Lack of Frisco ISD Leadership

Since last week momentum across the nation on social media and in the news continues to grow about the tragic death of Austin Metcalf and Karmelo Anthony who has been charged with Murder – 1st Degree Felony.  Our community is grieving, and it is compelled by the outside hate and accusations being hurled at the victim, his family and the community. 

Everyone has questions that of course will go unanswered until the Frisco Police Department finishes their investigation.  The fact is that two families are torn apart, and both families are grieving in very different ways. Young adults witnessed this and will most likely suffer from some sort of PTSD as they cannot unsee what they experienced that day.  What has transpired since the tragedy could have been avoided.  What could have helped in this situation is for our City and ISD leaders to come out with a strong voice that a full and complete investigation would be carried out and to support the ongoing investigation by Frisco Police.

Where’s Waldrip?   That is a good question!  From a scan of social media, we can find no comments made by the Superintendent of the ISD anywhere.  All he did on Twitter was repost the Frisco PD post about fake accounts and then Chief Shilson’s letters to the public.  No personal comments from Waldrip anywhere.   What a good way to lead during crisis.  If you remember in 2024 he was all over social media in videos telling residents why they should support the four propositions on the upcoming Nov 5th ballot. Now, it is a game of Where’s Waldo Waldrip.

Where’s Frisco ISD?  A clear view of their page shows a post at 10:01 am right as the first 911 call came in relating to 5th graders. Then April 5th at 6am reminds people the last chance to complete the k-12 survey and share your feedback with district leadership.  Fast forward to today…nothing!  Great leadership FISD telling students you will have therapists on hand, that our ISD community is strong, etc.  Nothing – absolutely nothing!

Where is the Frisco ISD Board of Trustees?  Dynette Davis, Frisco ISD Trustee made a statement on April 2nd at 2:33 pm.  She writes “We are deeply saddened by the tragic loss of a student within Frisco ISD. The Board of Trustees shares in the profound grief of this senseless act of violence and extends its deepest condolences to the victim’s family, friends, and loved ones. A young life ending far too soon is a heartbreaking reminder that violence is never the answer to conflict. In times like these, we must come together in support and compassion. Students who need help processing this tragedy are encouraged to speak to their parents or guardians and to reach out to school counseling services for guidance and support. Frisco ISD is committed to providing all necessary resources for everyone impacted by today’s terrible events.”

Current Frisco ISD Board of Trustees who made a comment or shared Davis comment includes Sherrie Salas and Stephanie Elad. 

Current Frisco ISD Board of Trustee members who have made no comment are Keith Maddox Sr., Mark Hill, Marvin Lowe, and Gopal Ponangi (who is running for Frisco City Council). 

Candidates running currently for the Board of Trustees that commented include Renee Sample, Stuart Shulman, Amit Kalara, Muniraj Janagarajan. and Melanie Jones

Others candidate running currently for the Frisco ISD Board of Trustees who have made no comment include Suresh Manduva and Ange Yao. 

Just look back over time:

We had a bullet hit a Frisco ISD elementary school prompting the early release of students, where is that investigation?  What happened? 

What happened to the students involved with vandalism at Memorial High School a few years ago during a senior prank day.  Damages included paint on the walls, furniture destroyed, and fire extinguishers set off closing the campus for several days.

Seven years ago, a Frisco 5th grader accused students of bullying and sexual assault.  What happened in that case?  Frisco ISD did not even inform the parents.  The district only asked the boys on both sides to sign a stay-away order. 

Multiple kids have been killed in Frisco just walking to school or riding their bike in the early morning hours to school.  What is the district doing along with the city to prevent that?

We even had a child arrested for bring a BB gun to school back in 2019. 

Heck the Attorney General of Texas sued our district for electioneering back in 2024.

Where is the leadership within our school district?  What we don’t understand is why more people are not asking questions of the school district?  This is the time for them to come out holding hands with a powerful message of unity, forgiveness and strength … but nothing!  You could hear crickets’ chip from across the city.  Where is the leadership in our district?  Why is no one asking…. WHAT IS HAPPENING IN FRISCO ISD?

