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Posts Tagged ‘Coupeville School Board’

And then there were six.

The Coupeville School Board narrowed its list of candidates to replace departing Superintendent Steve King after holding an executive session Thursday night.

Who are those six? That part is hush-hush, for a logical reason.

With many of the candidates currently working in other districts, the search consultant firm being used by the school board recommended keeping names private through the early rounds.

It is believed that helped to increase the applicant pool, School Board president Morgan White said in a statement.

The six candidates still in play will be interviewed during another private meeting Tuesday, Mar. 26, with the three finalists publicly announced by Mar. 29.

The final trio will tour the Coupeville School District and meet with staff and community between Apr. 8-10.

A detailed schedule of stakeholder meetings will be released next week, with opportunities to meet candidates and provide feedback.

The current plan is to hire a new superintendent in April, with that person starting the job in July.

Whichever of the six candidates wins the top spot, school board members are looking forward to the positives they will bring to the job.

“We are hopeful about the future of our district,” White said. “And we are grateful for wonderful candidates who are eager to serve Coupeville Schools.”

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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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The Coupeville High School gym got a seating upgrade in recent years. Time for the school’s PAC to join the modern world. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

New seats, after 30 years.

That’s the plan, as Coupeville School District officials are moving forward on a project to replace the seats in the high school/middle school Performing Arts Center.

The project, set for summer 2024, is projected to cost $284,000 and is covered by a capital projects levy.

Approval is on the agenda for the final school board meeting of the year, which goes down next Thursday, Dec. 14 in the Kathleen Anderson Boardroom on the CHS campus.

The meeting starts at 5:30 PM and is open to the public, while also being available to stream.

The PAC seats are original to the building, and date back to 1994, said Facilities Director Scott Losey.

In his letter to board members, he details the many problems with the ageing seats.

They are old enough the district can’t replace parts anymore, so “as the seats break, they are replaced with ones from the top rows to keep the lower ones in operation.

“The difficulty of operation of setting them up and taking them down has become a great undertaking,” Losey added.

“This typically takes the physical strength of multiple people. So, for the health and safety of our staff and specifically our maintenance and custodial staff replacement is needed.”

Losey also states “the seating will be more comfortable than current seats and the arm rests are flexible as we have the ability to move them up and down.”

 

To see the proposal from Nor-Pac Seating, pop over to:

Click to access Coupeville%20MS%20PAC%20MXM%2B%20Price%20Quote.pdf

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There’s a new lineup in place.

With the general election certified, the Coupeville School Board moved forward Thursday, welcoming a new director, acknowledging the return of another, and choosing its leaders for the next year.

Charles Merwine, who was elected to replace the retiring Christie Sears, and Alison Perera, who won reelection to her post, were sworn in.

They join Nancy Conard, Sherry Phay, and Morgan White on the five-person board.

Later in the meeting, White was chosen to be the board’s new president, while Conard was tabbed as vice president.

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Coupeville’s School Board — five adults, no shenanigans.

I would be a lousy school board director.

I enjoy my gossip too much, I don’t have the intestinal fortitude for combing through endless financial work sheets at 3 AM, and, most of all, even at age 52, I’m too immature.

A lifetime spent working in video stores, writing about prep sports contests, and taking care of babies has kept my internal clock set too far back.

My back and neck, having born the horrors of farm work and dishwashing (and a few sucker punches from those babies) remind me that my birth certificate lists 1971 as the year I popped into this world.

But my heart still lies to me from time to time and tries to get me to say “Hello, my fellow teens.”

At which point my brain alertly backhands me, and I promptly sit my butt back down on the rock-hard bleachers and get back to assaulting the back and neck we previously spoke about.

So why does this come up now?

Because, as a new edition of the Coupeville School Board kicks off tonight, I am once again reminded how blessed we are here in Cow Town to have five adults in the room.

Men and women who put in the work, stand tall in the fire, and don’t hide when they make their opinions known.

In Nancy Conard, Sherry Phay, Alison Perera, Morgan White, and Charles Merwine, we have a group which doesn’t sit hunched over, phone clutched to their chest, firing off thousands of anonymous tweets which bob along like piles of dog poop in what the French call “a gigantic global sewer.”

It’s a proud prairie tradition, one which former directors such as Venessa Matros, Christi Sears, Glenda Merwine, Don Sherman, Brent Stevens, Karen Bishop, and the late, great Kathleen Anderson also upheld.

Our board directors walk into the room, look us in the eye, say what they believe, and explain their stance.

We, the tax-paying public, may agree, or we may not.

But our directors don’t run like spooked rabbits, they don’t cower away in dark corners where the only voices are those from their personal echo chamber, and they don’t waste hours playing social justice warrior when nobody’s listening to their anonymous bleating.

While being too scared to put their names or faces behind their words.

Pro tip – a photo of a generic muffin card from a store in Anacortes sent via anonymous Twitter burner account means diddly and squat.

They give those cards to tourists as well, skippy.

Our directors don’t fire off anonymous emails trying to spark a financial boycott against any who would call them out on their crap — while being too stupid to realize those ads were one-time payments and the money is long gone.

Anonymous person says what?

Our directors also don’t embrace hate-soaked loons who whine for FIVE HOURS, only to reveal they didn’t actually read more than 25% of the article they’re complaining about since “it didn’t fit what I feel.”

While happily using Wi-Fi from the cafe they’ve been camped out in, while failing to buy even a water.

My sister, a former barista, would have taken a large metal spoon to your freeloading, whiny ass back in the day.

Good thing modern-day college students are more forgiving, I guess.

The point I’m making is, I appreciate where I live, and that the people of Coupeville — and many others from other cities, state, and countries — reach out to me to talk about my writing.

Some are happy, some not so much, but either way, they can reach me because I don’t hide my identity.

It’s right there at the top of the blog, with a semi-recent photo of myself.

Like the Coupeville School Board, I stand behind my words.

And I’m grateful I don’t live in a place where school board directors waste considerable time and their district’s money just for the chance to piss off their superintendent, who is hoping against hope they don’t have to publicly deal with a much-bigger fall out.

To school board directors in all areas, current or future, take a good, hard look at how these men and women conduct themselves.

And then be like Coupeville’s five-pack. The adults in the room.

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