Candidate still battling, with hope
Andrew Edwards
School board candidate Jim Peters’ interest in public education
started with a legal fight.
Peters is running for a seat on the Huntington Union High School
District’s board. In 1994, he and the Ocean View School District
become locked in a highly publicized legal battle to determine
whether then 6-year-old son, Jimmy,could sit in a mainstream
classroom.
News reports from 1994 stated the school district tried to block
Jimmy, who is mentally disabled, from attending regular kindergarten
classes at Circle View Elementary School, despite Peter’s objections.
The district contended Jimmy was too disruptive to sit in a
mainstream class, though he returned to Circle View in 1996 as a
second-grader.
Jimmy ended up in a private school when he started fourth grade,
Peters said.
Peter’s legal battle changed his life, he said. The former
businessman gradually adopted educational consulting as his life’s
work, and began to meet with parents who had disputes with school
officials -- particularly problems relating to special education.
“I just kind of drifted into this,” he said.
Peters listed his consulting activities as working with Orange
County school districts, testifying before Congress and working with
the Florida state government to organize a conference for parents of
disabled children. His campaign flier boasts a snapshot of him
standing next to the state’s governor, Jeb Bush.
Peters is raising three children with Sally Dashiell, a former
board member with the high school district. Though the two have been
romantically involved for 12 years, they have never officially tied
the knot.
“They say, ‘If it’s not broke don’t fix it,’ but we are really
looking at [marriage] for all of the funny reasons,” Peters said.
None of Dashiell’s and Peter’s children are attending local high
schools. They are pursuing individualized study programs.
“Kids grow at their own pace,” Peters said.
The son of a Baptist minster, Peters grew up in Connecticut and
his father was active in the civil rights movement, Peters said. He
remembered people from a wide range of religious backgrounds planning
activities in his childhood home.
“They used to work on freedom rides around the house,” he said.
“Talk about a great melting pot.”
Peters has run for a local school board seat every year since the
legal battles began, so far, unsuccessfully. He was a candidate for
the Ocean View board in 1994, 1996, 1998 and 2000. He ran for the
high school district’s board in 2002.
He said he started small with a “grass-roots” approach, but this
will be the year he goes all out to win.
“Not only is it grass roots, but it’s also professional, bringing
in a campaign manager, spending six times more money.” Peters said.
He anticipates spending about $48,000 on the race.
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