people from coming to Joplin. Are you saying that people would be afraid to come to a city where there is someone who cares about the truth, exposes
corruption on a regular basis and does what the rest of the media will not do? I would think that honest people would have no fear of Turner, nor do they. The only people who seem to be afraid of Turner are the people who have been manipulating the system in Joplin for so long.

Turner's firing no matter how many times Anson Burlingame and the CJ Huff apologists try to belittle his reporting by saying it all amounts to a vendetta makes it convenient for Turner's critics, but it raises an important question.

How many people does Turner have a vendetta against?

Did he have a vendetta against David Wallace when he began writing about his bankruptcies and lawsuits even before Joplin hired him as master developer. That also was at least a year before Turner was fired.

Did he have a vendetta against Bruce Speck when he was the only person who put his name on the line to challenge the way Speck was ruining MSSU. Southern Watch kept after Speck anonymously. The Chart did its job until Speck neutered it. It was Turner who kept up the pressure. Let's not forget- when the Chart was unable to publish the emails it received from a Sunshine Law request, it was Turner who grabbed the baton and revealed that the Joplin Globe's publisher was secretly working with Speck to squash dissent.

Did Turner have a vendetta against Mike Woolston when he was the only reporter who actually dug into the Lorraine report and clearly revealed Woolston's unethical dealings with Charley Kuehn and Wallace Bajjali?

Did Turner have a vendetta against Dean Dankelson when he revealed that Jordan Disposal had given him campaign contributions at the same time that the Jordan kid was in jail on drug charges? Even the Globe had to follow that one even though it failed to give any credit to Turner's reporting.

Those are just the ones I can think of off the top of my head and none of them have anything to do with CJ. If Turner is operating on a vendetta maybe it is time that the Joplin Globe get a vendetta. It is not Turner's vendetta or vendettas that we need to be worrying about. It is the people who have the vendetta against Turner who are causing the most harm.

Joplin has a good thing in Turner and we should be showing him that we support him and thank him for sharing his vendettas. I know of many places where they wish they had someone like Turner. Let's show him our appreciation while he is still here.

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Hartzler votes to extend Iran Sanctions Act

(From Fourth District Congresswoman Vicky Hartzler)

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (R-Mo.), House Armed Services Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee Chairwoman, on Tuesday voted to extend the Iran Sanctions Act, giving Congress the tools it needs to check a rogue Iranian regime from pursuing malicious activities.

“Before President Obama’s flawed nuclear deal with Iran, strong sanctions kept the world’s largest state sponsor of terrorism at bay from even more destructive behavior,” said Rep. Hartzler.

First passed 20 years ago, the Iran Sanctions Act supports sanctions on Iran’s illicit weapons programs and ballistic missile development that were not suspended as part of the nuclear deal. The act, and the sanctions allowed under it, are set to expire at the end of this year. The bill passed in the House of Representatives on Tuesday would extend the law for another 10 years.

“After the President’s bad nuclear deal lifted so many sanctions and gave the regime billions in relief, we cannot fail to pass this bill,” Hartzler continued.

Iran continues to buy destabilizing weapons systems from Russia and funnels weapons and assistance to its terrorist proxies to prop up the murderous Assad regime and threaten Israel.

“Passing this bill sends a message to the world that we are not going to stand for Iran’s continued destructive role in the Middle East, and it mitigates some of the damage done by the President’s dangerous nuclear deal,” Hartzler added.

The bill now goes to the Senate, where Hartzler said she is hopeful for quick consideration and passage. If the Senate passes the bill, it would then go to the President’s desk.

Former police officer files sex discrimination lawsuit against Lamar police chief, city

A former Lamar police officer who was fired in 2015 filed a sex discrimination lawsuit today in U. S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri.

In her petition, Katie Thomas alleges that she was treated differently from other officers because she was the only female officer.

The defendants in the case are Police Chief John Davis and the City of Lamar.

According to the petition:

In April 2015 Defendant Davis gave Plaintiff a negative performance review even though Plaintiff’s performance was among the top of similarly-situated officers. 

Plaintiff was kept as a probationary employee by the City of Lamar during the entire course of Plaintiff’s employment even though similarly-situated male employees who performed poorly compared to Plaintiff were released from probation. 

