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Show DAVC board changes gain state approval By TOM BUSSELBERG KAYSVILLE The complexion comple-xion of the Davis Area Vocational Center will change, ever so slightly next month. Ray Briscoe of Bountiful, a member of the Davis School District Dis-trict board of education, will rejoin the board thanks to state board of education action. He will be sworn in during the regular March 22 DAVC board meeting. ' Robert Thurgood, also a member mem-ber of the Davis School Board, will rotate off of assignment with the DAVC. When the DAVC was first organized orga-nized in 1977, it was under the direction of the Davis School Board. Those five members also represented the DAVC. That was changed several years ago to reflect re-flect inclusion of Morgan County as a part of the center's service area. In addition, community members mem-bers were included on the board. The board includes: Dee R. Forbes, president, of Layton. He is a retired HAFB aircraft mechanic foreman, flight test crew chief and production management specialist. special-ist. Marsha Martin is from Morgan and employed by that county's human hu-man resources department. She serves as DAVC Board vice-chairperson. vice-chairperson. Others are: Boyd Thurgood, HAFB deputy director of maintenance mainte-nance and former Syracuse mayor; Aaron Richards, DAVC advisory council chairman and farmer and dairyman of Farmington; Richard London represents Morgan County Coun-ty School District and is employed at HAFB as chief of the operations and administration section; Henry Heath of Kaysville is an attorney and representing Davis School District. Dis-trict. Other board members include Louenda Downs, of Layton, a Davis School Board member and homemaker-musician; William Fenimore of Kaysville, plant manager man-ager of All American Gourmet Co. in Clearfield. Dr. Briscoe has previously served on the DAVC board. He represents the Davis District board and is an educator and LDS Church researcher. The board meets monthly and oversees activities at the vocational vocation-al center. The Kaysville facility serviced nearly 4,000 students last year, with more anticipated during the current year. Students are drawn from both the high school and post-high school levels. It is operated under the State Board of Vocational Education's direction. |