Lawrence Reid

From Ballotpedia - Reading time: 9 min

BP-Initials-UPDATED.png
Ballotpedia does not currently cover this office or maintain this page. Please contact us with any updates.
Lawrence K. Reid
Image of Lawrence K. Reid
Prior offices
Brick Township Board of Education At-large

Education

Graduate

Fairleigh Dickinson University

Personal
Profession
Real estate
Contact


Lawrence "Larry" K. Reid was a candidate for at-large representative on the Brick Township Board of Education in New Jersey. The general election was held on November 3, 2015.[1] Reid was running as part of the Progress Not Politics slate with Walter Campbell, Lois Turner and John Talty. Lawrence Reid lost the general election on November 3, 2015.

He was an at-large representative on the Brick Township Board of Education in New Jersey. He was first elected to the board in 2011. He ran for re-election on a slate with fellow incumbent Sharon Cantillo in the general election on November 4, 2014, where he was defeated.

Biography[edit]

Email editor@ballotpedia.org to notify us of updates to this biography.

Reid became a full-time resident of Brick Township in 2007. He has an MBA in finance from Fairleigh Dickinson University. Reid is a licensed real estate broker. His family includes his wife, Deborah, and their three children.[2]

Elections[edit]

2015[edit]

See also: Brick Township Public Schools elections (2015)

Opposition[edit]

The Brick Township Board of Education consists of seven nonpartisan members who are elected at large to three-year terms. Four seats on the Brick Township Public Schools advisory board were up for general election on November 3, 2015. The at-large seats of incumbents Michael Conti, Frank Pannucci Jr. and Susan Suter were on the ballot for three-year terms. A fourth one-year term was on the ballot due to a resignation on the board.[1]

Newcomers Victoria Pakala, Stephanie Wohlrab and John Lamela won election to three-year terms, while George White defeated former board member John Talty for a one-year term.

None of the three incumbents filed to run for re-election, though Talty, the member who resigned from the board in April 2015, ran for his former seat. He left the board to recover from heart surgery and he faced challenger White in his bid to return. The race for the three three-year term seats attracted a total of 10 candidates: Walter Campbell, Madeline Colagiovanni-Iannarone, Leonard Figula, Victor Finamore, David Fischer, Lamela, Pakala, Lawrence Reid, Lois Turner and Wohlrab.[3][4] Campbell, Reid, Turner and Talty were running as part of a slate called Progress Not Politics.[5]

Results[edit]

Brick Township Board of Education, At-large (3-year term), General Election, 2015
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Victoria Pakala 16.6% 4,006
Green check mark transparent.png Stephanie Wohlrab 15.9% 3,831
Green check mark transparent.png John Lamela 14.5% 3,491
Lois Turner 10.1% 2,427
Madeline Colagiovanni-Iannarone 9.7% 2,338
Walter Campbell 9.1% 2,194
Lawrence Reid 7.3% 1,771
David Fischer 6.6% 1,591
Leonard Figula 5.8% 1,388
Victor Finamore 4.1% 993
Write-in votes 0.33% 79
Total Votes 24,109
Source: Ocean County, "2015 General Election November 3, 2015, Official Results," accessed November 20, 2015

Funding[edit]

Reid ran as part of the Progress Not Politics slate, which reported $3,393.90 in contributions and $1,817.34 in expenditures to the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission as of October 27, 2015.[6]

Endorsements[edit]

Reid did not receive any official endorsements in this election.

