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Improvements to Coupeville’s softball field could be coming. (Bailey Thule photo)

Capital projects are rolling forward as summer begins.

Using money from a levy approved by voters in February 2022, the Coupeville School District continues to make improvements to multiple areas.

The new CHS tennis courts, which sit between the high school gym and the softball field, are finished, but still in the process of being “cured.”

They will open to the public July 22.

“This was a challenging project, but we are pleased with the outcome,” said outgoing Coupeville Superintendent Steve King.

“I am pleased that our students and community will be able to enjoy this facility for years to come.”

The district has also finished work on its new transportation building next to the high school — hence the moving of the tennis courts.

“Our staff members deserve a respectable place to work and have their meetings in,” King said.

“Thankfully, we now have a great new building for the team, and we will be able to change the bus flow out of the transportation garage to improve capacity and safety for our vehicles.”

Over the summer, parking lot lines will be repainted at the school, with signs replaced in the parking areas.

Also, floors in the Multipurpose Room at Coupeville Elementary School will be replaced.

Two other projects are at different points, with replacement of the seating in the secondary school’s Performing Arts Center underway.

“It has been over twenty years since the original seats were installed in this facility,” King said. “Our seats were breaking and being able to use the seats on a regular basis has become challenging.

“We have currently taken out the old seats and new seats are being installed in the next couple of weeks.

“Our school community will see great improvements in the PAC when they return to school in the fall.”

Finally, the district is moving forward with plans to improve its softball field, which was built in the early 1990’s at a time when CHS, like most schools statewide, still played slow pitch.

With the change to fast pitch, balls are harder and far more likely to escape the current backstop.

Whether it’s cars on Terry Road being bonked — some while driving past the field — or the trailer park across from the field being under assault by wayward flies, safety is a concern.

The district has submitted plans that will “make significant improvements to our softball field that will greatly improve the facility and will also make it much safer,” King said.

The Historic Preservation Commission of Coupeville, which needs to give its approval for the project to move forward, will consider the issue at a July 11 meeting.

Sherry Bonacci sends son Landon off to the state baseball tournament.

They hired a fan favorite.

Sherry Bonacci, a 1989 Coupeville grad and a Wolf Female Athlete of the Year back in the day, is immensely popular in her community.

Now, one of the nicest human beings to ever trod the Earth is coming on board as the district’s new administrative assistant to the superintendent.

“Her skillset and history in the district set her apart as an excellent candidate for this critical position,” outgoing Superintendent Steve King said in a statement.

Sherry will be doing some onboarding and training for this position in July and will officially start in the role in August. Congratulations to Sherry!”

Bonacci, mom to Wolf legend Lindsey and current CHS senior-to-be Landon, will work with incoming superintendent Shannon Leatherwood.

Stephanie and Danny’s sister was previously employed as the district’s special services secretary, a position she has resigned from.

As Coupeville goes through budget cuts, the district is attempting to make reductions through attrition when possible.

King stated the district does not plan to currently replace Bonacci in her former position.

“District leadership and staff will discuss in the upcoming weeks how the workload formerly done by the special services secretary will be absorbed,” he said.

Avery Parker displays her artwork back when she was a CES student in 2020. (Photo courtesy Corrin Parker)

Art classes at Coupeville Elementary School have been eliminated for the 2024-2025 school year.

The decision was announced Wednesday by Superintendent Steve King and completes a school board resolution passed in April.

That resolution, part of a “modified education plan” which was passed on a 4-1 vote, is part of an ongoing effort to cut the district’s budget by $1.66 million.

It eliminated the district’s secondary music/band program and called for an elementary school specialist program to be eliminated at a later date.

The choices were STEM or art, with art ultimately being chosen.

“This is not something that any of us want to do,” King said. “However given our financial situation and the board resolution passed in April reducing one specialist, we needed to make this difficult decision.

“We believe that we can ensure that students have access to art opportunities by incorporating into Science – Technology – Engineering – Art – Math (STEAM) and through classroom experiences.

“I am hopeful that this will be a short-term reduction and that our art program can be restored in the near future.”

King, who resigned earlier this year, departs Coupeville at the end of June, and will teach in Hawaii starting this fall.

He is being replaced by Shannon Leatherwood, who is leaving her position as principal at Spanaway Middle School. This marks her debut as a superintendent.

A full draft budget is expected to be revealed at Thursday’s school board meeting.

Sherry Phay

It takes a special kind of person to be a school board director.

Merely making a commitment to run for the position, then endure the sheer tsunami of information dumped on your head once elected, requires a certain amount of steel in the spine.

