The School District posted the job description for Campaign Manager & Executive Director, Mt. Lebanon Foundation for Education (MLFE) on April 12, 2013. There is no posting deadline on the Job Postings page. The complete job description is available here.
Jackie Foor is listed as the current executive director on the MLFE website. Next year's PTA Council President, Julie Daubner is the current director. Ms. Daubner is also Elaine Cappucci's sister[-in-law].
I see that travel is in the job description. Does this position include travel expenses? If so, there are 23 Mt. Lebanon alumni in Hawaii. In fact, there are Mt. Lebanon grads in 24 countries, in addition to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Not a bad gig.
10 comments:
Ms. Daubner is not Ms. cappucci's sister
My mistake. She is her sister-in-law.
Elaine
$2 million in average yearly budget increases and the school district has to go begging to stay afloat.
How that happen in affluent Mt. Lebanon?
Cronyism just as rampant in the district as it is in Commonwealth government. Shameful !
Oh yeah, I'm going to donate money, pay for student parking, pay more for sports tickets, lab fees, book fees while teachers park for free and certainly administrators bulk up their pension and tack on more vacation time.
Sort of like watching somebody pay for Prime Rib with food stamps while I'm plan Mac & Cheese for my family.
Do teachers get free lunch?
Don't believe they do, they might pay a little more than the students.
How much do they pay?
Wow, the MLFE had a bank account balance of a whopping $38,000 at year end 2012. Surely they are qualified to handle $6 million or more.
“GOP bill would change Pennsylvania Pensions”
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette | by Karen Langley | May 8, 2013
HARRISBURG -- Three months after proposing a multipronged plan to limit state pension costs, Gov. Tom Corbett on Tuesday joined a pair of Republican legislators to announce bills in the House and Senate.
But as attention here begins to focus on the tasks ahead before the June 30 budget deadline -- often a de facto due date for other major legislation -- prospects are unclear that there's enough time to make broad changes to the retirement systems for state and public school employees.
In his February budget address, Mr. Corbett laid out a plan designed to address the unfunded liabilities of the statewide defined-benefit plans -- funding gaps now valued at more than $47 billion -- while limiting future risk to the state. Speaking to reporters Tuesday, the governor described a stark choice: Without overhaul, he said, growing pension costs will crowd out funding for education, public safety and other government functions.
Read more: http://www.statebudgetsolutions.org/publications/detail/gop-bills-would-change-pennsylvania-pensions#ixzz2TBxDOCN7
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