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Archive for the ‘Not sports? Tough!’ Category

“Bow before the magnificence of our collective brain power, puny mortals! Pray we use our skills for good, instead of having our robots conquer the world!!” (Photo courtesy Alison Perera)

It’s not about building robots — it’s about building good people.

That’s the mantra for the Whidbey Island Robotics Club, which brings together students from Oak Harbor and Coupeville.

The group, when not scoring big in competitions, concentrates on helping shape “people who will go on to be leaders in their various professions” and “people who will change the world.”

The mix of Wildcats and Wolves — Natalie PereraOrion Liedtke, and Gabe Smith hail from Coupeville — continue to shine at every event they attend.

This past weekend, the destination was Snohomish, where the 34-team PNW District Glacier Peak Event was held.

Whidbey Island emerged from the first level of competition ranked in the top five and were allied in the playoffs with the Iron Riders from Seattle and Stealth Robotics from Duvall.

Once there, they overcame two broken robots, collected the Gracious Professionalism award, and claimed third place overall.

Now, after two weeks of work, Whidbey’s robot overlords head back off-island Mar. 15-17 for the PNW District Bonney Lake Event.

Put in another stellar performance there, and they’ll join other top teams from Washington and Oregon in punching a ticket to districts.

The big showdown is set for Apr. 4-6 at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Portland, and you can support the brilliant young minds who operate on The Rock by popping over to:

https://team2980.wixsite.com/team2980/donate?fbclid=IwAR0ZTUsylCOMl35bOeGfe16QFQ9z88CLcpFGHoHy0m5IkNpE8jm10eNTQaE

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Coupeville Schools officials forecast 1.66 million in budget cuts for next school year, plan to ask for an $800,000 loan in May to “make it through the fiscal year,” and acknowledge the district is on a “financial watch list.”

All of that, and more, is detailed in a report Finance Director Brian Gianello will deliver Thursday night to the school board.

That meeting, set for 5:30 PM in the Kathleen Anderson boardroom in the district office (right across from the CHS gym), is open to the public and will be streamed as well.

Brian Gianello

In his report, Gianello will address plans to repay a $400,000 loan in which money was transferred from the district’s Capital Projects Fund to its General Fund.

He states “projections indicate that we will be able to pay back the 400K interfund transfer loan, with interest, from General Fund back to Capital Projects fund in April as we are slated to receive the majority of local levy revenues that month.

“However, we will need another interfund loan transfer of approximately 800K in May in order to be able to make it through the remainder of the school/fiscal year.”

His report also details that the general fund remains “at critical levels that require close monitoring.”

Coupeville is currently on a “financial watch list due to declining cash balances and declining cash flow” and is being monitored by Northwest Educational Service District 189.

Four school districts in this region, including Gianello’s former employer, La Conner, are under “binding conditions” this school year.

That means the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction requires the districts to regularly file budget reports and restore financial reserves to certain levels by a prescribed date.

Those pacts span at least two years and are meant to help districts prevent financial insolvency.

In extreme conditions, OSPI has the power to dissolve school districts.

The last time that happened in Washington state was 2007, when the Vader School District was erased overnight.

Coupeville Superintendent Steve King said his district is not in a similar situation.

“We are currently on the watch list like the majority of districts in the region,” he said.

“Given this situation we absolutely have to continue to make budget reductions this year and likely in future years.”

He does not, however, believe Coupeville will be put under additional monitoring.

“I do not anticipate that we will be going into binding conditions this year as we can borrow money from our Capital Projects fund instead of having to borrow money from OSPI,” King said.

“When districts have to borrow from OSPI is when they go into binding conditions.”

La Conner, which placed Gianello on administrative leave in January of 2023 before he resigned a month later, appears to be pulling itself out of its financial hole.

According to public records on Board Docs, La Conner’s Deputy Superintendent of Finance, Human Resources, and Operations Dave Cram was “given a standing ovation from the directors for his hard work on the budget” at the Nov. 27, 2023, school board meeting.

Back in Coupeville, Gianello will also address the potential need for deep financial cuts when the district puts together its 2024-2025 budget.

King, who has tendered his resignation after a six-year run at the helm, is slated to leave at the end of this school year.

