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It’s liable to get worse before it gets better. But the goal of everyone involved is for it to get better.

That was the consensus Wednesday as the Coupeville School Board and the district’s Financial Director, Brian Gianello, met with the public for a listening event.

As the work on a budget for the 2024-2025 school year begins to heat up, no one involved sugarcoated things as they addressed the current financial shortfall.

The brutal reality is the district, like many in the region, is bringing in less revenue than it needs to break even, and officials expect to have to make substantial budget cuts.

Gianello opened things Wednesday by acknowledging the early projections of needing to slash $1.6 million — while already sobering — might not be enough.

“We could get up to two million,” he said. “Or possibly less. That would be the hope.”

With 87% of expenses related directly to staffing, that means the likelihood of cuts through attrition due to retirements and departures or “reduction in force” remains at the forefront.

“The unfortunate fact is this is going to affect (our) people,” Gianello said.

Board directors Nancy Conard and Alison Perera have been working closely with the finance director, and both spoke to the tough work required to right a ship which is drifting, but not sunk.

“This will likely be a multi-year process,” Conard said. “There may have to be deep cuts initially, which is not a fun process for anyone. It puts us all on pins and needles.”

The former longtime Coupeville Mayor, who was herself the school district’s Financial Director during times of great success, is well-known and highly respected for her fiscal credentials.

She brings an air of gravitas to her work, something on display as she joined Perera and Gianello in seeking a balance between the many positives offered by her own alma mater, and the hard choices likely needed.

“We take our budget work very seriously,” Conard said. “We know the consequences.”

During a period of turnover on the school board, the district also dealt with the pandemic.

Rising costs on everything from insurance to benefits, plus a failure of the state legislature to deliver on its financial promises, further complicates matters.

“It’s been a perfect storm of a bunch of things,” Gianello said.

Coupeville is far from the only district in a tough financial bind, however.

Gianello stated at the meeting that 28 of 35 districts served by Northwest Educational Service District 189 are on a “financial watch list.” Coupeville’s web site has that number listed at 25 of 35.

Three districts — La Conner, Mount Baker, and Marysville — are under “binding conditions” in which a district has had to borrow money from the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Coupeville has borrowed money, but from its own capital projects fund, and outgoing Superintendent Steve King has stated “I do not anticipate that we will be going into binding conditions.”

The district borrowed $400,000, which it has a year to repay.

Gianello has previously stated the plan is to repay the loan in April, one of two months, along with October, when levy funds come in.

After that, it’s expected there will be an additional ask for approximately $800,000 in May “to be able to make it through the remainder of the school/fiscal year.”

As they work towards a budget for 2024-2025, school board directors want to better match revenues and expenses, while also restoring the fund balance.

The district is supposed to have 6% of its budget on hand, something which it has not been able to do for some time now.

This has been due to several factors, Conard said.

“I think there were likely overly optimistic budget estimates during tough times, and we were likely not as good on reporting as we needed to be.”

Moving forward, district officials will produce a “Modified Education Plan,” which will detail potential cuts. Also, an analysis is being done of current labor contracts.

The plan will be presented to the public in April, with more listening events planned in conjunction.

There is a May 1 deadline for unions to be informed of any possible “reduction in force” cuts.

The 2024-2025 budget needs to be adopted by the end of July.

Budget cuts will likely drive the conversation, as they did last summer when Dean of Students Tom Black and Athletic Trainer Jessica Caselden were among high-profile employees who at least initially lost their jobs.

Not to be overshadowed, however, are the many positives of the school district.

The search for a replacement for King has attracted 10 candidates to the full application process, and more are expected in the final days before the closing date.

Alison Perera spoke to the strengths of the district, from “the support of the community” to the “fact we have pretty safe schools.”

“Our staff know their students, those students are put first, and there is great participation by students, who have a sense of belonging and school and community pride,” she added.

“We don’t want to lose this.”

Academics, sports, and other extracurricular activities are strong.

While there will likely be differences in opinions in where cuts will be made, all involved pledged to take into consideration what community members and taxpayers have to say.

“When we have a modified education plan in place, we will hold more listening events,” Conard said. “And they will likely be more boisterous (than tonight), which is understandable.

“But this is necessary. If we don’t do it, the state will take control of our school district, and we don’t want that.”

Mason Butler (left) made his CHS track debut Wednesday, competing in three events. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Our team did great today!”

From unexpectedly nice weather to athletes performing in mid-season form, Wednesday was pleasant for Coupeville High School track and field coaches.

