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Taygin Jump is here to win all your titles. (Photo courtesy Christina Jump)

Taygin Jump ended the regular season with a bang.

The Coupeville grad, now a sophomore track and field star at Plattsburgh State, competed in three events Friday at the SLU Twilight Invite in Canton, New York, handily winning both the hammer throw and javelin toss.

Jump chucked her hammer 125 feet, five inches, finishing 21 feet, 11 inches ahead of the second-place finisher.

The former Wolf ace also claimed the title in the javelin with a heave of 95-09, this time placing exactly 22 feet ahead of her nearest rival.

The one event Jump didn’t win Friday was the discus, but she set a PR anyway, claiming fourth place (out of 11 competitors) with a throw of 82-09.

Aleksia and Khanor’s older sister, who is majoring in Environmental Planning & Management/Geology, tallied 26 points for the Cardinals, who finished second in the team standings.

Up next is the State University of New York Athletic Conference Outdoor Championships May 2-3 in Cortland, New York.

It takes great courage to speak out, especially in a small community.

During Thursday’s school board meeting, Wolf Mom Laura Callahan addressed her concerns with the Coupeville School District.

She has been a frequent volunteer in local schools, and her children attend class in Coupeville.

I am running Callahan’s words, unedited, as a letter to the editor, so that those not in attendance or watching the stream of the meeting can be part of the ongoing discussion.

 

Thank you for listening.

What I am going to say won’t be easy for anyone, but it comes from a place of deep care and love for the kids of Coupeville.

This has taken a lot of thought and reflection but is rooted in a love for the kids, our school, and our community.

I’m here today not just as a parent, but as a Coupeville alumnus, as someone who’s spent the last two and a half years in our schools, volunteering, mentoring, and getting to know our students and staff.

When my daughters arrived at Coupeville Middle/High School, they were welcomed in.

Public school was new to them, and there was hesitation, but the care they were given and the sense of belonging they experienced made our school feel special. It was safe.

They weren’t just a number, they had a name; they were important, valued, and my girls were known.

Sadly, in the past six months under new leadership, that spirit has faded.

We’ve shifted from a culture of connection and individuality to one that seems to be driven by compliance, control, and fear.

Our new culture feels more like a behavioral correction center then a place of belonging for our kids.

It is sad to see youthful enthusiasm quenched to enhance an “image”, or when rules supersede relationships.

Parents and students have shared they feel the new model of leadership seems to have a bent to intimidation and coercion.

Our leadership should be modeling the behavior we want from our students.

We should not be teaching kids to just comply, we should be inspiring them, allowing them to ask questions, wrestling with the big things in life, giving them spaces to grow.

Providing a safe place to fail and still be protected and loved.

That’s what real education looks like. That is how true change is made.

In addition, many staff no longer feel safe or supported.

Talented educators we love are leaving our kids, not because they don’t love their work or their students, but because the climate has become toxic.

This isn’t just speculation, it’s real, and it’s impacting our kids, in a very negative way.

And what’s worse? The silence.

Decisions are being made behind closed doors, dismantling a student-first approach with no explanation.

Families are in the dark. Staff are afraid to speak up. The lack of transparency is unacceptable.

We’re told to “trust the process,” but what we’re seeing does not inspires trust.

Good families are leaving. I’m one of them.

I’m planning to pull my youngest daughter from Coupeville at the end of this year without any significant changes, as this is no longer a safe place for her.

We all want safety, inspiration, and growth for our kids, but that cannot be achieved through fear or control.

It takes respect, transparency, and collaboration from the TOP DOWN.

Superintendent Leatherwood, this school was not broken.

It didn’t need a culture change; it needed leadership that would listen and support its people.

You inherited a dedicated staff who loved kids and community who supported them, but the leadership model being used is driving OUR people away.

If you can’t see the damage being done, I urge you to reconsider if your place is in our district.

Coupeville School Board, your silence is being noticed and taken as inaction. I urge you to ask hard questions and look deeper.

Talk and listen to our staff and to the parents.

Good people are taking their kids elsewhere for a reason. Staff are walking away. Our students are losing people they trust.

Find out why!