He was authorized by the school board to make 1.45 million in cuts during the last budget process.

That set off a firestorm in the community, when initial proposed cuts included Dean of Students Tom Black, Athletic Director Willie Smith, and Athletic Trainer Jessica Caselden.

The AD duties were to be handed to Assistant Principal Leonard Edlund, whose hours were also being trimmed, but that decision was reversed before the budget was finalized.

The other two positions were cut, but the athletic trainer position was funded for a year by the community, and Black returned on a part-time basis after Edlund had to take a medical leave.

During the debate over budget cuts, many in the community cited the cost of the district’s food service program, alleging too much was being spent for “restaurant level food” while the program, still recovering from pandemic restrictions, failed to show a profit.

Next budget, Gianello projects cuts of 1.66 million will be needed to balance the budget.

“Decreased federal funding and increased salary and benefit contract commitments coupled with not enough staff attrition, rising inflation, and increased insurance costs are indicating that budget reductions are needed as we continue to closely watch cash/fund balances and other key financial indicators,” he said.

“It will be extremely important to continue to right size district staffing levels and seek a sustainable model in this new volatile financial climate.”

Gianello also cites the cost of a search for a new superintendent, “15+ staff currently on and/or upcoming leave of absences,” and pending negotiations with unions as factors in reaching that number.

 

To read his report in full, pop over to:

Click to access 2024.02_Monthly%20Board%20Report%20Summary%20for%20February.pdf

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Luisa Loi

She hasn’t seen “The Princess Bride,” but don’t hold that against her.

I may have devoted way too many hours to mastering the dark arts of the VCR — thus marking me as a relic of the past in a world where streaming steamrolled VHS tapes and DVDs alike.

But there is hope in the world of reporters working on Whidbey Island, and specifically, in Coupeville.

Luisa Loi, who has been artfully pounding out stories for the Whidbey News-Times for the past eight months or so, is from a different generation.

A generation of wordsmiths who valiantly believe they can still change the world and are working to do so.

Luisa may be just on the cusp of 25, but she seems like an old soul in terms of the newspaper biz.

A young woman who, first and foremost, still believes in the power and necessity of just that … the newspaper biz.

Her words still grace newsprint and that newspaper, when you hold it in your hands, still seems more real, more solid, than all the many web sites, blogs, and social media time-wasters dotting the internet.

Hey, I’m not saying stop reading Coupeville Sports any time soon!

I’m just saying what Luisa does seems more permanent somehow. But then I am a relic often wistfully gazing backwards at golden nostalgia.

But anyways, what she does matters.

Luisa is a bit of a throwback to the newshounds I hung out with at the News-Times during my own years as a true believer.

She just spends a whole lot less time than they did smoking, with one foot in the newsroom and one (barely) outside on the deck, while slamming back steaming hot coffee and screaming into a corded phone at the exact same time.

I’m saying Luisa is WNT legend Mary Kay Doody reincarnated.

With an emphasis on all the good points and less on the second-hand smoke and yelling “I’m on deadline, sister!!!” while slamming said phone on an interview subject SHE had called.

Side question, did Mary Kay ever watch The Princess Bride?? And if not, why not?

Was I the only one in the newsroom more concerned with Andre the Giant’s immortal delivery of the line “Anybody want a peanut?” than whatever the local garden club was doing for the 110th time?

In the words of Wallace Shawn, who looks a heck of a lot like our editor back then, one Fred Obee

And, as I so often do, we’re just now returning from a side detour and getting back to the main focus of what the article is supposed to be about.

Something Luisa would likely never do, cause she’s a professional.

She asks the real questions, instead of flying off on tangents.

She remains fair and balanced, using those words not as a meaningless slogan but as a guiding light, while I often … squirrel!!!!!!!!!

Different movie, not “The Princess Bride.”

But, as my nephews are fond of reminding me, “Gee, Uncle David, you sure do watch a lot of crap, don’t you???”

Well, only if you consider a triple feature of ’70s schlock like “The Initiation of Sarah,” “The Severed Arm,” and “Puppet on a Chain” to be crap, and I mean, who in their right mind would think that?

