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Pound Ridge Woman to Take Seat on Bedford School Board

POUND RIDGE, N.Y. — The three seats up for re-election on the Bedford School District’s Board of Education are all unopposed this year, meaning two incumbents will retain their seats while a Pound Ridge woman will be elected as a newcomer.

Lee Goldstein, an eight-year Pound Ridge resident, is running for one of three open positions, one of which is being vacated by Graham Anderson, who has declined to run for another three-year term.

“I’m running for school board because my two girls are in [Pound Ridge Elementary] school and I‘m very committed to public education in general and to Bedford Central specifically,” Goldstein said. “I really want to participate in preserving Bedford’s outstanding education for every child in our district.”

In 2011, Goldstein, a former English teacher, applied as one of five applicants for the seat vacated by Mark Chernis. The seat was awarded to Andrew Bracco, of Mount Kisco, who is running for the remaining two years on Chernis’s seat.

In addition, longtime board member and current president Susan Elion Wollin, a resident of Bedford Village, is running for another full term.

Goldstein has a BA in literature from Yale and makes her living as a professional editor and writer. She has been active in the district’s Budget Advisory Committee and is highly involved in the Pound Ridge Elementary PTA, she said.

Goldstein cites her experience on the Budget Advisory Committee as being one of her major assets as a future board member, “both because it’s given me a real understanding of district finances but more, I think, that it’s given me an appreciation of the concerns and priorities of other community members.”

She said she is worthy of the community’s trust when it comes to navigating the financial challenges ahead, like those brought on by the 2 percent tax cap and unfunded state mandates.

“I think mandate relief is very important, both on the financial side because the mandate spending is unsustainable. That’s just truth, that doesn't come with political baggage,” she said.

Goldstein said while the intention of these state mandates may have been to help schools, local control of educational financing is what is missing from the picture.

“Our teachers and administrators and board of education members understand our children and our community and should be making the decisions,” she said.

Goldstein said she is excited and honored to take on the job. She is ready to work together with the board to preserve what is special about the district’s schools, she said.

 

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