At Whistleblower, we have said we feel for both families – this was a tragedy that did not have to happen.  These types of things should not be happening in our community.  When it comes to Austin Metcalf and Karmelo Anthony, instead of being able to heal, we are faced with a firestorm of media outlets, content creators, and others whose goal is to create their narratives that include pushing hatred and divisiveness.  Every rumor, accusation, and false narrative only hurts this case and our community.

Today the Next Generation Action Network in Dallas met with Frisco Police.  They are concerned about a fair trial, and they are concerned about the false narratives across the board.  They were concerned about the Anthony families fear to leave there home and the death threats the family is receiving because their child was involved in this incident.  They want to make sure the Anthony family is receiving the protection they need.  The President of NGAN said the disinformation out there is actually hurting the case, and social media has been a stomping ground for them to launch any disparity they want to.  President, Dominque Alexander said after he meets with Frisco PD, he feels comfortable as of right now things are being done properly, but they will have to wait and see how things go moving forward.  Frisco PD will look into the threats against the Anthony family as well.   We agree they should!

Next NGAN wanted to clear up some of the rumors being spread which include:

The Autopsy Report Online: Fake

The Statement From an account under Chief Shilson’s name: FAKE

Austin Metcalf and Karmelo Anthony knew each other before this incident: False

Austin Metcalf and Karmelo Anthony partied together before: False                                                                                                

Austin Metcalf and his twin brother were not on the roster to be at the track meet: False

Kamelo Anthony was not on the roster to be at the track meet: False

ALL THREE BOYS WERE ON THE ROSTER AND SUPPOSED TO BE THERE!

All three young men arrived at the track meet via Fisco ISD school buses.

Karmelo Anthony was kicked out of his home days before this event: False

Concern about if all witnesses have been interviewed:  Per the President of NGAN, Frisco PD confirmed they have interviewed over 75 people and is ongoing and they have more to interview.

Video of the event: Yes – Frisco PD confirmed they have confiscated video footage of the event.  That will not be released to the public as it is part of the investigation and will come out in court.

At Whistleblower we would also like to clear up two issue we have heard:

  1. Frisco ISD does not own the event/stadium? False, it is owned by the school district, so state laws apply
  2. What was Anthony right when it came to him carrying a knife on school grounds? 

Can a weapon, such as a knife be carried on school property?  Texas Penal code Section 46.03 (Places Weapons Prohibited) states, “A person commits an offense if the person intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly possesses or goes with a firearm, location-restricted knife, club, or prohibited weapon listed in Section 46.05 (Prohibited Weapons)(a):

(1) on the premises of a school or postsecondary educational institution, on any grounds or building owned by and under the control of a school or postsecondary educational institution and on which an activity sponsored by the school or institution is being conducted, or in a passenger transportation vehicle of a school or postsecondary educational institution, whether the school or postsecondary educational institution is public or private, unless:

  • pursuant to written regulations or written authorization of the school or institution;
  • on the premises where a high school, collegiate, or professional sporting event or interscholastic event is taking place, unless the person is a participant in the event and a firearm, location-restricted knife, club, or prohibited weapon listed in Section 46.05 (Prohibited Weapons)(a) is used in the event;

Instead of creating a narrative that this is a race issue, ask Frisco ISD and its leadership some serious questions about how their actions have failed students.  Why don’t they back up their teachers?  What have they done over the years to bury issues?  Why would they not have security at the stadium?  What medical personnel did they have at the stadium? The big shockers that come from this are going to fall on the lack of leadership from our school district, starting with Superintendent Waldrip.

***** IF YOU WORK FOR FRISCO ISD AND WANT TO TELL US SOMETHING YOU CAN EMAIL US AT FRISCOWHISTLEBLOWER@PROTONMAIL.COM. WE WILL PROTECT YOUR IDENTITY ********

“King Cheney: A Frisco Farce in Three Acts” – Tickets by Frisco’s Fraudway

(The lights flicker, and the performing arts center goes dark. The drums begin to rumble like a storm and then with grand fury the curtains rise for the play to begin!)