Competing in a season-opening 10-school meet at La Conner, the Wolves swept both girls and boys team titles.

Fueled by seven wins and an astonishing 87 PR’s, Coupeville was dominant all day.

“Thanks to our unique blend of young and seasoned athletes, we achieved early personal records, fantastic weather, and even clinched a team victory!” said CHS coach Bob Martin.

“It’s an exciting start that promises more successes ahead!”

Junior Lyla Stuurmans paced the Wolves with a pair of victories, sweeping to first in both the 1600 and 3200.

Meanwhile, Marquette Cunningham and Nick Guay came up huge, both winning an individual event while also running a leg on a pair of triumphant relay teams.

The former won the triple jump, while the latter claimed the high jump crown, joining discus chucker Zac Tackett in the winner’s circle.

Preston Epp also ran a leg on both winning relay units, with Hank Milnes (4 x 400) and Cael Wilson (4 x 100) chipping in as well.

The Wolf boys cruised to the team win, finishing with 155.5 points, with Mount Vernon Christian (128), La Conner (79), and Friday Harbor (76.5) rounding out the top four.

On the girls’ side, it was all-out war, with Coupeville (113) nudging past La Conner (110) and MVC (110) at the very last second to claim the title. Lopez Island was fourth with 73 points.

The Wolves get right back at it Saturday, when they compete at the Rainier Icebreaker.

The Wolves fill up the gym.

 

Wednesday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Issabel Johnson (7th) 15.03; Tirsit Cannon (8th) 15.23 *PR*; Ivy Rudat (21st) 16.11 *PR*; Myra McDonald (25th) 16.37 *PR*

200 — Jasmine Castellanos (6th) 31.62 *PR*; Lexis Drake (16th) 33.91 *PR*; I. Rudat (23rd) 34.76 *PR*

400 — Lydia Price (10th) 1:25.98 *PR*; Frankie Tenore (11th) 1:27.65

800 — Aleera Kent (4th) 2:57.60; Kayla Crane (5th) 2:59.83 *PR*; Reagan Callahan (14th) 3:45.93 *PR*

1600 — Lyla Stuurmans (1st) 6:15.89 *PR*; Kent (2nd) 6:27.38 *PR*; Crane (5th) 6:32.42 *PR*; Aleksia Jump (10th) 7:31.10 *PR*; Ayden Wyman (12th) 7:40.23; Callahan (14th) 8:42.14 *PR*

3200 — Stuurmans (1st) 14:21.98 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Tenore (10th) 25.53

300 Hurdles — McDonald (6th) 1:06.80 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Johnson, Drake, Carly Burt, Cannon (3rd) 58.86

4 x 200 Relay — Castellanos, Burt, Cannon, McDonald (5th) 2:07.11

4 x 400 Relay — Wyman, Cannon, Price, Kent (3rd) 5:11.33

Shot Put — Reese Wilkinson (2nd) 28-05 *PR*; Katie Marti (3rd) 26-04.50; Alysia Burdge (5th) 21-06 *PR*; Erica McGrath (9th) 20-08

Discus — Wilkinson (2nd) 96-01 *PR*; McGrath (3rd) 81-09; Marti (4th) 74-06; Burdge (17th) 44-09 *PR*

Javelin — Marti (2nd) 91-11; Wilkinson (9th) 60-03 *PR*; Burdge (13th) 54-08

Long Jump — Burt (8th) 13-03; Jump (12th) 11-01 *PR*; Tenore (14th) 11-00; I. Rudat (15th) 10-09 *PR*; Cannon (17th) 10-03.50 *PR*; Johnson (19th) 9-08

 

BOYS:

100 — Davin Houston (6th) 12.66 *PR*; Dayvon Donavon (16th) 13.24 *PR*; Matthew Ward (17th) 13.36 *PR*; Alex Merino-Martinez (22nd) 13.34 *PR*; Axel Marshall (27th) 13.71 *PR*; Ethan Walling (28th) 13.76 *PR*; Dane Hadsall (30th) 14.01 *PR*; Timothy Nitta (31st) 14.03 *PR*

200 — Marquette Cunningham (2nd) 26.25 *PR*; Donavon (5th) 27.10 *PR*; Ward (7th) 27.67 *PR*; Blake Burrows (10th) 27.85 *PR*; Merino-Martinez (11th) 28.10 *PR*; Hadsall (14th) 28.67 *PR*; Walling (15th) 28.67 *PR*; Nitta (16th) 29.19 *PR*

