She took her seat on the school board in 1980, with Jimmy Carter in the White House and American hostages in Iran. Over the next 26 years, four other presidents took office, Orange County went bankrupt and pulled itself together, and every non-adult student currently enrolled in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District was born.
Judy Franco is running again for the Newport-Mesa board of trustees. If she serves another four years, she will be the longest-lasting trustee in the history of the district. The record-holder, Roderick McMillian, served 29 years from 1965 to 1994 — and the Newport-Mesa boardroom is named after him.
It's no surprise, then, that experience is one of the key issues in the race for the fifth trustee area. Franco, in her campaign, has promoted herself as a seasoned veteran of the board who helped pass two bond measures, oversaw two strategic plans and has valuable connections in Sacramento. Meanwhile, opponents Sandy Asper and Loretta Zimmerman have trumpeted their work on the Newport-Mesa front lines — Asper as a teacher for 38 years, Zimmerman as a parent of five.