Everyone? Oh, I see, and once again, I have wandered off on a tangent.

Focus your movie-addled brain, man!! For five freakin’ minutes!!!!

Luisa. We were talking about Luisa.

Who kind of reminds me of Audrey Hepburn during her younger years, you know, and … dammit, David. Focus.

The point of this is supposed to be that Luisa is a talented writer, a committed true believer in the power of journalism, and someone Coupeville should welcome.

As she covers the inner workings of our school system, if she reaches out to you, consider giving her your time and expertise.

Answer her questions, provide her a framework to better understand a town she is just learning about after wandering the greater outer world, be it Italy or Bellingham.

I vouch for Luisa. For her skill and her desire to tell a complete story that doesn’t shy away from reality, but also embraces the good going on here in Cow Town.

She’s not as much of a shameless homer as I am, which can be a very good thing.

Work with her, if given the opportunity, and I think you will come away pleased with your interactions.

Luisa might not get my Princess Bride references or know who Siskel and Ebert were (oh lord, I am a movie-addled fossil…), but not frittering away her life seeking out ’70s movie “classics” on low-rent streaming sites like Tubi is probably a good thing.

Now, I need to go mainline “Devil Times Five” (evil killer kids trapped in a snowy cabin!), “Scorpio” (dueling assassins wearing corduroy!), and “The Manchu Eagle Murder Caper Mystery.

You know, that’s the one with a dead goat wearing a wedding dress and, well, yes…

I am what I am, and the more chances we give Luisa to write about non-sports stuff in Coupeville, the more time I have to fully merge with my recliner.

So do me a solid, Cow Town, cause the triple feature of revenge served hot ‘n nasty that is “Dog Day,” Rolling Thunder,” and “Poor Pretty Eddie” aren’t going to watch themselves.

And whether anyone should be watching them in the first place was not the question, skippy…

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Dr. Jim Shank and daughter Ashlie hang out at a game during their Cow Town days. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Popular former Coupeville Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank is one of three finalists for a similar position with the Longview School District.

The district, located in Cowlitz County, sits in the Southwestern portion of Washington state and is infamous for being where I was born.

The Longview School Board announced its finalists this past Saturday and issued a statement pledging to choose a new superintendent Friday, Feb. 23.

A report in the local newspaper, The Daily News, details that Shank, Dr. Karen Cloninger, and John Hannah will participate in community forums Tuesday-Thursday at R.A. Long High School.

Cloninger is the assistant superintendent of East Valley School District in Spokane Valley, while Hannah is superintendent of the Morton School District.

Shank, who recently received a long-overdue induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, is an R.A. Long graduate, a distinction he shares with Hannah.

During his time in Cow Town between 2013-2018, Shank oversaw construction of Coupeville’s stadium, its track oval, and new bleachers in the CHS gym.

He also played a large role in the creation of the school’s Wall of Fame, basically allowing me to run free if I agreed to retain the giant mural of “The Sad Coyote.”

“The Sad Coyote” sees all and knows all. He is eternal.

Two of the six Shank children, Matt and Brian, graduated from CHS, with a third, Ashlie, attending multiple years.

All three were successful athletes and strong students.

After leaving Coupeville, Shank was a superintendent in Idaho.

He and wife Sallie later returned to Washington state, as he currently leads the North Beach School District in Grays Harbor County.

Overall, Shank has 33 years of experience in education, with 15 as a superintendent.

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Daniel Verduzco keeps the CHS gym gleaming while often surprising with his eclectic post-game playlist. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re the true heroes.

Basketball players, wrestlers, and cheerleaders usually get the spotlight during winter sports, but things wouldn’t run the same without high school custodians.

The men doing the hard work at Coupeville, Oak Harbor, and South Whidbey deserve our praise as well.

If it wasn’t for them, we’d likely be watching our little games while buried under a pile of ever-growing trash.

So next time you’re in a Whidbey school gym, take a moment to tip your cap to their work ethic.

And then maybe pick up your dang trash and put it in the garbage can instead of leaving it up in the bleachers, you damn dirty apes!

Vik (left) and Cody Rikard are the best father-son duo in the clean gym biz.

South Whidbey’s unsung hero.

And his partner in … grime.

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