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Archive for the ‘budget cuts’ Category

Megan Behan (left) is joined by Tom Black and Kimberly (Farage) Sewell at her high school graduation. (Photo courtesy Behan)

Two students, almost a decade apart, both bound by their appreciation for a man who had a major impact on their lives.

Megan Behan graduated from Coupeville High School in 2021, while Kimberly (Farage) Sewell received her diploma in 2012.

The former has appeared here on Coupeville Sports numerous times for her athletic and academic achievements, while the latter departed CHS mere months before I launched this blog.

Today, the dynamic duo swing by to offer their support to the #bringbackblack movement, which calls for Coupeville Superintendent Steve King to reverse his decision to cut the school’s Dean of Students position.

That budget cut move brings an end to a 19-year run by Tom Black, something Behan and Sewell, like many in Wolf Nation, are not happy about.

 

Hello!

We thought it would be helpful to show the impact Mr. Black has had on student’s lives even nearly 10 years apart.

This man has done so much for this school, and we want the school board to see that!

The loss of Mr. Black to the Coupeville School District is a dreadful mistake.

Mr. Black is a core piece not only to Coupeville Schools but to the community as well.

I personally would have not gotten though high school without this man as an ally.

He was always the first high five and good morning of each day. His door was always open when troubles arose.

When I returned to Coupeville in 2021 for a graduation, he was not only the FIRST but ONLY staff member to welcome me home.

I could hear his big booming voice “KIMBERLY FARAGE” from across the way.

He has always made sure students were heard and loved. For most that is a vital resource.

Middle school and high school are hard times.

Students lives are changing rapidly and this can leave many feeling lost.

The stress we have in our world these days is only growing. Students now are facing situations that us that came before cannot understand.

Mr. Black is the beacon many confided in during hard times.

I understand that some members of the school board view his position of not high priority.

But from the voice of a past student you could not be more wrong.

There is way more that happens at school aside from math and science.

Not having Mr. Black around is a HUGE mistake.

I have always been proud of this community and its ability to stand together.

The loss of Mr. Black is going to impact our small town greatly.

I challenge you to ask any student about their time at CHS and I can guarantee their stories are not absent of Mr. Black.

We may be a small town, but our voices have always been loud!

We need to BRING BACK BLACK!

Kimberly (Farage) Sewell
Class of 2012

 

I, like many, am heartbroken that Coupeville Schools has decided to let go of Mr. Black.

I understand budget cuts are necessary to keep the school in good financial standing but cutting Mr. Black, who has a vital role in every student’s experience at CHS and CMS, is a huge mistake.

I know I am not alone when I say that Mr. Black is the reason I am on the right path in life right now.

He provided open ears, advice when asked, and of course his signature good morning high-five, which I looked forward to every morning.

He is a friend to all and somehow has enough compassion to share with both the high school and middle school.

As much as I loved all of my teachers, there is no staff member that can measure up to his reliability and comfort.

He was and always is there.

I know from a financial standpoint this may not seem like much, but from a social perspective it means the world.

Coupeville, if you follow through with this, just know the effect it will have on student’s mental health.

I hate to see a future at CHS with no Mr. Black.

#BringBackBlack

Megan Behan
Class of 2021

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Siblings Jada Heaton and Ryan Oliver both walked the hallways at CHS under the watchful eye of Tom Black. (Photos courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

Their stories are unique, but the sentiment at the core is the same.

Local students, current and former, are pouring their hearts out in the wake of Tom Black’s 19-year run at Coupeville High School coming to a premature end.

Budget cuts are necessary, and it’s the position — Dean of Students — which is what is being sliced, we are told.

To which the response is — Tom Black is more than his job title.

He is the glue helping to hold together generations of kids.

Our latest letter in the ongoing #bringbackblack movement comes from Ryan Oliver, CHS Class of 2010:

 

Coupeville will always have a special place in my heart and Mr. Black is a significant reason for that.

Middle and high school were real weird times for me, like I’m sure it is and was for many kids.

I wouldn’t say I was a bad kid by any means.

I just did obnoxious things and would a lot of the time cross the line.

Or, if anyone here was around with me in those years, it was talking.

Talking, talking, talking, is what I would get in trouble for, and I HATED it and I let it be known I hated it, because why me?

And why is it such a big deal?

But you know who was always there to listen? Mr. Black.

Countless times he was the person who was in between me and actual trouble.

I’m sure behind the scenes he vouched for me to not get some sort of suspension.

Looking back, who knows if I deserved that benefit of the doubt? Maybe I needed a little kick in the ass.

But I think without that benefit of the doubt and him listening to me and hearing me out that I would be a different person.

He never made me feel like I was a bad kid.

In fact, he would shoot it straight with me and explicitly say I was a good kid, but I just need to stop doing these “dumb” things.

In all honesty he probably knew about my anxiety/depression when few people knew in those times that I was taking medicine for it.

It’s something that I still deal with today, but he was one of the people early in my life that didn’t make me feel like my thoughts and feelings were weird.

Looking back with thankfulness, looking forward with joy.

At times, with a fork in the road, Mr. Black always pointed me in the right direction.

I trusted him, he made me feel heard, and made me feel like I was his friend and when you’re in middle school and high school sometimes that’s all you need.

It wasn’t just me either.

