The School Board usually consists of elected members, so it is PART of an elected government.
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In the United States, most school boards are elected positions, so you will need to run for office and be elected by the voters of your district.
There is no such thing as "Canada's school trustee." A school trustee is a politician, someone who has been elected to a school board. Not all provinces have school boards. In those that do, school boards are municipal or regional bodies, not provincial or federal ones.
The legislative branch has nothing to do with school governing. Each state has special laws concerning education and there are school boards that oversees the district. The school boards are elected locally and are people who come from the community.
Your school board is elected locally so it is part of local government.
The public school education system is regulated by?ælocal school boards and by state governments. In certain cases, the federal government can step in.?æ?æ
There are hundreds of catholic school boards.
Answer: A special government elected at the local level to manage public schools.
School boards in Scotland was created in 1988.
School boards in Scotland ended in 2006.
The NJ Short Term Disability insurance program is mandated for people who work in NJ for Private employers. Government employers are exempt from this mandate. Most teachers work for a local municipal government, and therefore do not have mandated coverage. Many municipalities and school boards elect to participate. If your school board elected to participate, then you are covered. If not you are out of luck.
Local government isn't involved in hiring teachers. Elected school board members in each district hire teachers. Funding is a combination of state and federal money. Any local money may come from a school bond voted on by voters and added to property taxes.