On or about 6:30 pm on December 4, 2015, Plaintiff received a text message from Cpl. Oliver Cornell ordering Plaintiff to report to duty at 8 p.m. rather than her normal start time of 10 p.m. Plaintiff reported to work as ordered on that date. 

On or about 8 p.m. on said date, Defendant Davis and others accused Plaintiff of stalking and harassing a fellow police officer, Joe Housel. Defendants knew or should have known that Plaintiff was not stalking or harassing Joe Housel. 

On or about the night of December 5, 2015, Plaintiff received a text message from Plaintiff’s immediate supervisor Oliver Cornell asking if Plaintiff was able to meet with Chief Ken Bergman on December 8, 2015, at 1 p.m. Plaintiff would not have been on duty at 1 p.m. on December 8, 2015. 

Plaintiff requested that said meeting be held on or near the time Plaintiff was on duty. On December 5, 2015, Plaintiff reported in to work at 10 p.m. and was informed by Chief Ken Bergman that Plaintiff’s employment was terminated for insubordination, i.e. refusing a direct order from Chief Bergman. 

Plaintiff neither received nor disobeyed a direct order from Chief Bergman.

The petition alleges Thomas' gender was "a contributing factor" in her dismissal and that Davis' actions were "willful and made with reckless indifference or evil motive with the intent to cause harm" to Thomas.

The firing has caused Thomas loss of wages, lost employment opportunities, mental and emotional distress, and other damages, according to the petition.

Thomas is asking for damages, attorney fees, costs, and punitive damages.

Davis, who was deputy police chief at the time of Thomas' firing, was appointed police chief October 29 following the retirement of Ken Bergman.

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Joplin R-8 School District will hire a strong superintendent

Some Turner Report readers went into panic mode after a post early this morning which examined the events surrounding the arrest of a Harrison High School assistant band teacher on charges of having sex with underage girls.

Harrison Police claimed that the school district's superintendent, Melinda Moss, one of two finalists for the Joplin R-8 superintendent position, interfered with the investigation when she brought in a lawyer, who was conducting his own investigation before the police arrived.

The post also included information about a lawsuit filed by a fired teacher.

Those who have grown used to reading one horrific story after another about the C. J. Huff era in Joplin can't be blamed for thinking- how in the world did this woman become one of the two finalists after the board hired a firm to do a national search? And who can blame them?

Ever since the people of Joplin became fed up and elected a board of education to do what our president-elect refers to as "draining the swamp," there has been a small, but persistent, minority that has attempted to belittle Board President Jeff Koch and board members Debbie Fort and Jennifer Martucci at every turn.

Any time a problem has arisen, generally because of the machinery that C. J. Huff put in place, this vocal minority starts in again, obviously hoping to pave a pathway back to the type of board we had when people like Jeff Flowers, Anne Sharp, Randy Steele, and God help us, Mike Landis, rubber stamped decisions that decimated the district's morale and its finances.

How did the search firm end up with a candidate facing a crippling lawsuit? Quick answer- it didn't. The Harrison School Board's description of former teacher Andrea Pendarvis' lawsuit as "frivolous," was an accurate one, something I will address in a bit.

Even more importantly, that lawsuit is the only one I have been able to find while searching the records of both finalists.

In her seven years at Harrison, Mendy Moss had one lawsuit that I was able to find in a search of state and federal courts and a reporter for the Harrison Daily Times confirmed that he had never come across any other legal actions while checking the superintendent's record.

On the other hand, during the seven-year tenure of C. J. Huff in Joplin, the district has been involved in multiple lawsuits. It paid $2.5 million recently to the P1 Group for Huff's full speed ahead no matter what the cost decision to try to get Joplin High School open on time in August 2014. And the district has already incurred more than $1.1 million in legal bills for that lawsuit.

The district paid $276,000 to Urban Metropolitan in a lawsuit that included charges of racial harassment, and an undisclosed amount in a sexual harassment lawsuit filed by an employee. Another sexual harassment case is pending in Jasper County Circuit Court.

The district also paid an undisclosed amount to settle another lawsuit brought by an employee who was fired for union activity.

