Cheryl Pasteur
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Cheryl E. Pasteur (born 1948/1949) is an American politician. She is a member of the Maryland House of Delegates for District 11A in Baltimore County. She previously served on the Baltimore County School Board from 2018 to 2022.


Education and career

Pasteur graduated from the University of Maryland, College Park with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English education in 1971. She later attended Morgan State University, where she earned a Master of Science in urban education in 1975. Pasteur is a former teacher at Lake Clifton Eastern High School and Old Court Middle School as well as a former principal for Old Court Middle School and
Randallstown High School Randallstown High School is a public high school located in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States. It serves students in the Randallstown, Woodlawn, and Owings Mills areas. It is a part of Baltimore County Public Schools. Its primary feeder ...
. From 1983 to 1988, she worked for the
Federal Bureau of Investigation The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the domestic intelligence and security service of the United States and its principal federal law enforcement agency. Operating under the jurisdiction of the United States Department of Justice, t ...
. Pasteur retired from teaching in 2012.


Involvement in politics

In November 2018, Pasteur was elected to the Baltimore County School Board in Councilmanic District 2, receiving 66.1 percent of the vote in the general election. In December 2019, Pasteur challenged incumbent board chair Kathleen Causey in the election for chair of the Baltimore County School Board. Pasteur received six votes for the chair position, while Causey received five. Despite this, Causey continued to serve as the board's chair, as board policy requires a candidate to receive seven votes to become chair. In December 2021, the school board selected Pasteur to serve as its vice chair. In June 2019, Maryland Senate President
Thomas V. Miller Jr. Thomas Vincent Miller Jr. (December 3, 1942 – January 15, 2021), known as Mike Miller, was an American politician from Maryland. He had been a state senator representing the 27th District ( Calvert, Charles, and Prince George's Counties) from ...
and
House Speaker The speaker of a deliberative assembly, especially a legislative body, is its presiding officer, or the chair. The title was first used in 1377 in England. Usage The title was first recorded in 1377 to describe the role of Thomas de Hungerfo ...
Adrienne A. Jones Adrienne A. Jones (born November 20, 1954) is the Speaker of the Maryland House of Delegates, the first African-American and first woman to serve in that position in Maryland. Initially appointed by Governor Parris Glendening to fill the vacancy ...
named Pasteur to serve on the
Blueprint for Maryland's Future The Blueprint for Maryland's Future, also referred to as just The Blueprint, is a landmark law in the U.S. state of Maryland. The bill represents a 10-year plan that aims to implement a series of education reforms recommended by the Commission on ...
Funding Formula Workgroup. In January 2020, the Baltimore County School Board voted to endorse the recommendations of the Kirwan Commission. In February 2022, Pasteur filed a declaration supporting a lawsuit challenging Baltimore County's new council districts for diluting the power of Black voters. Pasteur resigned from the school board on February 11, 2022, to run for the Maryland House of Delegates in District 11A. In June 2022, Governor
Larry Hogan Lawrence Joseph Hogan Jr. (born May 25, 1956) is an American politician and businessman serving as the 62nd governor of Maryland since 2015. A moderate member of the Republican Party, he was secretary of appointments under Maryland governor Bo ...
appointed retired middle school teacher Felicia Stolusky to serve the rest of her term. Pasteur was the only candidate to run for the district.


In the legislature

Pasteur was sworn into the Maryland House of Delegates on January 11, 2023. She is a member of the House Judiciary Committee.


Controversy

In 2012, the Maryland State Department of Education opened an investigation into Randallstown High School, where Pasteur was a principal at the time of the investigation, after two anonymous sources reported cheating on state testing. A confidential report obtained by Project Baltimore in May 2020 found "improbable gains" on the state assessments of sixteen students at the school, resulting in two school employees being banned from future state assessments. Pasteur says in the report that she was "unaware of any testing improprieties", but two witnesses told state investigators that she was aware of the cheating. Pasteur announced her retirement weeks after Randallstown High School was reported for allegedly cheating on state testing, and she officially left the school weeks before the results of the investigation were released. Pasteur responded to the Project Baltimore report in a radio interview in June 2020, confirming some of the reported details but denying that she was connected to the alleged cheating or that she retired to "slip out" of the investigation.


Electoral history


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Pasteur, Cheryl 1940s births 21st-century African-American women 21st-century African-American politicians 21st-century American legislators 21st-century American women politicians African-American state legislators in Maryland African-American women in politics Democratic Party members of the Maryland House of Delegates Living people Women state legislators in Maryland People from Pikesville, Maryland School board members in Maryland Schoolteachers from Maryland 21st-century Maryland politicians