2014[edit]

See also: Brick Township Public Schools elections (2014)

Two seats on the Brick Township school board were up for election on November 4, 2014. At-large incumbents Sharon Cantillo and Lawrence K. Reid ran for re-election as a slate. Returning candidates John Barton and David Fischer challenged them in the general election.[7]

Results[edit]

Brick Township Public Schools,
At-Large General Election, 3-year term, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Nonpartisan Green check mark transparent.pngSharon Cantillo Incumbent 35.1% 7,053
     Nonpartisan Green check mark transparent.pngJohn Barton 23.2% 4,658
     Nonpartisan David Fischer 22.4% 4,505
     Nonpartisan Lawrence K. Reid Incumbent 19% 3,814
     Nonpartisan Write-in votes 0.4% 87
Total Votes 20,117
Source: Ocean County Clerk, "General Election Unofficial Results," November 12, 2014

Funding[edit]

Reid ran as part of the Cantillo-Reid for Brick committee, which reported no contributions or expenditures to the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission as of October 13, 2014.[8]

Endorsements[edit]

Reid did not receive any official endorsements.

2011[edit]

Brick Township Public Schools, At-large General Election, 3-year terms, 2011
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Nonpartisan Green check mark transparent.pngSharon Kight Incumbent 22.4% 6,410
     Nonpartisan Green check mark transparent.pngLawrence K. Reid 18.1% 5,177
     Nonpartisan Vicky Leone 15.5% 4,434
     Nonpartisan Konstantine Goulas 13.1% 3,752
     Nonpartisan Robert Merola 13.1% 3,750
     Nonpartisan John Barton 8.9% 2,540
     Nonpartisan David Fischer 8.5% 2,430
     Nonpartisan Write-in votes 0.5% 149
Total Votes 28,642
Source: Ocean County Clerk, "2011 School Election County of Ocean Official Results," accessed September 8, 2014

Campaign themes[edit]

2015[edit]

Reid answered the following questions from Brick Shorebeat about issues in the district:

Do you currently receive any public salary compensation? If so, from what public agency?

No public salary at this time, nor at any time in the past.


Have you ever previously held an elected office in Brick or elsewhere?

Three year term on the Brick Township Board of Education.

As it presently stands, the administration of the Brick school district remains in flux. What should the academic priorities of our administrators be over the next three years?

Brick school administrators should be focused on increasing the graduation rate for both high schools. In addition, a priority should be placed on increasing the number of students taking advanced placement courses, and the availability of these courses in all subjects in both high schools. Another priority is making sure our special education students are receiving all the services that are appropriate for each individual.

District administrators need to maximize the Journies reading and language program and Math Expressions program in our elementary schools so as to ensure continued academic success in Middle and High School grades.

At its core, a public school district will always be judged based on the achievement of its students. Though Brick’s performance has improved in some areas in recent years based on state data, that same data has repeatedly shown that the Brick district lags in the category of college and career readiness. In a competitive state like New Jersey, what specific initiatives should be put into place to ensure that Brick students will be able to compete in both college and the marketplace with their peers who reside in the state’s highest-performing districts?

Our Brick school district should be initiating a program of Academies to focus students on specific areas of study such as STEM (science, technology and math) where the majority of new, high paying jobs are being created in the marketplace. Additionally, our District should be partnering with Ocean County College and Georgian Court University to bring in programs for both students and parents that will highlight what exactly is needed to be fully prepared for college. Also, rather than just one career day, our District could bring in representatives from various career fields throughout the year, giving students an in-depth overview from people actually working in areas such as healthcare, business and finance, etc.

Most Board of Education meetings are extremely lightly attended. On some occasions, concern has been expressed that not enough parents are engaged in the academic aspects of the school experience. What specific ways can the district better engage parents and members of the community with the aim of bringing them into discussions on academic achievement?

Our District could conduct evening and Saturday seminars for parents to learn about job opportunities and career paths that exist for High School graduates in today’s marketplace. Parental input is key to student performance, and any effort to better inform parents and bring them into discussions on academic achievement would have to be in the evening or weekend to get participation. Perhaps a discussion twice per month starting in October with central administration and Board of Education members attending.

Another specific recommendation would be to alter the format of BOE meetings so that comments from the public and BOE members about academic achievement would be the FIRST item on the agenda, and that way parents would know that 7:00 PM is when they can show up and be heard. As it stands now, parents need to come to meeting and wait an undetermined amount of time (1-2 hours) to get a chance to make public comments, and it isn’t really a discussion about academic achievement.