He would talk and joke around and make people feel welcomed and loved every day. Every student.

He’d be at the bus stop in the morning saying hi and greeting everyone and be right back there at 2:30 when everyone was leaving.

He would chat with you in the halls and when he popped in your class for a few minutes it was always a treat.

I’m still best friends with Jason Bagby, Chase Griffin, and Jason Ornburn, and over the years we’ve shared stories and reminiscenced about Mr. Black and the impact he had on our and other peoples lives.

Don’t rob those feelings and memories from students from today or tomorrow.

Don’t let their last memories be about how they wish he was still here or that things are so different without him.

Don’t let a student be thinking in their head, “I wish Mr. Black was still here. He would understand.”

Because it will happen.

There will be a vacuum that nobody will be able to fill.

He’s a true one of one and it would be shameful and an absolute disgrace if you let go of one of the kindest, most thoughtful, and genuine people that has helped thousands of students in his tenure at Coupeville.

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Tom Black

It’s not just students.

Parents are speaking out as well, determined to convince Coupeville Schools Superintendent Steve King to reverse his decision to cut the Dean of Students position, ending Tom Black’s 19-year run of working with local students.

Our next letter to the editor comes from a father who has seen lives changed, teens helped, new hope given.

 

Here are my two cents:

It felt like a punch in the gut when I heard that Dean of Students Tom Black had been terminated by Coupeville High School as part of their budget process.

This is a mistake.

A mistake that will have drastic consequences to many current and future students of Coupeville High School.

As a parent of two former Coupeville High School students and a current middle school student, I know from personal experience that Mr. Black selflessly helped a great number of students, including my own sons.

When one of my own sons was having an extremely difficult time, due in great part to the Covid remote learning, I reached out to Mr. Black and shared my concern.

Within an hour, Mr. Black was at my home having a heart-to-heart conversation with my son.

I don’t know what they talked about, but it was enough to keep my son in school and he has since graduated with honors.

I have many other examples of the positive things Mr. Black has done for my kids, both big and small.

I have just as many examples of the extraordinary things Mr. Black has done for other kids we know.

Dean of Students is not just a job for Mr. Black – he is ALL IN for the wellbeing of his students.

Mr. Black genuinely cares for kids.

They know that, and because of that, they look forward to seeing him.

They trust him, respect him, and take his advice.

I cannot imagine how many kids went on to graduate that otherwise would have dropped out if Mr. Black hadn’t been an influence in their lives.

I personally know of several.

On this, a value cannot be placed.

If the superintendent and board put the well-being of the present and future students of Coupeville High School in the forefront, they will look elsewhere to cut the budget.

Eric M. Ohme

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Ja’Tarya Hoskins (center) credits Tom Black with having a significant impact on her.

His community is embracing him.

Budget cuts in the Coupeville School District claimed the job of CHS/CMS Dean of Students Tom Black, but people are not having it.

The through line, as captured in this letter to the editor from 2020 Wolf grad Ja’Tarya Hoskins, is that what the man brings to students is worth far more than the dollar figure on his contract.

Hoskins, who recently graduated from Saint Martin’s University with a Bachelor of Arts in Criminology and Criminal Justice, has the mic:

 

Mr. Black made Coupeville High/Middle School home.

He has been the Dean of Students since before my older brother graduated.

He watched and nurtured four generations of Hoskins graduate from 2011, 2013, 2020, and lastly, 2022.

Mr. Black was always the person that I looked forward to for a laugh every day.

His presence makes a huge impact, and it made a significant one on me.

My older brother and sister walked the halls years before I did.

I was always determined to be my own person, but it’s hard to do that when everyone wants you to be exactly like them.

Mr. Black never compared me to my siblings in the many years that I’ve known him.

He made sure that I was my own person even though we shared DNA.

Mr. Black also made CMS/CHS home; he always fought the injustices in school.

There were many times where racial slurs and racial commentary would be said around me, or at me.

Mr. Black was always the first one to protect me from them without hesitation.

He was always someone you could talk to about personal stuff, school, even teachers that were giving you a hard time.

Mr. Black will always be the home the students need in such a small school and community.

Forever and always,

#BRINGBACKBLACK!

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Supporters push for the reinstatement of Dean of Students Tom Black. (Photo from Change.org)

They continue to turn up the heat in creative ways.

The fan club for Coupeville High School Dean of Students Tom Black is using old-school paint and new-school social media to drive home their point.

While they understand budget cuts are necessary after district officials came up short on keeping the general fund in line with the wishes of the school board, cutting Black is not the answer.

The rock in front of the CHS gym was painted in support of the jack of all trades recently, with siblings Moira and Gabe Reed launching the hashtag #bringbackblack.

A photo of that rock was quickly shared across Instagram, popping up repeatedly on the stories of Wolf students and parents.

Now, a petition has been launched on the popular web site change.org, calling for Black to be reinstated, with cuts coming elsewhere.

Petition organizer Gabe Reed wrote:

Tom Black is easily the most important part of the Coupeville School environment.

“He’s helped countless students graduate when their odds were low, helped steer them away from suicide, and keeps the overall environment at school a safe space for students.

“I can’t even imagine what it would be like if Mr. Black were to be gone.”

 

The petition can be seen at:

https://www.change.org/p/keep-tom-black-as-the-coupeville-dean-of-students?source_location=search

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