By Karen Hatter

Our calendars are packed full aren’t they?  Personal calendars are used by many of us to track our appointments and schedules.  If you closely examine one of these commercially printed calendars you may see little reminders noted on certain days like “New Year’s Day” or “Martin Luther King Day”.  If you happened to have a calendar printed by the Kentucky School Board Association like I do, you would see a reminder proclaiming, “January is School Board Recognition Month” printed at the top of January’s page.  In light of that designation for the month, I want to recognize the members of our local board of education.
The members of the Lincoln Board of Education oversee the district’s budget and make decisions about such things as building projects, educational programs and establishing the positions within the school system. The drive behind each and every decision is to make certain the individual student in the Lincoln district gets what he or she needs to successfully learn in school and beyond—to make those college and career readiness benchmarks. In recent times this has become more of a challenge to our board members as budget options are restricted by the shrinking state and federal dollars for education and tough economic times locally.
These responsibilities and others are the reason Kentucky and other states set aside the month of January to thank local school board members during School Board Recognition Month.
Like the students in Lincoln County schools, the members of its board of education must do their homework. This means sifting through complicated test data and financial reports while keeping abreast of the latest requirements handed down from state and federal governments, to name just a few “subjects.”
Our school board members also serve as the link between the school system and the community. That’s why you’ll often find them at ball games, school celebrations and honors ceremonies.  
So why do they do it? Here is what several school board members – no different from those here – from across the state recently said about their job on the occasion of School Board Recognition Month:
“You have to be willing to put in the extra hours to educate yourself. You cannot continually rely on other people to spoon feed you information. You actually have to read policy.”
“My background is in business management and I use these tools in dealing with people and making decisions and looking at budgets, focusing on the best possible outcomes considering the situations and constraints you have to deal with.”
“The very first skill – and I don’t even know if you could call it a skill – and that is you’ve got to have a true heart for children. If you don’t have that you don’t need to be on the school board.”
So I hope the community as a whole, and individual parents, students and school staff will take a few minutes this month to acknowledge the critical role and responsibilities carried out by Mr. Jim Kelley, Mr. Tom Blankenship, Mr. Denny Hogue, Mr. Tim Jackson and Mr. Eddie Whittemore.  We appreciate the time our board members have given to the betterment of the school district.