I have letters from those who want their voices heard but are hesitant to speak out due to fear of retaliation to themselves or their child. I will be sending these to the board.

My understanding is that none of our board members have their children in Coupeville’s middle and high schools currently, so I ask you to listen to those of us who do.

Things are not good. We are not all okay.

Students, parents, and staff are upset and scared of the path our school is on. We are losing trust.

Thank you.

 

EDITOR’S NOTE:

One school board member, Nancy Conard, does have a child attending CHS. Her granddaughter Madison McMillan, who is she helping raise, is a senior.

Poster by Sydney Wallace

Prepare to enter a “One Stoplight Town.”

Coupeville High School’s newest theatrical production, set to debut May 8-10 in the school’s Performing Arts Center, features the work of a large cast and crew.

When theatergoers arrive, they’ll find a thicker program than normal, said CHS drama teacher and play director Stefanie Ask.

“Our ‘bio page’ morphed into quite the tome this year in order to include all 49 students involved in this production,” she said. “Yes, you read that right.

“FORTY-NINE CHS students are involved in this show, each bringing their own talent and contributions to the stage, whether that be through acting, epic set design and painting, tinkering with props, preparing costumes, running lights/sound, or manning a stoplight.”

The tale they’ll tell, written by playwright Tracy Wells, focuses on the sort of town “so small you might drive through it without really taking a second look.

“But if you stopped for just a moment, you might see a young boy and girl fall in love, a cantankerous grocery store owner coping with change, a daughter returning home while another thinks of leaving, a beauty queen and drum major striking up a friendship, and a handywoman taking it all in while she fixes what is broken.

“These stories teach us that change comes for us all, whether we are ready for it or not.”

In between classes, Stefanie Ask pours over scripts, looking for ones which will offer her students “a different experience each time they take the stage, to ride the varied emotions of an audience and feel how the experience differs from show to show and genre to genre.”

Coming on the heels of diverse works such as Trap, She Kills Monsters, and Puffs!, the latest play offers a chance to pay tribute to real-world one stoplight towns such as Coupeville.

“In moments of great change and turmoil, sometimes the best thing you can do is look around and take comfort in your people, in your place,” Ask said.

One Stoplight Town is about a small town, the quirks and conflicts of sharing a life with a little community, and ultimately it’s just nice.

“It feels like taking a moment to honor our little strip of the island with the pride it deserves.”

 

The cast:

Trish – Pamela Morrell

Barb – Elizabeth Lo

Sally – Sydney Wallace

Jim – Phineas Rhodes

Charlie – Sam Marchese

Morgan – Riverwind Dearmond

Casey – Chloe Ferguson

Emma – Dahlia Miller 

Runaway – Brooke Crosby

Prodigal Daughter – Kassidy Upchurch

Police Officer – Mason Butler

Toby – Cedar Socha

Flash – Marz Halstead

MusselFest Queen – Alysia Burdge

Drum Major – Grey Bialik

Kids/Teens – Miles Gerber, Eliza Dodge, Tommy Smith, Lina Shelly, Zoe Holm

Protesters – Will Tierney, Sunny Swankie, Nick Kalwies, Connor Booth, Kaiden Burrow, Garrett Bevill, Dorian Tynda, Valen M., Rowan Stoner

 

The crew:

Director – Stefanie Ask

Stage Manager – Danni DeMers

Assistant Director – Zoe Holm

Assistant Stage Manager – Ren Smith

Light Technicians – Zeke Allen, Oktober Frost

Sound Technicians – Hailee Wells, Aubrey Rodriguez

Costume Designers – Molly Ferguson, Luci Humphries, Nick Kalwies, Hayden Kendall, Sophia Siverly, Cedar Socha, Sunny Swankie, Dorian Tynda

Set Design Team – Richmond Bandong, Taylor Brotemarkle, Mason Butler, Jennifer Camarena-Herrera, Ember Light, Valen M., Jacob Schooley, Rowan Stoner, Will Tierney

Prop Team – Ryan Beaston, Garrett Bevill, Soal Hibbard, Walker Kirkconnell, Will Tierney, Doc Wertz

Stage Ninja – Kaiden Burrow

Stoplight – Jorja Auen

Poster by Rowan Stoner

Capri Anter (left) and Sydney Van Dyke whacked home runs in the big city Thursday afternoon. (Photo courtesy Colleen Henderson-Van Dyke)

“There is just no substitute for live reps.”

