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Press Release

Micciche Reelected to State Association Board

Austin— Dan Micciche of Dallas ISD has been reelected to a three-year term on the Texas Association of School Boards (TASB) Board of Directors, representing TASB Region 10, Position C. Micciche was also elected to serve as first vice-president. The election was held during the Association’s 2025 Delegate Assembly on Sept. 13 in Houston. 

Micciche was elected to the Dallas ISD Board of Trustees in 2012. He is partner emeritus at the law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld. During his time with Akin Gump, Micciche started and chaired a school partnership program with James W. Fannin Elementary School in Dallas. The program won the State Board of Education’s highest award for community partnerships in 2011.   

He has received numerous recognitions for his work in public education, including the No Kid Hungry Award from Share Our Strength, The Closing the Gap Award from Leadership ISD, and the Voice of Children Award from Children at Risk.   

He received his undergraduate degree from Stony Brook University, his law degree from the University of Chicago Law School, and his master’s degree in education policy and analysis from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Micciche also holds a master’s degree in public leadership from the LBJ School of Public Affairs at The University of Texas at Austin.   

He has been recognized by D Magazine as one of the Best Lawyers in Dallas and by Texas Monthly as a Super Lawyer.    

Micciche’s civic and charitable activities include serving on the boards of the American Red Cross Dallas, Greater East Dallas Chamber of Commerce, and Workforce Solutions Greater Dallas. He previously served on the School Finance Task Force of the Greater Dallas Chamber and the State Bar of Texas Board. He was a member of the Comptroller’s Tax Advisory Group under three different comptrollers. 

About TASB

TASB is a nonprofit organization established in 1949 to serve local Texas school boards. School board members are the largest group of publicly elected officials in the state. The districts they represent serve more than 5.5 million public school students.