Nassau County School Board Races Head to Runoffs

By Wes Wolfe, Florida Politics

Nassau County, with its deep-red politics and ability to generate knives-out primaries, could have been a prime spot for Gov. Ron DeSantis to put the significant strength of his organization behind one of the six School Board candidates running in the two races.

His presence could’ve also ended the election in the Primary, instead of runoffs that are in the cards for both District 1 and 3. The white-hot politics of the statewide education debate stayed at arm’s length from the Nassau County School Board campaigns, for the most part.

When it came down to it, voters decided School Board member Jamie Deonas and challenger Shannon Hogue were the top choices in District 1. Hogue claimed 46.6% of the vote, but in nonpartisan races, the top vote-getter has to receive 50% of the votes, plus one, to avoid a November runoff. Deonas, who received 33.7% of the vote, gets more time to make his case to voters.

Hogue won most precincts, but Deonas squeaked out a plurality at the River Road Baptist Church location. Rick Pavelock is eliminated. He received 19.6% of the votes cast.

Deonas, the current District 3 member, ran for the District 1 open seat. He won election and re-election the previous times without opposition. Deonas was one of the more vocal members of the Board regarding the need for a 1 mill property tax increase to help deal with the pressure put on the school district and its staff by the county’s extraordinary growth and high standard of living.

An educator for more than 20 years, Hogue is currently the reading coach at Emma Love Hardee Elementary.

The Nassau Teachers’ Association (NTA) announced its endorsements in the Board’s two competitive Primaries, backing Hogue in District 1, while putting their support with former West Nassau High School Principal Curtis Gaus in District 3.

Gaus, David Dew and Albert Wagner competed for the open District 3 seat, which ended up more or less even, though the order counts in elections. Gaus advanced to the runoff with 37.7% of the vote, while Wagner was close behind at 35%. Dew, who drew 27.2% of the vote, is eliminated.

Gaus ran up his totals around Callahan, while Wagner performed consistently across the district.

Wagner, a former teacher at Yulee Elementary School, is presently the assistant principal at Windy Hill Elementary in Duval County. He came in third in a three-way race for Nassau County School Superintendent in 2020, drawing 10.2% of the vote. Current Superintendent Kathy Burns claimed 50.8% of the nearly 25,500 votes cast, followed by Dale Braddock, who received 38.8% of the vote.

Gaus, who left West Nassau in 2020, is the principal at Bronson Middle-High School in Levy County. Dew, a federal civil service employee at Naval Air Station Jacksonville, is a Yulee resident, graduate of Nassau schools and involved in community activities.

 

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Mike Collins
Mike Collins(@mike-collins)
1 year ago

Horribly written. More confused than before.

Drew Skonberg
Drew Skonberg(@skonberg)
1 year ago

It seems to me having school board members who also teach or administer in the school district is a conflict of interest.