In recent years, some long-sought facilities improvements have been completed in various school buildings. With the condition and age of the district’s facilities continuing to be a chief concern among Brick residents, which improvements and/or upgrades would you prioritize, and which funding mechanism would you favor to finance those projects?

Upgrading all facilities in the District is an ongoing issue that needs to be part of the regular budget process, with $2 to $3 million set aside in each year’s $145 million school budget to fund these improvements. While on the BOE and Chairman of the Finance Committee of the BOE from 2011 through 2014, I made sure that the monies were set aside and the improvements planned, designed, put out to bid and completed. The time delay can be 2 years from the when the project is approved by the BOE until the time the work is completed. Accordingly, the work at Brick Township HS updating the electrical infrastructure was approved over 2 years ago.

Priorities for those projects would be anything that might be considered to fall into 3 main categories: 1) Improving student safety, 2) improving student performance, such as heat and air conditioning, and 3) energy saving and/or cost saving projects that make the District operations more efficient in spending taxpayer dollars. Budgeting for priorities in facility improvements by the Board of Education within the existing budget can be accomplished if we work to reduce costs in other areas and always strive to cut waste and increase efficiency.

I need your vote to allow me to follow through on these initiatives.

[9]

—Lawrence Reid (2015), [10]

2014[edit]

Reid provided the following statement on his campaign website:

Larry always prioritizes the needs of the students, while respecting the economics of the taxpayer and the impact of a school system on home values. To that effect, Larry was the driving force behind the extensive upgrades to the technology in the school district, having initiated the one-to-one laptop initiative and other improvements.

Larry feels passionately that parents who commit to residing in a town and, often times, spending 12+ years in the town's public education system, deserve the best possible educational experience for their children. He devotes many hours to painstakingly reviewing budgets and expenditures, always prioritizing the benefit of students and the elimination of wasteful spending.[9]

—Sharon Cantillo and Larry Reid's campaign website (2014)[2]

About the district[edit]

See also: Brick Township Public Schools, New Jersey
Brick Township Public Schools is located in Ocean County, New Jersey.
Brick Township Public Schools is located in Ocean County, New Jersey. The county seat of Ocean County is Toms River. In 2013, Ocean County was home to an estimated 583,414 residents, according to the United States Census Bureau.[11] In 2011-2012 school year, Brick Township Public Schools was the 17th-largest school district by enrollment in New Jersey and served 9,893 students.

Demographics[edit]

Ocean County underperformed in comparison to the rest of New Jersey in terms of education achievement and median household income in 2013. The United States Census Bureau found that 25.4 percent of Ocean County residents aged 35.8 years and older had attained a bachelor's degree, compared to 35.4 percent for New Jersey as a whole. The median household income for Ocean County was $61,136, compared to the state average of $71,629. The unemployment rate statewide and in the county were equal at 10.4 percent.[11]

Racial Demographics, 2013[11]
Race Ocean
County (%)
New
Jersey (%)
White 93.0 73.4
Black or African American 3.5 14.7
American Indian and Alaska Native 0.3 0.6
Asian 1.9 9.2
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander 0.0 0.1
Two or More Races 1.3 2.0
Hispanic or Latino 8.8 18.9

Presidential Voting Pattern,
Ocean County[12]
Year Democratic Vote Republican Vote
2012 102,300 146,474
2008 110,189 160,677
2004 99,839 154,204
2000 102,104 105,684

Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.

Recent news[edit]

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms 'Lawrence Reid' 'Brick Township Public Schools'. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]

BP-Initials-UPDATED.png
Suggest a link

Footnotes[edit]


Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Original source: https://ballotpedia.org/Lawrence_Reid
Status: cached on November 18 2021 13:04:14
Encyclosphere.org EncycloReader is supported by the EncyclosphereKSF