Mark your calendars.
The Coupeville School District hosts a back-to-school event Aug. 31, offering local families a chance to obtain free clothes and school supplies.
For more info, pop up to the photo above.
Posted in Not sports? Tough!, tagged Arianna Bumgarner, back to school, Coupeville School District, school supplies, student support on August 9, 2023| Leave a Comment »
Mark your calendars.
The Coupeville School District hosts a back-to-school event Aug. 31, offering local families a chance to obtain free clothes and school supplies.
For more info, pop up to the photo above.
Posted in Ranting and Raving, tagged budget cuts, Coupeville School District, school board, The Real World on July 30, 2023| Leave a Comment »
We are not broken, but we need to fix things.
In the wake of efforts to pass a budget for the 2023-2024 school year, there is considerable anger bubbling just under the surface in the Coupeville School District.
Anger that, in many ways, feels justified.
It would be easy for district administrators and school board members to heave a sigh of relief in the wake of passing the budget, assuming everyone will go back to singing kumbaya, jointly working together to implement what is in that budget.
That would be dangerously naive.
People have still lost jobs.
And the majority of those budget cuts claimed positions which directly impact student safety and well-being.
A Dean of Students with 19 years in the trenches and countless teenage lives changed for the better.
An athletic trainer who helped Coupeville enjoy the most injury-free sports year I can remember in 30 years of writing, while also inspiring young women into following her career path.
Paraeducators who are the first, and last line, of defense, of positive reinforcement, of making sure each child gets the most from their day and returns home safely to their family.
There is a face behind every cut. Do not forget that.
With those cuts, and others, public perception, justified or not, is that the budget prioritizes a food service program which has lost money every year except when the state paid for free meals across the board at the height of the pandemic.
As administrators, as board members, I don’t know if you truly realize how close you all came to having this turn into something much nastier.
To having the anger not be an abstract thought, something you read about in letters to the board or in first-person accounts here on Coupeville Sports, but a reality of your daily life.
Life is different if they picket your houses.
More restrained voices won out this time when those discussions arose. They might not always.
Now, we don’t have multiple active lawsuits in play, as appears to be the case at a nearby district whose sports teams vie with the Wolves in the Northwest 2B/1B League.
And our district passed a budget Thursday, beating the state deadline, largely because to not do so would unleash chaos.
Whether that chaos, while painful, might have been beneficial in the long run, is a debate that will continue to play out.
I was one of only three people not on the school board or part of district administration who sat through two budget workshops and the budget hearing.
During those six-plus hours, I was conflicted.
I looked upon good men and women, people who I believe (or want to believe) are in those positions because they want to help Coupeville students reach the highest levels of achievement.
As in any group, there were disagreements on how best to reach that goal. Some were vocalized, though almost always couched in politeness.
I’m not saying the people in that room needed to scream at each other or take advantage of the fact Prairie Center had an ongoing sale on throwing-size tomatoes.
It would have been entertaining, certainly, as I sank deeper into a sea of half-understood financial figures and acronyms.
And I do believe a little righteous anger unleashed often has its place.
As The Real World taught my generation “This is the true story, to find out what happens, when people stop being polite, and start getting real.”
Sitting in the audience I was not allowed to scream “That is some righteous bullshit,” lest I get booted out to sit in the parking lot, no matter how many times those exact words burbled up inside me.
There is a reason I would not fit well seated at the “adult” table in these matters.
Coupeville’s school board directors and its administrators have an ability to operate in that world in a way I do not, and let’s give them credit for that.
While still wishing one or two would unleash a public “that is some righteous bullshit” when appropriate.
Such as when the answer to how some revenues in the new budget will be realized essentially comes off as us being told “It’s magic.”
But anyways.
What I witnessed, in my opinion, is a budget process which has to be fixed.
You can NOT send board members a revised budget at 11:30 PM on a Tuesday, when the budget workshop is 18 hours later, and the budget deadline is four days after that.
That is insanity, and all the excuses in the world — no matter how legit they may be — don’t change that.
Yes, the Finance Director is relatively new to the district.
Yes, the transition to the Qmlativ platform has made the budgeting process harder.
Yes, there are 1,001 real-life financial issues affecting school districts everywhere, not just in Coupeville.
It doesn’t matter.
You can NOT give board members 18 hours (or more like 10-12, if we accept most people sleep during the night…) to crunch hundreds of pages.
And this was not a one-time thing.
Every step of the way in the budget process this year, it felt as if the board was being forced to scramble, to work from behind, to try and do their due diligence without being given proper time.
Don’t come to me with excuses. I sympathize, but it doesn’t matter.
Fix it.
Secondly, all involved need to do a better job of keeping the taxpayers — their ultimate bosses — in the mix.
The district, at every level, has a PR problem, but with a little work, it could be improved.