ACT I: The Magnificent Mogul
(The lights come up on a grand stage.) Center spotlight, Mayor Jeff Cheney, dressed in regal attire, surveying his domain—the kingdom of Frisco. The backdrop is a glittering real estate billboard for the “Santa Barbara in The Preserve at Fields.” A chorus of Realtors hums disapprovingly in the background.
King Cheney (booming voice): Citizens of Frisco, behold! A paradise unlike any other! Luxurious living, exquisite homes, and of course, no conflicts of interest whatsoever! Just because I, the humble servant-mayor, also run The Cheney Group, doesn’t mean I would ever dream of using my influence to benefit my business! (The crowd murmurs)


ACT II: The Great Arts Debacle
(The scene shifts to the Frisco City Council Meeting, where they are about to vote on the Frisco Center for the Arts.) Tammany Hall takes to her microphone to welcome a band of concerned citizens, each holding a scroll of grievances to read at citizens’ input. King Cheney, now looking slightly less majestic, listens from his throne, pulls up his phone, and his fingers twitch over his social media apps.
Citizen 1: Your Majesty, why must we fund this expensive arts center when other needs go unmet?

Citizen 2: Will this benefit the people of Frisco, or just serve as another jewel in your town?

King Cheney (flustered, stands up): How dare you question my wisdom? Do you not see my vision? Only I know what’s best for Frisco! (Suddenly, a transformation begins)

Before the eyes of the audience, King Cheney shrinks, his voice becoming higher, more desperate. His regal robes stripped away, leaving him in a striped shirt, suspenders, and racoon hat.)

Tammany Hall (played by Tammy Meinershagen): Mr. Mayor, you are starting to look like a certain childhood bully – Scut Farkus. Cheney (looking for a mirror): Scut Farkus? Who… I demand to know who that is?

Tammany Hall responds: You know Mayor, the notorious tormentor from A Christmas Story.

ACT III: The Meltdown
Scut Cheney—er, King Cheney—now frantically types away on social media. His fingers fly over his phone, leaving a trail of desperate comments across every Frisco Facebook group and post related to the Frisco Center For The Arts. The doors from the back of the chamber open abruptly and running down to the stage is Steve Cone holding an article published in the Dallas Morning News.

Cone (shouts): “Mr. Mayor, Mr. Mayor, you have to read this, right now!” It’s so bad, Mr. Mayor, so bad! What do you want me to do Cone asks?”
Scut Cheney (frantically points to the audience): Listen to me! You’re all wrong! I know best! The arts center is my dream! You just don’t get it! WHYYYYY!?

(The citizens watch in bemusement. A few chuckles ripple through the audience. A small child tugs at their mother’s sleeve.)
Child: Mommy, why is the mayor crying and having a tantrum on the internet?
(The mother shrugs. The citizens shake their heads. The lights dim as Scut Cheney’s tantrum echoes into the void of the digital realm. The curtain falls to thunderous applause.)

Epilogue: As the audience exits, they are handed a complimentary “Cheney Group” brochure, because no matter how the play ends, the sales must go on. The End… or is it?

Curtains Up, Candidates Take Center Stage

Back on May 14, 2024, we filed our first PIR related to a performing arts center.  We asked for all the studies and documents related to those reports from consulting groups or third parties like Frisco ISD or Hall Group.   

On May 24, 2024, we got a tip from an inside source and we released breaking news in a Facebook Post that Craig Hall backed out from the Performing Arts Center at Hall Park.  Today we ponder, did he know something about the project, or how the scope of the project was changing that we didn’t at the time?  Possibly, but looking back we think he was a smart man for getting out along with Frisco ISD at the time. 

On May 30, 2024, we received a letter from the city secretary that, due to confidentiality issues, the City has chosen to seek a ruling from the Attorney General regarding a portion of the responsive documents.  We were not surprised!  Now we want you to STOP AND THINK ABOUT … what did they not want the public to see it?  For a city telling you this FCFA project is the cherry on top of the city, why do they continue to delay and withhold information?  As a voter, if that does not concern you, it should!

At the February 7th City Council Meeting future candidates took to citizens input under Agenda Item 38 (starting at the 2:25:00 mark).

First up, Jared Elad, candidate for City Council Place 4.  Elad stated he had been a resident for 11 years, and he first became aware of this project when he learned the city’s partnership with Frisco ISD fell through due to disagreements over the scope of the project.  Frisco ISD is moving forward with a 55-million-dollar facility as we speak to serve its students. 