A lawsuit currently in federal court alleges that the district violated First Amendment rights by permitting students to take a field trip to Victory Ministries. This lawsuit came after Huff ignored letters threatening such a lawsuit, in which he was shown that the permission slip students had to sign to attend the event included permission for Victory Ministries employees to talk to students about religion and invite them to religious activities.

I found no evidence of any such cavalier attitude about lawsuits in the research on Mendy Moss and Gary Quinn.

As for the lawsuit against Moss, it would be an upset if it ever gets anywhere near a trial and it may be headed for summary judgment.

The fired teacher never claims that she did not do what she was fired for doing. Her main argument is that other people have done bad things and were allowed to keep their jobs. She accuses Moss of sweeping teacher actions that could be harmful to students under the rug, but only refers to one such incident- the Kyle Smith sex case and in that one she has the facts wrong. She says Smith remained in the classroom until his arrest in February of this year, when he never returned to the classroom following the initial report on August 20 and, in fact, resigned effective September 1.

The teacher claims that people lied about her during her termination hearing, but there is no mention of what those lies were. She also claims she was not allowed to present her case because the district's lawyer, who was serving as judge, would not permit her to present evidence.

The evidence she wanted to present, however, was not designed to prove her innocence, but to show that others had done worse, and were still on the payroll.

In one portion of her petition, Pendarvis accuses Moss of hunting for more evidence against her because she did not have "a smoking gun." I am not sure where the smoking gun reference came from, but what would sure appear to be a smoking gun was included among the exhibits Pendarvis herself filed- an e-mail in which Pendarvis referred to a colleague using extremely vulgar language.

Both Quinn and Moss have strong, consistent records of improving education, including test scores. As a comparison, test scores in Joplin dropped each of the seven years that Huff was at the helm.

I came across no reports of more than half of the teachers leaving at either Harrison or Bartlesville. C. J. Huff lost more than 400 teachers over a four-year period and left the district with half of its teachers having five years or less of classroom experience.

Quinn had a strong record of getting approval for bond issues. Huff successfully passed a $62 million bond issue, the biggest in Joplin history, in 2012, but only by 45 votes, and as I noted in my book Silver Lining in a Funnel Cloud, that margin came because of a decision by Jasper County Clerk Marjorie Bull to allow people who no longer lived in Joplin, those who had been displaced by the tornado, to vote. While some of those people returned to Joplin, many did not, and those people provided the cushion.

After all of that, Huff overspent by tens of millions, and the ledger has still not been closed on the costs from the construction projects.

None of the articles on Gary Quinn and Mendy Moss made any references to "might-as-well" spending and there were never any references to them attacking board members during board meetings or in the community.

Writing a vicious Facebook post about someone whose election to the board might pose problems for their agenda would never have occurred to either Quinn or Moss. On the contrary, they not only worked well with board members from every appearance, but even more importantly, learned how to behave like adults long before they became superintendents.

As for the accusation made by Harrison Police that Moss interfered with their investigation, there was never even the slightest appearance, despite the lawsuit claim, that anything was being swept under the rug. Thankfully, it appears the Kyle Smith case was the only time Moss ever had to face that kind of situation. There were never any accusations that she misled the public or the police.

Compare that to the case of Joplin tech employee Ronnie Justin Myers. When Myers was arrested on sex charges, Huff quickly issued a statement that Myers had no contact with students, never bothering to tell the public or the board of education that Myers was in charge of the high school students' laptops or that he had nude photos of 10 Joplin High School girls on his own laptop and a video, all of which he was able to obtain by using a different kind of access.

The only thing C. J. Huff has over Quinn and Moss is that neither of them can ever claim to being the hero of the Joplin Tornado and take weeks off to rake in extra money and promote Bright Futures USA on a never ending School Will Start on Time speaking tour.