Communicate with us, the great unwashed public.
You believe this is your best budget, that these decisions have to be made — sell it to us or don’t be surprised when social media chatter rips you a new one.
I understand you also have to have room and freedom to do your job, but if you are not willing to explain your decision making — well before we’re five minutes from seeing the budget approved — the blowback will only grow.
A lot of people do not feel their concerns were truly heard, no matter the post-game platitudes.
That has to be improved.
Also, read the room.
When your budget is about to slash jobs — again, real people, not just numbers on a spreadsheet — informing us you’re being honored by other administrators for those very budget cuts kind of goes over like a public fart.
Just sayin’.
Finally, let’s make it about me.
Someone out there, someone with a better understanding of financial matters, of how school districts operate, needs to step up and launch their own blog.
I’ve spent my scattershot journalism career primarily writing about sports and movies. I very specifically made the choice not to train for covering these matters.
You can start a blog literally for free or spend a few bucks as I have to give it at least a hint of a professional sheen.
Someone comes in and focuses on budget matters, on financial doings, on how the sausage is made at a time when money is tight everywhere, I’ll promote your work.
Then happily go back to watching a triple feature of Death Car on the Freeway, Night of the Killer Bears, and Swing You Sinners.
Posted in budget cuts, tagged budget cuts, Chartwells, Coupeville School District, Maury Povich, school board on July 20, 2023| Leave a Comment »
Maury Povich would be having a field day.
As we work our way through “Budgetageddon ’23” here in Coupeville, the master of the television lie detector reveal would be giving his eyebrows a workout.
Much has been said, and some of it is even true.
With budget cuts dominating the news cycle, and an August 1 deadline for school districts to finalize their 2023-2024 budgets, the next two Thursday nights are going to be … something.
The school board has a budget workshop on the agenda July 20, and a regular board meeting and budget hearing July 27.
Things go down in the Anderson Board Room at the district office, which sits right in front of Coupeville High School.
Action tips off at 5:30, and we could end up with high drama, or way-too-long sessions filled with endless droning about decimal places.
The workshop is NOT streamed, and there is no public comment, but is absolutely 1000% open to the public.
And yes, the board plans to go into executive session AFTER its budget discussion, to discuss labor negotiations. No public action will take place after that hush-hush coffee chat.
But that part, and ONLY that part, is exempt from our eyes.
The budget discussion? Come watch that sausage being made in living color, taxpayers.
The July 27 event has all the bells and whistles of a normal monthly meeting — streaming, live mics, public comment, additional stuff likely on the agenda.
As we head towards those meetings, here are a few things — some random, some very germane — I’ve heard or read lately, and how close they come to reality.
1 — “We don’t need 14 football coaches.”
Um, this isn’t Texas. We have four Coupeville High School gridiron gurus, and one of them is an unpaid volunteer.
The remaining three aren’t exactly making Nick Saban money, and CHS also has three paid track and field coaches.
2 — “Why is the school district building new tennis courts while potentially making up to 1.45 million in budget cuts?”
Um, the money for capital projects — such as moving the tennis courts from next to the school to the other side of the gym, while expanding the bus barn into the area the courts currently occupy — is its own thing.
Voters have the ultimate say on funding those projects, and school administrators can’t use that money for anything besides what has been approved by the taxpayers.
Sorry, but you can’t take capital projects money and hire more paraeducators, no matter how big the need.
Because you’d be BREAKING THE LAW.
3 — “The school’s main food guy made $100,000 last year, and his wife made $80,000.”
OK, that’s close to the 2022-2023 salaries for Food Service Director Andreas Wurzrainer ($100,213.83) and Assistant Food Service Director Laura Luginbill ($79,475.63), but the duo is NOT MARRIED.
The real Mrs. Wurzrainer does NOT work for the school district — she sails the high seas in the cruise ship industry and has done so for a number of years.
4 — “The school district budgeted more to offer bottled water in its school offices last year than it did for an athletic trainer.”
It would seem so, as, while both are slated to be slashed from the new budget, fancy water is listed at $12,000, while the trainer gig is valued at $8,200.
One of those things should never have been in the budget in the first place, while cutting the other is a slap in the face to every coach and athlete who benefitted from having Jessica Caselden front and center.
Yes, the trainer position has only been in place for a year.
But did you also notice last school year was the first one I can remember in many years in which Coupeville football didn’t lose key players to season-long injuries?
Bigger still, at a school where there have been only a small handful of females in athletic leadership positions, you’re going to cut Jessica??
A Coupeville grad, who played on the same fields as current athletes, who grew up in the aisles of Videoville, who returned to her hometown — when she could make much more money elsewhere — to be an absolute rock star of a role model for young women?
You’re going to slap every girl at CHS in the face, metaphorically, over $8,200?? Not a great look.