Elad stated he was concerned about Frisco residents maintaining and operating this project in perpetuity.  He said it had been stated that this project could cost up to $6 million per year to maintain and he asked the council and the city if they had really done their analysis to make sure it won’t go higher than that?  He finds it even more concerning that we are in a partnership with Prosper ISD, which limits the location options since it will have to be within Prosper ISD boundaries.  He said that boundary limitations will make the project less accessible to most Frisco Residents.  Elad asked why the city was unable to reach an agreement with Frisco ISD, and why it could not have been reworked to serve the Frisco residents better.  Now we are left with not 1 but 2 Frisco Performing Arts Centers that the Frisco residents will have to support. 

Another concern of his was the city signing a letter of intent with Broadway Access – he noted that a letter of intent is not binding.  Without a signed agreement, there is no guarantee that this partnership will come to fruition.  That could leave Frisco residents with a facility to maintain and a facility that won’t meet its projected potential revenue.  Elad went on to say it has been reported that the Dallas Performing Arts Center is struggling financially as we speak, due to the pandemic and the nature of consumers’ habits changing. He looked at the council and asked, “What makes us think we can do better?” 

As for the jobs, he said it will only create a minimum number of jobs, other than the construction phase.  While he appreciates the other public-private partnerships like The Star and Frisco PGA, he believes this one will go too far with the potential cost burden it will put on Frisco residents.  He closed, asking the council to reconsider the priorities for Frisco and to make sure we are fiscally responsible.

Next up was Burt Thakur, candidate for City Council Place 2.  He said he absolutely loves the arts, supports the arts, and believes in the power of the arts to change people.  He talked about how when he was in the military, he would use the power of books to transform himself in other places, giving his mind some peace. He said the question of whether we like or support the arts is not what is in front of us at this moment. 

The question before us today is are we being financially responsible, and do we have the right priorities in line.  Are we good stewards of taxpayer dollars?  Thakur went on to say that on Friday the proposed number was $360 million, then a few days later the number was adjusted to $340 million.  Then he pointed out, if you take the graphic in the presentation, that ads up to $380 million.  Why are we being given vague ranges with an 80 million dollar variance for the cost? Where are the specifics?

Thakur brought up his concern regarding the yearly O&M (operational/maintenance) costs potentially facing Frisco residents.  Can we justify this when we, as a city, have other pressing needs that are unfunded?  He also touched on the Frisco ISD theater and said, with one already in progress, how is there not a way to find a potential to combine the two and mitigate risk?  Thakur mentioned how police and fire have all asked for additional staffing, which costs a fraction of the yearly operational costs, yet the city can’t find the money for that.  We don’t have a proper animal shelter, nor do we have a building for our Veterans. We need a space for the local VFW and other Veteran organizations to meet.  Thakur said he loves the arts, but he believes in responsible governance, and he asked the council to work smarter, take a step back, and make sure we are funding our needs first.  Thakur closed with; We owe it to the people of Frisco to prioritize wisely.

Next up Josh Meek, candidate for City Council Place 4.  Meek started by voicing his support agenda item 38 & 39.  With the amount of time, money and resources invested in this project we need to reach an answer.  He then said that answer needs to come from no one else but Frisco citizens. He hopes that the council allows citizens to vote sooner, rather than later because prolonging it could have increased costs.  

Meek went on to say Frisco is ultimately a destination location and he thinks that it would be a far, far oversight to not explore the potential we have when it comes to partnering with Broadway.  Meek said he has two boys and when Hamilton came out, they looked at traveling halfway across the country to have that experience so why would he not allow this to be in his own backyard.  When you start to break it down a big part of what has made us successful is that we have created these areas for people to visit and experience.  He believes that this should go to the ballot.  He said we have four districts that cover Frisco so while many are asking why we not partnered with Frisco ISD, maybe we should be asking why we have not partnered with the other ISDs and should we more in the future (Lewisville ISD, Little Elm ISD, Prosper ISD).  Meek said he is on the CDC Board, and he has had the opportunity to see the benefits we will have from this.