When Quinn announced his retirement from Bartlesville he told the Tulsa World:

The reason for our success is that we have had great people with which to work,” he said.We have had tremendous school board members focused on students. Our teachers and staff are caring professionals, working hard every day for the success of our students. We have the best students in the state. Our parents and community members are truly supportive of our school district and help us succeed. It has been a privilege to have served the students and community of Bartlesville the past 17 years.
It is hard to imagine C. J. Huff saying something like that. Huff thought so much of Joplin that in order to get him to leave, the board approved a recommendation letter written by Huff that talked about how apathetic the Joplin community was when he arrived in 2007.
The search process initiated by the Joplin R-8 Board not only appears destined to bring us a better superintendent than the one who mercifully departed in 2015, but it is likely to bring us one who is far superior, whether the board elects to go with Mendy Moss or with Gary Quinn.
Ironically, the initial part of the process, the national search, was conducted by Ray and Associates, the same people whose search in 2007 landed a superintendent for the Lindbergh School District, which is widely considered to be the number one school district in the state of Missouri. That superintendent, Jim Simpson, was C. J. Huff's predecessor in Joplin, and the one whose leadership guided the R-8 School District to four consecutive years of being accredited with distinction.
The first time that feat was accomplished, Simpson referred to it as "climbing Mt. Joplin."
With C. J. Huff and nearly all of his leadership team gone, the time is right to begin climbing Mt. Joplin once more.
Two weeks from tonight, we will learn who will lead the district to that goal.

State Audit: Many local government units not complying with Sunshine Law

(From State Auditor Nicole Galloway)

Missouri State Auditor Nicole Galloway says government must do better when it comes to meeting its obligations to transparency with the public. A newly-released report on compliance with the state's open records laws shows that only 30% of local governments fully complied with laws specifically designed to keep government accessible to its citizens.

"My office regularly receives complaints related to access of public information, which is exactly what the Sunshine Law is designed to address," Auditor Galloway said. "For this report, we sent public records requests to hundreds of local governments across the state. The results were extremely disappointing and demonstrate that we have a long way to go in improving transparency and citizen access to information in Missouri government."

Auditor Galloway and her staff sent open records request letters to more than 300 local government entities in every region of the state. The request was fairly simple - to provide a copy of minutes for the last meeting held in 2015, along with the notice and agenda for that meeting, and several other basic pieces of information. The letters were not sent on official office letterhead in order to provide a clearer picture of what the average citizen experiences when requesting information from government. Of those who received a request, 37% failed to acknowledge it or respond within the 3-day time period required by law. Some of those eventually provided information after the deadline, but 16% did not respond at all.

Four local governments took it a step further and refused to respond unless the requestor provided additional information or explained what the information would be used for, which is a violation of the Sunshine Law.

The Sunshine Law does allow governments to charge fees for research and copying records. In this case, the requested records were fairly simple, and recent - dating back to less than a year, so any costs should have been minimal. Some local governments still requested unreasonably high dollar amounts to provide these records - more than $80 in one example.

The report also includes information on whether the meeting documents provided by local governments meet standards set in law, and which entities included information about their designated custodian of records and recording policy, as requested in the initial letter.

This report includes results from 309 local government entities, including counties, cities, school districts, and a variety of special taxing districts from across the state. To see how local governments in your area fared, see the complete report online here. The report includes information on local governments surveyed for the report and levels of compliance. Appendix G includes all referenced entities, sorted by county.

Second Joplin R-8 finalist is one-time Neosho superintendent

Dr. Gary Quinn, superintendent of the Bartlesville, Oklahoma school district for the past 17 years is the second finalist for the Joplin R-8 superintendent post.

Quinn will be in Joplin all day today, touring district facilities, meeting with staff and then later meeting in closed session with the Board of Education.

The school district released the following biography:

Dr. Gary W. Quinn is an experienced educator and long-time veteran school superintendent.

With over 39 years of full-time work in the field of education, he continues his passion for providing the best possible learning environment for children. Dr. Quinn completed his 17th year of serving as superintendent of schools for the Bartlesville Public School District in Bartlesville, OK. He is tied for the longest serving superintendent in Bartlesville’s history.

Prior to serving as superintendent in Bartlesville, Dr. Quinn was the superintendent for the Neosho R-V School District in Southwest Missouri.

During Dr. Quinn’s 39-year career in education he has served as a teacher, coach, Assistant Professor at colleges, Assistant Dean of Students at a college, an Adjunct Graduate College Instructor,Assistant Principal, Principal, Assistant Superintendent and Superintendent. Dr. Quinn earned his bachelor's of science degree in education and his master's of education degree in secondary education administration from the University of Central Oklahoma. He earned his doctorate of education degree in educational administration from Oklahoma State University.