5 — “But wait, you’re the news, you’re supposed to be impartial.”
I’m not Walter Cronkite, I’m an idiot writing a blog, somehow hanging on for 11 years on virtually no money.
I’m very partial towards Jessica, whose father, Willie, did the gardening for Videoville and used to spend a considerable chunk of time telling me stories about his in-laws and their (alleged), possibly not fully legal activities back on the East Coast.
And Tom Black, the Dean of Students, whose job is slated to be cut?
This blog, moments before launching in August of 2012, was either going to be called Coupeville Sports or Lexie Black’s Block Party.
True story.
Tom’s older daughter was my wingwoman at Videoville, a six-foot-two doppelganger for Fifth Element star Milla Jovovich, and the only one truly worthy of being the next Queen of England back when William, Prince of Wales, still had a full head of hair.
Lucious locks? They’re here for a good time, not a long time…
But anyway, Lexie also blocked a lot of shots on the basketball court for the Wolves — still holds a state tourney record for 1A female players — and national sports blogs with names like Kissing Suzy Kolber were huge at the moment.
Lexie said yes for a hot second, then later patted me on the head and was like, “No one is going to get it, and you’re going to be explaining it for years, and still no one will get it,” and we went with the boring placeholder.
“Fiiiiiinnnnnnnnneeeee…”
Followed by me pouting for 11 years.
So, pragmatic? Ever so slightly.
Impartial? Not even close.
6 — “All Coupeville administrators will make the same salary in 2023-2024 as they did in 2022-2023 or are taking a voluntary pay cut.”
Yes … voluntary. Your mileage will vary on that statement, I’m sure.
But to the main point — it’s not true.
Two admins are taking the same salary and two are taking pay cuts, but a fifth will make $2,566 more in 23-24 than in 22-23.
Compare the contracts from last year, and the new ones approved by the school board at the end of June, and it’s there in black and white.
I’m not saying which admin gets the bump, as this is not meant to be a gotcha, and I believe the raise is likely a simple mistake.
The reasoning for that is based on that admin being the only one in the group who also shows a boost in their job ranking from one level to another.
I don’t know for sure, as emails to three people inside the district on the subject have gone unanswered for two weeks.
And yes, I realize July is a vacation time for many school officials, and yes, I realize they’re probably tired of talking to me.
But there’s a contract. Its board approved. An admin seems to be getting a (small) raise when the public stance is no one gets a raise.
Probably not an intentional lie, but certainly not a true statement.
7 — “The (Food Service) Director’s salary is comparable to that of the food directors at the Oak Harbor and South Whidbey school districts.”
This one is from Superintendent Steve King, in response to a question from the Whidbey News-Times.
And it’s not even close, sorry.
As mentioned before, Coupeville, according to contracts published on the district’s website, paid Andreas Wurzrainer $100,213.83 and Laura Luginbill $79,475.63 in 2022-2023.
Both are likely to take pay cuts when new contracts are approved, as current budget cuts call for financial trims in that department.
But, for Coupeville’s Food Service Director to have a comparable salary to that of the person heading up South Whidbey’s program, that pay cut would have to be much more sizable than expected.
And it certainly wasn’t true last year.
Our next-door neighbor, which has a larger student body than Coupeville (for sports, they’re 1A, while we’re 2B) contracts with Chartwell’s for food service.
John Maupin, the Area Director for the Pacific Region, responded to my question by stating “Chartwell’s salary range in Washington for a director of South Whidbey’s size ranges from $65,478.40 to $72,100.”
Oak Harbor High School, a 3A institution, contracts with Sodexo, which did not respond to a request for similar info.
To summarize, last year Coupeville paid its Food Services Director $100,213.83, with additional benefits since the director is a school employee.
Chartwells would have gone no higher than $72,100 at South Whidbey, and there is no assistant director listed for that school.
In terms of letter grades, if 100 is an A, 72 is a C-.
In terms of dollars, $28,000 is pretty much the cost of a paraeducator.
Now, I wrapped up my tour of duty in the world of 1989 high school math by fast-talking my way into a “life skills” class, so I wouldn’t have to finish out my last semester of algebra.
Einstein, I’m not.
But even I know $100,213.83 and $72,100 aren’t remotely comparable.
UPDATE:
I was close on #6, but an email Thursday night from the admin involved clarifies things.
The fact their job ranking was boosted for putting in another year of experience is key.
The $2,566 is separate financial compensation for achieving that new level and is not considered a raise as it doesn’t affect the admin’s base salary, which remains unchanged from last year.
Posted in budget cuts, tagged budget cuts, Coupeville School District, letters to the editor, school board, Tom Black on July 17, 2023| Leave a Comment »

Community support for the reinstatement of Dean of Students Tom Black is loud and passionate. (Moira Reed photo)
Expect #bringbackblack to dominate the airwaves once again.
