COLLEAGUE RIPS GARZA
At The McHale Report we keep asking the same question: "What is Denise 'La Gata' Garza hiding?" A contributor to Juan Montoya's award-winning El Rrun Rrun attempts to shine light on this wannabe BISD trustee who is counting on women to lead her to victory when she doesn't think twice about calling the the female AOBE leadership and hundreds of BISD women corrupt. As a result of her allegations, blogger Booby Witless-Cervezas went wacko and threatened these respected educators with a "blood bath" among other retaliatory actions because the organization posted their endorsements that did not include Garza. AOBE has filed a complaint against him with the Brownsville Police Department.
Garza, who doesn't have a college degree and refuses to publish on her Facebook page the number of higher education credits she has earned, is she has earned any, says her experience as the BISD's Medicaid coordinator more than compensates for frontrunner Frankie Olivo's Bachelor's degree and Master's degree studies as well as Jaime Diez's Bachelor's. According to a critic in the following article, the detractor asserts, "Now Denise claims she was the Medicaid coordinator. Give us a break. That position has never existed in the BISD. She needs to be honest about her job title when she worked at special services. Give credit where credit is due.
What did Garza actually do for the BISD? The El Rrun Rrun contributor responds, "Denise just pushed some buttons on a keyboard every once in a while and spent plenty of time in her male friend's office at special services. She did not change, feed or do any of the hard work we did in the classroom."
The Baker Boys, the famed investigative duo, are vetting her. BISD insiders are arguing that Board President Minerva Peña, who is trailing "Big" Joe Rodriguez in the polls after the latter who, like Olivo, gained endorsements from both AOBE and STIJA, pulls Garza's strings.
Minerva is the puppeteer and Garza is the marionette. There are many questions buzzing around Garza. Some of them are answered in the following article. After digesting the following information, educators need to ask themselves a simple questions: Do educated persons want an uneducated person giving them their marching orders? An educator answers that question:
Many of us cannot believe that Denise Garza (AKA Mujica) would have the nerve to be running for the BISD board. She would brag about her alone making all this Medicaid money for BISD while thinking us special education teachers and aides would never find out about what she was saying to people in and out of the school district.
The former superintendent who left to San Antonio and his wife, another clerk at special services, would believe her without realizing that the hard-working special education teachers and paraprofessionals generated the money while we cared for the children in our classrooms feeding them, changing them, assisting in the restroom, monitoring behavior and taking them to the nurses for medication.
Denise loved to say "I bring in all this money to the district" to the former superintendent and his wife. We had to enter by ourselves all our Medicaid billing on the computer and this took many hours to complete. Ask the leader of BEST who is a retired special education teacher about this. We all did the hard work.
Denise just pushed some buttons on a keyboard every once in a while and spent plenty of time in her male friend's office at special services. She did not change, feed or do any of the hard work we did in the classroom.
The training we received on Medicaid billing was always done by people from Houston ISD, not by Denise. They would come down in person to meet with us. She wanted to pretend to be a supervisor, but even the new special education teachers figured out she was a clerk by the way she presented herself.
Now Denise claims she was the Medicaid coordinator. Give us a break. That position has never existed in BISD. She needs to be honest about her job title when she worked at special services. Give credit where credit is due. The staff from Houston ISD Medicaid where the go-to-people for billing help.
Since Denise had been gone, we still continue to receive Medicaid billing training and support from the people from Houston and our Medicaid monies have increased over the years without her. The former superintendent and his wife (clerk) thought Denise was needed. Many of us did not think that back then and don't think we need Denise Garza (Mujica) in BISD now or in the future.
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