Dr. Quinn is active in numerous community and professional organizations including Rotary International, the American Association of School Administrators, the Oklahoma Association of School Administrators and the Cooperative Council of School Administrators. Rotary International honored Dr. Quinn as a Paul Harris Fellow. He is a former member of the Bartlesville Area Chamber of Commerce board of directors as well. During Quinn's leadership in Bartlesville, there were numerous successes. One of the most visible is the improved facilities.

During Dr. Quinn's tenure, the community passed five successful bond issues amounting to over $115,000,000. During this time, almost every school site was significantly renovated or expanded. This includes the most recent Freshman Academy addition at Bartlesville High School and the renovation at venerable Central Middle School. He has overseen Bartlesville High School expand into a four-year school site.

During the past seventeen years, the school district developed an increased focus on improving student achievement by improving instruction. The academic plan assisted the district to be an extremely high-performing school district. The district’s A-F grades and the state's previous Academic Performance Index (API) indicate that the school district scores among the top in the state. As a result of this success,

Dr. Quinn has had a book published on improving student achievement and has presented at numerous state and national conferences. During Dr. Quinn’s tenure the district incorporated several initiatives including expanding to full-day kindergarten and Pre-K. In addition, the school district became the only Great Expectations Model District in the nation. He and his wife Julia are the proud parents of three adult sons.

Lawsuit alleges Joplin superintendent finalist interfered with police investigation of sex crime

The sentencing for a former Harrison, Arkansas high school teacher charged with sex crimes involving underage girls is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Thursday in U. S. District Court for the Western District of Arkansas in Fort Smith.

The sentencing of Kyle Smith, 28, Branson, who pleaded guilty May 12 to transporting a minor across state lines for sex purposes and coercion and enticement of a minor, will bring an end to a chapter that has made the past year a trying one for Harrison Public School Superintendent Melinda Moss, one of two finalists for the Joplin R-8 superintendent position.

The grand jury indictment said Smith took a 14-year-old girl from Arkansas to his Branson home on July 19 and 22, 2015, and did the same with a 16-year-old on August 3 and 16.

Questions arose concerning Moss' handling of the situation and whether she caused problems for investigating officers by bringing in a lawyer to begin an investigation even before the Harrison Police arrived on the scene.

From the Harrison Daily Times report:

The report said  (Harrison Police) Detective Jason Causey went to the school and spoke with Superintendent Mendy Moss and legal representative, Cody Kees, in reference to the allegations. Causey also spoke with the teacher who received the original allegations and called the Crimes Against Children Unit on Aug. 20.

Records obtained under the Freedom of Information Act show Kees, a lawyer with the Munson, Rowlett, Moore & Boone law firm in Little Rock, was notified about the case on Aug. 20, the same day the CACU call was placed. He was on the Harrison campus the following day to conduct an investigation for the school.

Moss told the Daily Times in February that Kees specializes in investigations for schools.

“So,” Moss said, “whenever there’s any kind of report alleged we utilize their services because we want thorough, swift and complete investigations because nothing’s more important than student safety.”


Questions were raised at that time about the wisdom of bringing in a lawyer to begin an investigation even before the police arrived and those questions were raised again during a federal lawsuit filed in May by fired teacher Andrea Pendarvis, another of the negative events that have impacted Moss' recent months at Harrison.

Pendarvis claims her First Amendment rights were violated when she was fired for criticizing another teacher using vulgar language in a private e-mail. Other teachers involved in that same e-mail conversation had no action taken against them and Pendarvis claims that was because she had been critical of the superintendent's handling of situations involving children's safety, including the Kyle Smith arrest. The following passage is from Pendarvis' lawsuit:

It became evident Moss wanted Plaintiff out of the district because Plaintiff had spoken out about the mishandling of certain instances where a member of the district staff was suspected of some form of child abuse or child endangerment.

One such incident involved Kyle Smith, a former assistant band director for the district, who was arrested on or about February 11, 2016, and charged with four counts of statutory sodomy and four counts of statutory rape (Note; these were the original charges filed in Taney County Circuit Court) of underage girls who were students in the Harrison School District.