Besides the council meeting we got an email from another candidate, Jerry Spencer, candidate for Frisco City Council Place 4.  He wrote; I am opposed to the Arts Center in its current form. I especially do not like taking money from economic development and community development. I want to get away from this sports/tourism obsession and go after emerging technology/medical research, etc., with the sales tax money. Instead of Sport City USA, we need to re-brand ourselves Brain City USA! I have no problem with a REGIONAL Arts Center. Let’s do one with Plano, McKinney, Allen and Denton. It will take some work, but with effort it can be done. Then, we spread the costs over 1 million people, rather than the 235,000 in Frisco. The per capita costs would come way down.  In closing, my website will be up in a few days

Lastly, while he is not running now he did run in 2024, we want to recognize that John Redmond spoke at the council meeting in early February.  He said, in theory, he liked the idea of the Performing Arts Center.  However, he feels we have spent tons of bond for a community theater and spent the last focused on a highly commercial, very large-scale performing arts center.  Redmond went on to say he believes these decisions have been made based on the input of a very small select group of people and not based on the voice of Frisco residents.

Whistleblower Opinion Time: While many will say Whistleblower hates the arts, that is simply not true.  My son was in community theater since middle school.  We had to take him to other cities to do community theater shows.  What we support is a community theater venue for our residents and nearby visitors.  We don’t support a monstrosity theater built for Broadway shows and concerts.  I asked my son the other day what do you think about this Broadway thing in Frisco?  He said dad Broadway isn’t just about the performance it is about New York, the lights, the theaters, the city itself creates the experience of Broadway.  Seeing Lion King in Dallas or Fort Worth doesn’t elicit the same response as you traveling to New York and encapsulating the entire experience of Broadway.  We agree with him! 

We appreciate hearing from the candidates because we believe they will be the future of this city.  We believe if residents rise and vote for change, we could see different things coming from the council pulpit.  One thing never escapes us, why did Frisco ISD and Craig Hall backout?  What did they know or what did they see change that they didn’t agree with?  We have analyzed this project in every way we can and a few points keep popping up:

1. Frisco has a lot going on right now with the Frisco PGA, Fields build-out, Universal, Toyota Stadium overhaul, downtown revitalization, Grand Park, and more.  So many of these things have not been finished, and now we are going to start another project. Are we overextending ourselves and soon to hit a bubble of sorts?

2.  Where is the HEART of Frisco?  Every city has an area that is the original heartbeat of the city.  Where is that for Frisco?  We lost the heartbeat of our rich history that dates back to the late 19th century.  Initially, a railroad stop, and hub for the railway, we lost that cultural historical heritage instead of building around it and putting it into everything we do.  Wouldn’t it be cool if you could take the local railway as our public transportation from downtown up to the PGA for dinner, then over to the theater for dinner? 

It could have been awesome, but instead we just set up a museum to hold pictures of our heritage and how many people actually visit that each year.  The reason some of these cities the Chamber visited on their “Leadership Travel” were so great is because they built around their history.  Instead, Frisco just built over it!

3. The location of PAC being at 380 and the DNT, so it is in Prosper ISD boundaries, which does limit the access to Frisco residents. How could we not have solidified a deal with Craig Hall, who was offering the land as a donation? The land they are proposing we use today for this project was purchased years ago by the city with the intent to sell it one day. Why? They knew it would be worth millions along the 380 / DNT corridor. Taxpayers paid for that land! It was not free to the city! We spent money back then to make money today to help pay off our debt obligations.  

4.  EDC & CDC: Where did that money come from?  Sales Tax!  They want you to believe this is not your money, it’s all those tourists who come here.  Do you grocery shop here, eat here, buy gas here?  If you do, then you are paying for it!

What was it designated for?  Community Development and Economic Development  – it was not originally intended for a Performing Arts Center.  If you read the slide about the Frisco Model vs Venue Management Model you will see the private partners in the sports model operate these partnerships without on-going operational funding from the City.  These are partners like the PGA, Omni, The Cowboys all with strong financial backing.   

In the Frisco Center For Arts model we have no idea who the Private Operator will be.  The financial model is DEPENDENT on overall financial milestones for fundraising.  What happens if the economy goes to crap and people are not donating – who covers that cost then?  You…and me!  It also states the private partner operates with LIITED ON-GOING OPERATIONAL FUNDING from the city.   We agree with the candidates why so VAGUE – where is the CERTAINITY?  Why are you asking us to vote on so many “What If’s?”  Words like dependent, limited, don’t make me feel comfortable.