400 — Preston Epp (3rd) 56.22; Hank Milnes (8th) 1:03.19 *PR*; Burrows (9th) 1:03.47 *PR*; Solomon Rudat (11th) 1:06.06 *PR*; Marshall (12th) 1:07.56 *PR*

800 — Carson Field (5th) 2:30.21 *PR*; Thomas Strelow (6th) 2:35.75; Santiago Ojeda Fernandez (9th) 2:39.23 *PR*; S. Rudat (10th) 2:39.64 *PR*

1600 — Field (2nd) 5:10.96; Kenneth Jacobsen (7th) 5:26.28 *PR*; Strelow (8th) 5:27.35 *PR*; Mikey Robinett (18th) 6:30.61 *PR*; Damiano Giacobbe (19th) 7:24.53 *PR*

3200 — Field (4th) 11:43.59 *PR*; George Spear (6th) 11:57.79; Nick Wasik (7th) 13:05.84 *PR*; Marshall (8th) 13:16.69 *PR*

110 Hurdles — Cael Wilson (4th) 19.50

300 Hurdles — Wilson (5th) 48.45

4 x 100 Relay — Cunningham, Wilson, Epp, Nick Guay (1st) 47.80; Merino-Martinez, Donavon, Hadsall, Houston (5th) 50.60

4 x 400 Relay — Milnes, Cunningham, Epp, Guay (1st) 4:00.55

Shot Put — Zac Tackett (3rd) 34-04.50; Zane Oldenstadt (4th) 34-03.50; Marcelo Gebhard (8th) 30-00 *PR*; Robinett (12th) 27-11 *PR*; Zachary Saho (18th) 23-02 *PR*; Mason Butler (20th) 22-06 *PR*; Jacobsen (26th) 20-05.50 *PR*; Giacobbe (30th) 16-06 *PR*

Discus — Tackett (1st) 113-11; Oldenstadt (2nd) 110-04 *PR*; Butler (13th) 76-01 *PR*; Jacob Schooley (14th) 74-01 *PR*; Gebhard (18th) 70-11 *PR*; Saho (22nd) 62-08 *PR*; Peerapong Prombut (34th) 49-06 *PR*; Giacobbe (36th) 37-04 *PR*

Javelin — Gebhard (12th) 97-10 *PR*; Butler (17th) 87-10 *PR*; Robinett (18th) 86-06 *PR*; Ward (19th) 84-07 *PR*; Schooley (22nd) 82-02 *PR*; Ojeda Fernandez (30th) 64-04 *PR*; Giacobbe (38th) 43-11 *PR*; Prombut (39th) 43-10 *PR*

High Jump — Guay (1st) 6-00 *PR*; Houston (3rd) 5-04 *PR*; Wilson (7th) 5-02

Long Jump — Houston (3rd) 17-0.50 *PR*; Guay (5th) 16-08 *PR*; Burrows (10th) 16-00 *PR*; Field (11th) 15-10 *PR*; Robinett (14th) 15-05; Ojeda Fernandez (14th) 15-05 *PR*; Walling (16th) 15-02 *PR*; Marshall (17th) 14-09 *PR*; S. Rudat (24th) 11-11 *PR*

Triple Jump — Cunningham (1st) 36-08 *PR*; Milnes (3rd) 33-11 *PR*

Hunter Bronec owns the paint. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They shoot, they score.

Whether on the hardwood or at a season-ending awards banquet, Coupeville High School basketball players racked up big-time success this season.

The Wolf boys’ varsity shared a league title, captured the Bi-District crown outright, and advanced to the state tourney for the second time in three seasons.

The Wolves celebrate adding more hardware to the trophy case.

Meanwhile the JV hoops stars torched nearly everyone in sight, racking up a 14-2 mark while running most foes off the floor.

With the basketballs put away and uniforms turned in, the Wolves gathered as a unit one final time Tuesday, with Brad Sherman and his coaching staff handing out letters and awards.

In the year’s biggest non-surprise, senior Logan Downes was hailed as the varsity Player of the Year.

That comes on the heels of the program’s all-time leading scorer winning Northwest 2B/1B League MVP and being tabbed as an All-State player.

Cole White snagged Defensive Player of the Year for the varsity, while Ryan Blouin earned the Wolf Award.

Rounding out the night’s honorees were Nick Guay (Sixth Man Award), Thomas Studer (Heart of Service Award), and Chase Anderson (Sunrise Award).

Eight of Coupeville’s nine seniors played all four years for the Wolves, with Zane Oldenstadt, William Davidson, Mikey Robinett, and Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim joining Downes, White, Blouin, and Guay.

