[Vision2020] Superintendent-Elect Luna Embellished Resume

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Fri Dec 15 14:35:50 PST 2006


>From today's (December 15, 2006) Spokesman Review -

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Superintendent-elect embellished resume 
Ex-supervisor: Luna not appointed by Bush
Associated Press 
December 15, 2006

BOISE - Tom Luna, the incoming head of the state's public school system,
misrepresented his position with the U.S. Department of Education on his
resume during his successful campaign this fall.

In a biography on his Web site and a resume provided to Idaho Public
Television for its campaign debate series, Luna wrote that he was "Appointed
Senior Adviser to Secretary of Education Rod Paige by President George W.
Bush."

However, Luna was not appointed by President Bush, said Bill Hansen, the
former deputy secretary of education and Luna's immediate supervisor at the
department.
 
Paige tapped Luna as a "special assistant" in the undersecretary of
education's office, according to a detailed 2004 directory of executive
branch appointments published by the joint congressional Committee on
Government Reform.

The Office of Presidential Personnel "signed off" on the appointment, Hansen
told the Associated Press. Soon after, in April 2003, Paige named Luna
director of a newly formed Rural Education Task Force, he said.

Elaine Quesinberry, a Department of Education spokeswoman who now sits on
the Rural Education Task Force, described a similar hiring process.

"Tom Luna was the director of the Task Force, appointed by Secretary Rod
Paige and approved through a White House vetting process," she said.

Luna is not listed in an archive of presidential nominations.

Brian McNicoll, a spokesman for the Committee on Government Reform, said
appointments such as Luna's are not defined as presidential appointments.

Luna said the Office of Presidential Personnel called him in November of
2002 and asked him to file an application as a "senior education adviser."

He said the White House hired him in March of 2003 to lead an Initiative on
Tribal Colleges and Universities, and a month later he was asked to direct
the Rural Education Task Force.

"That's how they refer to it. It's a political appointment where you apply
through the White House," Luna said Wednesday. "I could tell you a couple of
days after the election, I got a call from White House personnel saying,
'Would you like to work for the president?' "

While at the Department of Education, Luna maintained an office but also
continued living in Nampa. 

Luna said he attended several meetings with President Bush, mostly in the
Roosevelt Room of the White House. He said Paige or Hansen were also at the
meetings.

"One or the other, seldom both," Luna said.

Hansen said he does not remember any meetings with President Bush that Luna
also attended.

Hansen, who was appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate to
serve as Paige's principal adviser, is a Pocatello native. He stepped down
in 2003 and now works at an education consulting firm in Washington, D.C.,
with Paige.

He was one of several top-level officials who helped Luna secure his post in
the Department of Education months after Luna lost to Democrat Marilyn
Howard in the 2002 race for Idaho superintendent of public instruction.

Last month, Luna, a Republican, defeated Democrat Jana Jones in his second
run for the superintendent's seat. He takes over as head of the Idaho
Department of Education and the state's 620 public schools in January.

Throughout the campaign, Luna offered his stint at the Department of
Education as a rebuttal to criticism that he never taught in a classroom or
worked in school administration.

Hansen said Luna's duty on the Rural Education Task Force was to serve as a
policy adviser in the Department of Education, an ambassador for the agency
at rural education conferences and a liaison between the department and
school administrators.

Hansen said Luna was instrumental in reworking parts of the federal No Child
Left Behind Act to provide more flexibility for rural school districts when
hiring teachers.

Luna also revamped funding formulas and helped restore grant programs for
rural schools that President Bush cut from the federal budget. Hansen said
Luna excelled in his job.

But some rural educators have groused that Luna left behind a scant work
product and his task force produced no meaningful reform.

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Seeya round town, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho

 "Everyone has problems, some are just better at hiding them." 

- Unknown 




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