Lastly, will it deplete the CDC and EDC money for other potential projects?  Okay it brings construction jobs here during development – are you in construction?  It will have a few salary jobs to run the theater but will the hourly jobs to clean it, be an usher or attendant help you pay for your million-dollar house?  What jobs will this bring to Frisco that are viable economic jobs that people can live on in Frisco?  None!  What happens if we ever faced another Pandemic?  During that time a survey showed that the Dallas Arts suffered a $67.7 Million dollar loss.  Who will pay for it then? 

Mayor Cheney and his protégés Tammy Meinershagen, Bill Woodard, John Keating, and Laura Rummel must have every project be so great, so grand!  It’s like they all suck on the same bottle of whiskey every night and pass the blunt until they have the same stories lined up.  Time to say enough, otherwise we might be setting ourselves up for some hard times ahead in Frisco.  Slow down, smell the roses!  Fix the infrastructure and stop lying to citizens.  Life would be so much better.

Weasel Wes & The Letter

In our December blog called Fairweather Frisco Friends, we told you about how the city went on a full-frontal attack, with Bobblehead Bill leading the charge against our firefighters in the May 2024 elections.  Why would they do this?  The Frisco Fire Fighters Association felt their relationship with the city deteriorated or went up in smoke to the point that they had no other choice than to bring propositions for Civil Service and Collective Bargaining.  After the election, Angelia Pelham and John Keating promised on their election roads to make things better with the Fire Department and to work on solutions.  Ever wonder how that turned out?

In our blog, 13th Storke of the Clock, we told you about the aftermath following the May 2024 election and how the city and city management held “HEALING SESSIONS,” aka mandatory in-service meetings.  The point was for the Fire Department staff the opportunity to express their complaints and fears.  The result was a 50+ page report that was no different than the 2011 Climate Report, which talked about how Mack Borchardt and Lee Glover were the direct cause of the problems. 

That 2024 report was given to the city management for their review, and we are guessing Weasel Wes didn’t like the remarks about him in the report.  The 2024 report noted that when it comes to the City Manager, Wes Pierson the FD doesn’t trust him or his judgement. The report went on to say since taking over in this city he has been dismissive, divisive, flat out ignored them, refuses to meet with them, and has been condescending to members of the FD fracturing a future relationship

After wasting the departments time in the “in-service healing session meetings” the members of the Fire Department waited, and waited, and waited for possible change.  One notable change was that Fire Chief Lee Glover was given a “counselor” to help him do his job better.  The other notable change was staff started leaving like hot cakes.  That’s right the “EXPERIENCE” in our fire department is dropping like flies but they don’t want the citizens to know that. 

Sometime in December or early January, we were told the Fire Fighters Association again raised some member motions for a “VOTE OF NO-CONFIDENCE!”   Bet you have not heard about that!  We are told it passed but we are still working sources to find out the final vote outcome. 

It was the February 2025 response from Weasel Wes that caught our attention.  It reads that he received their letter dated 12/27/2024 regarding the results of the vote of no confidence in Fire Chief Lee Glover and how he appreciated meeting with two of the board’s directors to discuss the letter’s contents.  Sounds good right?  Not so fast!

Paragraph two states while Weasel Wes respects their prerogative to voice concerns, he is DISAPPOINTED that this vote was the chosen method to do so – especially since work is currently underway to address issues that have been raised.  He continues “It’s equally disappointing that as far as I (Wes) know, there was no attempt to communicate about these matters before the vote.”

HEY WEASEL WES – WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN?  DID YOU READ THE 50+ PAGE HEALING SESSION REPORT, OR WAS YOUR HEAD STUCK IN A HOLE SOMEWHERE?

Next Weasel Wes acknowledges some changes have been made by Chief Glover that are viewed as unpopular but if those changes result in better service or value for the citizens he is inclined to support them.  That must mean that Weasel Wes supports taking away Squad after they just asked for that money in the 2019 and 2023 bond for more Squad ambo’s.  Funny thing is more and more cities are implementing Squad Units as Frisco takes it away.  Weasel Wes must also supports Glover’s decision to go back to the big bulkier fire trucks that are hard to navigate the narrow Frisco streets lined with cars because no one knows how to use their garage or driveway.  He supports the reduction of staff.  After Assistant Fire Chief, Kyle Mills announced his retirement after 21 years with the department, Chief Lee Glover decided to redistribute rolls instead replacing that position.  In 2024 they had Firefighter Stewart and Captain Graham retire.  Then in October 2023, Deputy Chief Porter retired.  Years of experience out of the door.  The truth is many of them utilized their retirement options to leave Frisco and have jobs elsewhere.  Porter is at Little Elm today and Mills took a job with the Texas A&M Forest Service.   