The Coupeville School Board has a budget workshop this Thursday, July 20, then the budget hearing during its regular monthly meeting July 27.
That means the push to reinstate Dean of Students Tom Black, a 19-year vet who is currently a victim of budget cuts, will once again be front and center.
The following letter to the editor, which was also sent to school board members and Superintendent Steve King, is from a local family:
Hello Alison, Christine, Morgan, Nancy, Sherry, and Steve,
We respectfully request that you reinstate Mr. Tom Black as the Dean of Students.
The board was elected to represent and serve our community.
In our eight years with the Coupeville schools, we have rarely ever seen another district issue where the community has so clearly stated how they would like to be served.
The community has written letters to the Whidbey News-Times editor.
Written testimonials on Mr. Black’s positive impact on them among the many articles by David Svien about the community wanting to reverse this decision.
Been referenced in a top front page newspaper article about the controversy.
Been a frequent local discussion topic among parents and students plus posted across Facebook and social media.
Signed a petition that has 500+ people saying Mr. Black needs to be reinstated, and multiple people showed up to your recent board meeting in support of reversing this decision
There is unified, vocal, and extensive community input to reinstate Mr. Tom Black as the Dean of Students.
The community is asking you to figure out where else you can cut $85,000 from the budget.
This is only 6% of the budget cut proposal.
Nobody is “happy” with the other 94%, yet people understand that budget cuts are needed.
The focused public outcry is not second guessing that 94% or asking you to do the whole effort all over again.
It is important to not confuse effective leadership with “sticking to your guns” and “making the hard decisions that are not always popular.”
A mistake was made on a small portion of the overall proposal.
We are not perfect and nobody on this thread is perfect.
We hold no grudges against the initial mistake, especially since budget cuts are always hard.
However, the current situation is quite disheartening.
You are passively ignoring the ramifications, the clear community feedback on that initial decision, and the clear community directive to cut something else instead.
If the superintendent and the board just says “that’s the way it is” without listening to the input from your community, then you lose your ability to say you represent the interests of this community.
A sign of true leadership is recognizing a mistake and resolving it.
Anything else is just a case of inflexibility and a false sense that you have done your job, community needs and priorities be damned.
Since Steve has expressed his belief that he made the right decision with no known interest in changing it, we ask that the Board override his decision on this one item, direct Steve to seek cuts elsewhere, and reinstate Mr. Black promptly.
This request is coming from a broad base across the entire community that you are supposed to serve.
If you do not reverse this decision, it would essentially mean that you are unwilling to represent the clearly and loudly stated interests of your community.
You would do everyone a disservice if you are just a rubber stamp to a bad decision.
And this issue needs to be corrected rapidly before Mr. Black understandably needs to move on and find employment elsewhere.
Regards,
Scott, Karen and Lydia Price
Contact info for the superintendent and school board:
Steve King — sking@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Nancy Conard — nconard@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Alison Perera — aperera@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Sherry Phay — sphay@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Christine Sears — csears@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Morgan White — mwhite@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Posted in Not sports? Tough!, tagged 2023-2024 school year, budget, Coupeville School District, food service, school board, Steve King on July 11, 2023| Leave a Comment »
When I got into journalism, I went the easy route, covering sports and writing about movies.
My eyes glaze over when I try and parse complicated financial reports, such as the 2023-2024 draft budget for Coupeville schools.
I can pull out some numbers, such as the district acknowledging it expects to take a $400,000+ hit with its Connected Food Program.
The budget projects food service revenues to be $300,000 next school year, down considerably from the $502,960 generated in 2021-2022, when the state was financing free meals for all during the pandemic.
Expenditures for food service in 2023-24 are projected at $706,602.
That’s down from the $774,573 spent in 21-22, and the $863,155 projected in the 22-23 budget.
Now, there is also a line devoted to “School Food Services, Sales of Goods, Supplies and Services,” which projects $250,000 in profit.
The same line shows a $37,874 profit in 21-22 and $0 for the 22-23 budget.
Is the leap because the state has announced it will fund free breakfast and lunch for elementary school children, but NOT middle/high school students?
Or is there something else in play there?
I don’t know, and Superintendent Steve King went on vacation at the start of July.
He and his crew are obviously still tweaking things behind the scenes, but not answering emails currently — a deserved break.
People with a better understanding of budget ins and outs will have a chance to ask questions moving forward, with two school board meetings scheduled for July.
There is a workshop board meeting July 20 and a regular board meeting, with budget hearing, July 27.
Both meetings begin at 5:30 PM in the Anderson Board Room (Annex Room 305), which is located at the front of the CHS campus at 501 S. Main.
Until then, a link to the 41-page draft budget: