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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Idaho official who oversaw IEN to resign

Teresa Luna (Betsy Russell)
BOISE – Teresa Luna, director of the Idaho Department of Administration and a central figure in the scandal over Idaho’s failed statewide school broadband network, will resign at the end of this year’s Idaho legislative session, Gov. Butch Otter announced Tuesday. Luna has headed the state department since 2011, when she was named to succeed former Director Mike Gwartney, a close friend of Otter’s who had served in the position for a salary of a dollar a year. Gwartney issued the $60 million Idaho Education Network contract in 2009 that a court last month declared illegal. Otter, in a statement Tuesday, didn’t say why Luna was leaving. “I admire Teresa’s tenacity and commitment to doing the right thing,” he said. “I am proud to call her a friend.” Luna is the sister of former two-term Idaho schools Superintendent Tom Luna, who left office in December and also was a big booster of the Idaho Education Network, which was one of Otter’s key initiatives as governor. Amid legal questions over the contract award in the summer of 2013 – after the Idaho Supreme Court had raised questions and federal authorities had cut off federal matching funds – Luna, without telling state lawmakers, extended the contract through 2019. Under questioning from the Legislature’s joint budget committee, she said she thought the legal problems would work out, and she expected extension of the contract to lead to savings. Since the statewide service to Idaho high schools was cut off last month, school districts have scrambled to sign new contracts for broadband service with vendors of their choice; costs fell 37 percent, even as bandwidth increased. The cost per megabit fell a whopping 61 percent. The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating the contract deal; the two politically connected vendors who held the contract have filed multimillion-dollar tort claims against the state. Last week, legislative budget writers pulled the program out of the Department of Administration entirely and cut the department’s budget by nearly two-thirds; they shifted the school broadband program to new state schools Superintendent Sherri Ybarra’s office. Prior to being named director, Luna was chief of staff to Gwartney and then interim director. She previously worked for the Idaho state controller’s office for four years. When he named Luna director in 2011, Otter said, “Teresa has proven herself through some very tough times, advancing the priorities and initiatives that she and Mike set together during his tenure and continuing to focus the Department of Administration’s efforts on finding smarter, more efficient ways of managing everything from information systems to purchasing.” Luna said then, “It’s a privilege to work for a governor who gives his agency directors the flexibility and freedom to be innovative in our management in order to be more effective in our use of taxpayers’ dollars.” Idaho Public TV reporter Melissa Davlin inquired about Luna’s status after reviewing official records and discovering that two of Otter’s top cabinet members – Luna and Idaho State Police Director Ralph Powell, who was in the middle of a contract mess with a private prison firm that led to a $1 million settlement – hadn’t yet been submitted for confirmation by the Senate for Otter’s third term. Asked about the two on Tuesday, Otter issued the announcement regarding Luna’s impending resignation; he had no comment on Powell. On Monday, the Idaho Senate unanimously passed legislation to require the governor to submit cabinet reappointments to the Senate by the 36th day of the legislative session; Tuesday was the session’s 65th day. That bill is now pending in the House.