We reached out to other local Fire Departments and asked if they would ever eliminate positions in their ranks, and we were told “not a chance” repeatedly.  One commented off the record that eliminating positions is equal to department suicide because cities will never give you the money back in budgets in the future to reinstate those positions.  Yet Fire Chief Glover thinks we don’t need more front-line staff, and he is willing to reduce his management staff.  How does that benefit the citizens, Weasel Wes?

Weasel Wes then goes on in the letter to say he recognizes there are still opportunities for growth and improvement in the FFD and he will continue to encourage Chief Glover and his team to pursue efforts to improve our service delivery in a responsible way.  He notes that Chief Glover has opportunities to grow as a leader, just as we all do…. Wait Weasel Wes, Glover has been with Frisco FD for over 20 years and held positions such as lieutenant, captain, deputy chief, assistant chief and more so don’t you think he should have GROWN THOSE LEADERSHIP QUALITIES DURING THAT TIME?  Now, after all this time he should be ready to step in and not need a counselor or more opportunities to grow.  

Ready for the hard facts and truth?  The bulk of his email was written in a way like it is the first time he is hearing about these issues and that he is shocked to hear of the issues at hand.  Weasel Wes writes it as if the rank and file and the association have never shared their concerns prior to this December 2024/January 2025 vote.  The hard truth is they shared their concerns with Weasel Wes before they even hired Chief Glover which we documented in our blog, Turn Back Time.  Then they continued to share their concerns after they hired Chief Glover with a survey in 2023, also at citizen input and in the May 2024 election.  Lastly, let’s not forget about the cities own survey that resulted in a 56-page report (during the aka Healing Sessions) where it was mentioned over 100 times with the issues directly being related to culture, morale, leadership, vindictiveness, racism and retaliation like behavior.  He closes the letter by saying everyone he talks to says the department is great – well Weasel Wes who are you talking to? 

Weasel Wes couldn’t have been more disrespectful and very intentional with how he wrote the letter.  Angelia Pelham and John Keating have not followed up on their promises “TO MAKE IT ALL BETTER!” We documented some of those in our blog, Wasted Time. Remember that next time they run!  We can’t wait to see what Tammy Meinershagen promise on her campaign this year when it comes to fire fighters as she was on the front lines against them in May 2024.  Our City Manager is not stupid, in fact he is quite calculating and is known for being arrogant from all the emails we receive from inside the city.  His letter is an example of just that!

Next, Weasel Wes is going to act like he never knew the city was being sued by Former Assistant Fire Chief Cameron Kraemer for wrongful termination. We wrote about the case in our blog Kraemer vs City of Frisco. If he wins, the city will pay big time, which we wrote about in our blog, Big Time Casino Payout.

FISD: Mindful Spending

Where does a school district’s money come from?  School funding is largely in the hands of states. The primary job of the state finance system should be to account for differences between the districts in the cost of providing the right educational quality level, and then to distribute the funds.  About 30 years ago the Texas Supreme Court ordered the Texas Legislature to fix the state’s unequal school funding system.  The fix by lawmakers is often called the “Robin Hood” recapture plan.   In 2023, three school districts voted to stop paying the recapture money to the state and two of those districts are here in North Texas.  Carroll ISD and Keller ISD led the way and if other districts followed it would force the legislature to look at more options. If you received one of the recent postcards, they sure look misleading!

So, what is the funding system?  According to a 2019 Texas Tribune article, “Texas guarantees every school district a certain amount of funding for each student. State lawmakers determine the base number per student, which is currently $5,140. Many educators argue that the state should regularly increase that base number, at least with inflation, to get all schools the money they need. But the amount has not changed in four years.”  What many Texans don’t realize is that Texas consistently ranks in the bottom 10 to 12 states for education spending per student.  According to an article by Texas Standard, Texas hasn’t increased school funding since 2019.  It goes on to say to keep up with inflation over the last four years, state lawmakers would need to add almost $1200 per student. Two North Texas districts, Carroll ISD and Keller ISD, led the way and if other districts followed it would force the legislature to look at more options.