With that in mind, Coupeville High School softball coach Aaron Lucero took a collection of Wolf sluggers to Oak Harbor Thursday for the first JV game of the season.

And once in the big city, the young guns held their own against a 3A school, rallying late to eke out a 6-6 tie with the host Wildcats before daylight ran out.

The game, which featured a pair of final-inning two-run home runs from Coupeville’s Capri Anter and Sydney Van Dyke, and several spiffy defensive plays by catcher Ava Lucero, was a perfect confidence builder.

“A great experience for a number of players who don’t get the opportunity,” Aaron Lucero said.

“I’m proud of the resilience and never being out of the fight.”

Trailing 6-2 in the late going, Coupeville got its bats barking, and how.

Emma Cushman sparked things with a single, with three consecutive extra-base hits providing the big boom.

Anter, who jacked a home run in her team’s most-recent varsity contest, belted an inside-the-park round tripper to cut the lead to 6-4.

Following hot on her footsteps, Ava Lucero crushed a double, before Van Dyke walloped a two-run tater to knot things up.

While the offense came up big, so did the Wolf defense.

Anter whiffed 10 Wildcats from the pitcher’s circle, “pitching well and making adjustments when she ran into trouble and wasn’t getting the calls.”

Meanwhile, her battery mate was superb, with Ava Lucero throwing out a runner at second and scrambling to recover a wild pitch and catch an incoming runner at the plate to preserve the tie.

Mary Western keeps an eagle eye on things. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville had 10 players in uniform, with eight of them getting on base.

Allie Powers and Mary Western rounded out the Wolf roster, with everyone involved getting the nod of approval from their coach.

“Lot of positives to take away from the game,” Aaron Lucero said. “We have items to work on but will get there.”

 

Thursday stats:

Capri Anter — One home run, three walks
Emma Cushman — Two singles
Emma Leavitt — Two singles
Ava Lucero — One double
Olivia Martin — One walk
Chelsi Stevens — Two singles
Danica Strong — One walk
Sydney Van Dyke — One single, one home run, one walk

Kimberly Kisch is stepping down as Coupeville High School girls’ soccer coach but will continue working on the pitch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

She’s shifting gears.

After two seasons of working as a coach at the same high school where she once played soccer herself, Kimberly Kisch has resigned.

But that doesn’t mean she’s leaving the pitch, just planning to redirect her efforts to a different age group.

Kisch was hired to coach the CHS girls’ soccer program, but the Wolves have been unable to field a full team the past two seasons due to a shortage of players.

Those girls who did show up have played with the Wolf boys as a co-ed team, with Kisch joining fellow soccer guru Robert Wood on the sideline.

Wood recently stepped down as boys coach, citing the difficulty in balancing the position with his real-world job.

Now, Kisch is joining him in stepping away from high school soccer and will instead focus on continuing her work with younger players.

“I’m not leaving soccer,” she said. “I am just putting more into the younger divisions.

“I took on the Vice President role for Central Whidbey Youth Soccer and I went back to coaching for them in U12. I have had a number of these girls since U8.

“I am back with them and hoping to inspire them to stick with soccer so that we can revive the girls (high school) program.”

In her resignation letter, Kisch expressed her gratitude for the time she had with the high school program, and the hope it would continue to be rebuilt.

“It is important for this program to grow and flourish and I do not feel that I can accomplish this in my current role,” she wrote to Athletic Director Brad Sherman.

“I greatly enjoyed my time working with and learning from you, Coach Rob, and the student players.

“Moving forward I would like to take what I have learned the program needs and feed it into the younger players coming up.

“I am so hopeful that training the lower divisions will be effective in the revival of the high school girl’s program.”

Kisch hopes to remain involved with the CHS program as a volunteer, offering support to her replacement.

“Thank you for the opportunity to be involved with this program,” she said. “I am so grateful to have had the honor of coaching for the team I grew up playing on.”