After the arrest, the Smith case was widely published in the newspapers and is well known in the community. Plaintiff had been told by others that when the allegations against Smith were first known to Moss, Moss did not call the police, but rather had a law firm come in to look at the situation, purportedly to determine the district's liability, and then allowed Smith to return to campus and continue working for the district 

Smith was never terminated by the district, but upon information and belief, did ultimately tender his resignation. around the time of his arrest more than six months after the allegations were first brought to the attention of Moss. (Note: Smith's resignation was actually accepted September 1, five months before Smith's arrest.)

During that time, Plaintiff openly expressed her concern about Moss' role in that matter and in particular what had been said by Harrison police and reported in the paper, to the effect that Moss had hampered their investigation of Smith and thereby delayed his arrest. The reports from the Harrison police suggested that evidence could have been lost or destroyed during that delay. 

Pendarvis claimed there were two other instances in which she believed school staff had endangered children and that Moss had done nothing about it and had a "habit of sweeping things under the rug."

Pendarvis also alleged that Moss revealed information from her personnel file to other district employees, encouraged them to bring in more dirt against Pendarvis because she did not have a "smoking gun" that would make sure she was fired.

The lawsuit also includes allegations of intimidation against teachers who offered support for Pendarvis.

The defendants in the Pendarvis lawsuit, the Harrison Board of Education and Moss have said the lawsuit is frivolous and denied all of her allegations in their response to the petition.

Though there are no indications that it has anything to do with Melinda Moss, Harrison patrons booted the two incumbent school board members who were up for re-election by a wide margin in the September 20 election.

John McCuistion defeated incumbent John Sherman 643 to 221 and Marisa Keylon received 699 votes to 155 for incumbent Roz Slavik. 

Monday, November 14, 2016

Federal grand jury indicts Joplin, Webb City, Neosho, Lamar residents for meth conspiracy

(From the U. S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri)

Nine southwest Missouri residents have been indicted by a federal grand jury in relation to a conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine in Jasper County, Mo.

Donald B. Loomis, 34, Katherine A. Stein, 26, Torrey L. Nigro, 25, Brice J. Bresee, 36, and Kelly C. Walker, 25, all of Joplin, Mo.; Alisha D. Courtney, 46, and Terrance E. Romero, 41, both of Webb City, Mo.; Adrian K. Gire, 30, of Lamar, Mo.; and Lisa M. Allison, 38, of Neosho, Mo., were charged in a 16-count indictment returned under seal on Nov. 2, 2016. That indictment has been unsealed and made public following the arrests and initial court appearances of the defendants.

The federal indictment alleges that Loomis, Stein, Walker, Courtney and Romero participated in a conspiracy to distribute 500 grams or more of methamphetamine in Jasper County from March 1, 2015, to Sept. 24, 2016.

The indictment also alleges that Stein, Nigro, Bresee and Gire participated in a conspiracy to distribute 50 grams or more of methamphetamine in Jasper County from May 10 to May 12, 2016.

In addition to the conspiracies, the indictment charges Stein, Nigro, Bresee and Gire together in one count of distributing 50 grams or more of methamphetamine and in one count of using cell phones to facilitate the drug-trafficking conspiracy.

Romero is also charged with one count of possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug-trafficking crime and one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. Romero allegedly was in possession of an F.I.E. Corp. Titan .25-caliber handgun on June 1, 2016.

Courtney is also charged with four counts of distributing methamphetamine.

Walker is also charged with one count of distributing methamphetamine and one count of possessing methamphetamine with the intent to distribute.

Stein and Allison (who is not charged in either of the drug-trafficking conspiracies) are charged together in one count of distributing methamphetamine and in one count of using a cell phone to facilitate a drug-trafficking conspiracy.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Abram McGull, II. It was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the FBI, the Ozarks Drug Enforcement Team, the Joplin, Mo., Police Department, the Webb City, Mo., Police Department, the Newton County, Mo., Sheriff’s Department, the Jasper County, Mo., Sheriff’s Department, the Jasper County, Mo., Prosecuting Attorney’s Office and the Newton County, Mo., Prosecuting Attorney’s Office.