Remember when we were told if we approved the Texas Lotto, it would support education, where is all the money from the profits of these scratch-offs and power ball drawings?  The truth is only 7% of the funding by the state for the state’s public school system comes from the Texas Lotto. However, the Texas Lottery is a better wordsmith to perfume the pig. The Texas Lotto website reads, “The Texas Lottery Supports Texas Education. Since 1997, the Texas Lottery has contributed $33.9 billion to the Foundation School Fund, which supports public education in Texas.”

While funding is an important part of the discussion so are the spending habits of some of these districts.  How did our school district choose to spend their money?  Are the funds being distributed properly?  Are they spending based on a well-thought-out budget?  We decided to investigate the spending habits via the Frisco ISD Check Registers on the district’s website. The district has 4 funds: The General Fund, Child Nutrition, Debt Service, and Capital Projects.   We started with the General Fund!

$$ Legal Services: In 2024, Frisco ISD paid Abernathy Law $40,851.93, in 2023 they paid $85,913.58.  We are curious, would it be a conflict of interest if the same law firm represented both the city and the School District?  Was the legal advice received around these “Public-Private Partnerships” that are sold to residents as success ventures. 

$$ Legal Services: In 2024, Frisco ISD paid Walsh Gallegos Kyle another law firm $411,336.57 and in 2023, $353,028.02.   Why does the district have two different law firms?  What kind of legal services is the district needing?

$$ Amazon: In 2024, the district spent $2,271,090.30 on “MISC SUPPLIES.”  That is slightly higher than the 2023 spend, which was $2,047,880.  That is a lot of Amazon!

$$ Dallas Physician Medical Services for Children:  In 2022, the district opened a medical clinic to provide FISD employees with free access to health and wellness.  As we know nothing is free!  In 2024 the district paid DPMSC $470,000 dollars, and in 2023 the district spent $472,000 dollars.   We are curious why they would partner with a medical service for children – when it is supposed to be for adult employees. 

$$ Blue Star Frisco EV:  In 2024, $457,915.28 for “Rentals”, in 2023 the district paid 359,028 dollars.  When the public-private partnership was announced for The Frisco Star residents were led to believe this was a good deal for the school district as they would have use of the facilities.  The city website reads “It houses Frisco ISD events such as football games, soccer games, marching band competitions, commencement exercises, and other similar events.”  Everyone failed to mention how much the district would pay for it each year on top of what the district paid for in the original agreement.

$$ City of Frisco (Contracted Services):  In 2024, the district paid the city $2,361,742.00 and back in 2023, they paid $2,135,134.56 dollars.  What contracted services cost that much?

$$ City of Frisco/Park (FISD Debt Payment): In 2024, the district paid $4,511,073.80 and back in 2023 they paid $5,678,818.38.   What is the district getting back from that? 

$$ Hilltop Holdings (Yearly Investment): In 2024, the district paid Hilltop Holdings $63,301 and in 2023 it was $81,017.98.  What is the yearly investment for? 

$$ GCS Trails of Frisco (Contracted Services):  Par for the course the city is paying for the use of the facilities for GOLF!  In 2024, the district paid $61,555.85 and then in 2023 they paid $54,893.94.  I thought the whole point of the PGA partnership was to have “USE OF THE FACILITIES” so why are we paying to rent facilities.

$$ Population & Survey (Demographics Survey): The most interesting expense was the 2024 payment for $115,700 for a survey.  Then we noticed in 2023 they paid $113,450.00 for another survey.  Why? For What?  We plan to file a PIR for the information.

The district’s website reads “OUR MISSION is to know every student by name and need.”  At Frisco Whistleblower our mission is to understand how the district spends its money and the need to ask us for more Bonds = More Taxes!  There were many more payments in the 2024 and 2023 General Fund Report that some may question.  While we wanted to highlight a few, we are still left with the question of what the point of the Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone (TIRZ). If all we are doing is paying out on them then how are they beneficial? What are we getting back from these TIRZ if we now have to go and ask residents for another $1 Billion dollars?  Next up we will look at the 22/23/24 Capital Fund spending.  Until then, you can review the Financial Reports on the district’s website.  Lastly, look over the check registers as you might find some interesting things like we did.