Having sat through too many board meetings, whether watching them in-person or streaming on the computer, I can state with utter conviction — it’s a post I would be horrible at.

So, I already have a great deal of respect for those men and women who choose to put themselves on the line.

If they didn’t believe in what they were doing, they wouldn’t be there in the first place.

But, as board members come and go over the years, nationally or locally, a few invariably stand out.

Some for what they accomplish. Others for what they don’t.

Here in Coupeville, we have been blessed to have pretty rock-solid board members, at least in the years in which I’ve been paying attention.

Today though, as she prepares for her next-to-last monthly meeting, I’d like to single out one director.

Sherry Phay, who is resigning effective the end of July, has accomplished something remarkable in her two terms on the board.

There is no question she is outspoken, resolute in her beliefs, and unwilling to go along just to get along, but she also has remained relevant, passionate, and a check on power.

Phay has been on the losing end of votes many times, been willing to endure personal attacks, because at the end of the day, when she looks out across the Kathleen Anderson Boardroom at those in the audience, she can look us in the eye.

She fights, every meeting and every moment, to remind us that when finances aren’t right and budget cuts have to be made, those are real humans who are losing their jobs, and not just numbers on a spread sheet.

Her support for paraeducators, for teachers, for support staff, for the people on the ground who make this school system work, has never wavered.

Phay is as committed as any board member I have witnessed in action, and she has stood resolute even when it may have been personally painful.

Some have tried to dismiss her impact, to say “Well, she’s losing 4-1, she’s not accomplishing anything.”

Bullshit.

Phay is not a crank, like some candidates have been, someone seeking to nab a board slot just so they can spend their time disrupting things.

In her work on the board, and as its legislative representative, she has championed good causes, helping Coupeville’s schools shape a positive road forward — especially in the rebuilding time after the pandemic.

But she’s also not someone who seems fond of being mansplained to, of being dismissed, of being talked over.

Like all leaders should, Phay chooses her words carefully when she speaks at public meetings and realizes the power of those words to shape things.

But she ain’t here for your fake promises and platitudes, either.

I don’t really know Phay on a personal basis. We’ve exchanged a few words at most.

What I see, what I know, is what I have witnessed, and that is she is a woman of rare conviction.

The board has been better for her presence, the school district and town as well.

I hope that whoever inherits her position on the panel, whatever their opinions or personal causes may be, upholds Phay’s willingness to engage, to challenge, to stand tall and say “People matter. Don’t forget that.”

As she departs, the board will have to make tough choices when it comes to producing a balanced budget.

People will be cut. That’s a painful reality.

But they are not mere numbers on a spread sheet.

Phay has never forgotten that, to her immense credit.

I am sure that come July, she will be acknowledged by her fellow board members for her contributions. That’s their thing.

For what it’s worth, today I am inducting Sherry Phay into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame for her work on the board. She’ll be included under the Contributor category.

After this, you’ll find her up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

I’ve never put someone into the Hall strictly for school board work before, despite the fact there’s been numerous standouts, from Don Sherman to Karen Bishop and beyond.

I know, it’s a sports blog, and there are some who have wished I would “stay in my lane.”

To which I say, my lane is whatever I say it is.

And my lane today is to honor Sherry Phay, for refusing to sit down and shut up, for always speaking from her heart, for fighting for what is right, every day.

We saw you. We see you. We appreciate you.

Ellen Hiatt

The newsroom at the Whidbey News-Times in the early 1990’s was full of future leaders.

Not me, who went from an underaged, rubber band-shooting Sports Editor to today’s blogger yelling at his computer enough to trouble the outside cats.

But everyone else.

Ellen Hiatt, then the Island Living Editor and the woman who shared a cubicle wall with a younger version of me, is the latest to rise to the statewide throne of power.

She’s currently settling into her new role as Executive Director of the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association, replacing Fred Obee, who held the position for 8+ years.

Obee, the man who shocked the world by promoting a 21-year-old David to WNT Sports Editor (then put up with his frequent in-print shenanigans), was Editor in Chief at the News-Times from 1983-1994.

Hiatt, who assigned me some of my first professional freelance stories (and then also put up with my shenanigans), began her career at the News-Times, eventually working there from 1989-1997.

After a long, diverse career, she now heads up the WNPA, the state’s leading advocate for “community newspapers, freedom of the press and open government.”

It’s dedicated to “helping members advance editorial excellence, financial viability, professional development, and a high standard of publication quality and community leadership.”