Harrison, Arkansas administrator finalist for Joplin R-8 superintendent

An Arkansas superintendent with teaching, counseling, and administrative experience in southwest Missouri schools is in Joplin today meeting with Joplin R-8 board members about the vacant superintendent position.

A district news release issued a few moments ago named Dr. Melinda Moss, superintendent of Harrison Public Schools as one of the two finalists for the position vacated by the resignation of C. J. Huff in 2015.

Moss will tour district facilities and the community today and then will have a dinner meeting with the board tonight.

The other finalist will be announced Tuesday meeting.

Biographical information on Moss provided by the R-8 School District is printed below:

Dr. Melinda Moss is in her seventh year as superintendent of Harrison Public Schools in Harrison, AR.

 Moss served three years as assistant superintendent in the district before being named superintendent in 2010. She serves on the Arkansas Commissioner of Education’s Advisory Committee. 

Moss taught Special Education students in Republic, MO at the Green County Cooperative before serving as a guidance counselor at Spokane School District and Springfield Public School District. While at Spokane,

Moss also organized the District’s accreditation reviews, wrote a successful A+ Schools Grant, managed the District’s Comprehensive School Improvement Plan and the District’s curriculum alignment.

 Following her time in Springfield, Moss became middle school principal in Reeds Spring, MO She received her undergraduate degree in Finance & Banking from the University of Arkansas, her special education certification courses and master’s in Guidance & Counseling from Missouri State University, and her doctorate in educational leadership from Saint Louis University.

 Moss is active in the community serving on the Harrison Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors, Boone County Economic Development Committee and the local Rotary Club Chapter Board of Directors. She and her husband Greg have two sons. Zach and his wife, Kaitlyn, live in Ozark, MO. David, his wife, Sarah, and grandson, Nash, live in Bentonville, Arkansas.

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Links provided for top Turner Report/Inside Joplin posts for past week

Six of the top 10 posts this week on the Turner Report related to the election, but not the ones at the top of the list.

Both of the top two posts related to the controversies that are swirling around Jasper County Prosecuting Attorney (and soon-to-be Division II judge) Dean Dankelson. The top post was the Turner Report coverage on the investigation by KOAM's Jordan Aubey that revealed that it was Dankelson who refused to go forward on recommendations to file misdemeanor and later felony charges against those involved in the April 2014 Dropbox scandal.

The number two post involved the release on bond of Ace Mohr, 23, Carthage. As the Turner Report has noted, Dankelson dropped armed robbery charges against Mohr twice and failed to file any charges when the Joplin Police Department arrested him for an armed robbery at 7th
and Moffet.

The top post on Inside Joplin Obituaries this month was the death of Carthage artist Bill Snow.

The Turner Report

1. Report: Dean Dankelson swept Joplin High School child porn scandal under the rug

2. Ace Mohr back on the streets

3. Former superintendent sentenced to one year in prison for pension fraud

4. Live feed- Donald Trump campaign victory party

5. Winners and losers from the 2016 election

6. Settlement reached in Joplin Blasters lawsuit

7. Video: Jason Kander concedes Senate race

8. Watch live- Hillary Clinton concession speech

9. Live feed- Hillary Clinton victory party

10. McCaskill: Join me in voting no on Amendment 6

Inside Joplin

1. Carthage Police needs help identifying this couple

2. Carthage Police want to know who this man is

3. Joplin Police Department Weekend Arrests

4. Joplin pedestrian victim of hit and run driver on 43

5. Joplin Police want to know- Have you seen this bicycle thief?

6. Joplin teen dies from gunshot wound

7. Joplin woman injured in car-deer collision

8. Jasper County Sheriff's Office Arrests

9. Webb City woman injured in accident on Zora

10. Jasper County Sheriff letter offers update on extended conceal-carry permits

Inside Joplin Obituaries

1. Bill Snow

2. Candace Middleton

3. Guidelyn and Guinevyre Atkins

4. Diana Gandy

5. Don Helms

6. Eric Butts

7. Janice Knight

8. Virginia Derfelt

9. Hugh Nutt

10. Lila Roy