On the JV side of things, Aiden O’Neill was tabbed as Player of the Year, with Camden Glover (Offense) and Landon Roberts (Defense) also hailed for their work.

Jack Porter took home the Wolf Award, with Riley Lawless noted for his work as Sixth Man of the Year.

Riley Lawless (right) gets down ‘n dirty.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Chase Anderson
Ryan Blouin
Hunter Bronec
Hurlee Bronec
William Davidson
Logan Downes
Nick Guay
Timothy Nitta
Zane Oldenstadt
Mikey Robinett
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim
Cole White

 

Varsity participation certificates:

Aiden O’Neill
Landon Roberts

 

JV participation certificates:

Sage Arends
Camden Glover
Easton Green
Davin Houston

Riley Lawless
Jayden McManus
Mahkai Myles
Aiden O’Neill
Jack Porter
Johnny Porter
Landon Roberts
Malachi Somes

 

Managers:

Kyle McCrimmon 
David Somes
Thomas Studer 

Throwing fear into rivals everywhere.

Lexis Drake gets the stadium rockin’. (Jackie Saia photo)

Lexis Drake has gone to a different level this school year.

As we note the 24 Coupeville High School students who are making the grade as three-sport athletes, we should also hail the Wolf freshman for actually beating that standard.

Drake is among the rarest of rare in that she’s a CHS athlete who has been a part of four separate teams.

Like legendary Wolf Breeanna Messner did back in the day, Jaje’s lil’ sis balanced playing volleyball with being a football cheerleader in the fall.

Lexis delivered spikes and sets for the Wolf JV volleyball crew, where she earned the Most Inspirational award, while also working the sidelines on fall Fridays as part of the varsity cheer squad.

Pulling double duty allowed her to have a front row seat to her big bro playing his senior season of football.

A key part of the support crew on older brother Jaje’s Senior Night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

After a super-busy fall, which all happened as Lexis made her own debut as a high schooler, she could have taken a break.

Instead, she immediately jumped into basketball, before picking up the track and field mantle this spring.

Throughout her odyssey, Lexis has shined brightly, putting in tons of hard work while always displaying great joy.

She is the epitome of everything a Wolf student/athlete can be, achieving greatness while remaining humble.

So, take a moment to tip your hat, or lift your drink, and acknowledge Lexis for all she has accomplished – and all she will likely continue to achieve as her high school career plays out.

She’s a jack of all trades, AND a master of them, too.

Her future’s so bright, she’s going to need shades. (Parker Hammons photo)

Wolf junior Jada Heaton is a busy bee, having played three sports for three seasons running. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

We have a record. I believe.

I’ve been tracking the number of three-sport athletes at Coupeville High School since the blog started in 2012, and an early look at spring rosters indicates this is the deepest year ever.

There are 24 Wolves — 14 boys and 10 girls — who are finishing their year-round odyssey.

That breaks the previous high of 23, achieved in 2014, 2017, and 2022.

Not counting 2020, where Covid restrictions erased spring sports and made the concept of three-sport athletes impossible to achieve, CHS has had 20+ iron men and women almost every year in the Coupeville Sports era.

The only sub-20 years were 2013, when 18 Wolves completed the journey, and 2016, when we hit our low of 17.

At a small school like CHS, having full rosters is huge, and it speaks strongly to the work put in by Athletic Director Willie Smith and his coaches.

And it’s also a testament to the work ethic of the Wolf athletes themselves, as they fully embrace the chance to get the most possible out of their prep sports careers.

So, tip your hat to the ones who are there, every season:

 

GIRLS:

Capri Anter – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Haylee Armstrong – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Teagan Calkins – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Lexis Drake – Volleyball, Basketball, Track
Mia Farris – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Jada Heaton – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Katie Marti – Volleyball, Basketball, Track
Madison McMillan – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Brynn Parker – Soccer, Basketball, Tennis
Lyla Stuurmans – Volleyball, Basketball, Track

 

BOYS:

Chase Anderson – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Camden Glover – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Easton Green – Cross Country, Basketball, Baseball
Nick Guay – Soccer, Basketball, Track
Davin Houston – Football, Basketball, Track
Zane Oldenstadt – Football, Basketball, Track
Aiden O’Neill – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Jack Porter – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Johnny Porter – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Landon Roberts – Cross Country, Basketball, Baseball
Mikey Robinett – Football, Basketball, Track
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – Soccer, Basketball, Track
Malachi Somes – Football, Basketball, Track
Cole White – Soccer, Basketball, Baseball

If there’s a sport to be played, Chase Anderson will be there.