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Posts Tagged ‘letters to the editor’

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.

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Paige Mueller

Paige Mueller is a local success story.

A Coupeville High School grad who followed in the footsteps of her forefathers by becoming a farmer, she and her husband own Bell’s Farm.

Mueller’s family has been tilling the soil of Whidbey Island since 1946 and are deeply connected to The Rock.

With another round of budget cuts looming on the horizon for the Coupeville School District, much has been said about the Connected Food Program.

Mueller strongly supports what Chef Andreas Wurzrainer and his crew have accomplished, and she lays out her thoughts in a letter to school board members which is included on the agenda for Thursday’s meeting.

In the letter, she talks about her own experiences as a farmer, and a former Coupeville Elementary School librarian.

“We have a responsibility as citizens of this world to guide students towards healthy food choices, away from processed foods, and to show them how food gets on their plate,” Mueller writes.

“For their health, the community’s health, and the health of our planet.”

 

To read her letter in full, pop over to:

Click to access P%20Muller%20Letter%20to%20the%20Board%20.pdf

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Pete Gebhard, seen with daughter Gabriella, is the lead custodian for the Coupeville School District.

The lead custodian for the Coupeville School District is calling on the school board to address a year-long shortage in staff.

Pete Gebhard has sent a letter to the directors, which is included with the agenda for their March 28 meeting.

In it, he states the maintenance department have not been able to “replace the full-time custodian at the middle school.”

“We are now coming up on one year since Dan Burns resigned,” Gebhard writes. “I have expressed my concerns about this decision to both (Superintendent) Steve King and (Business Manager) Brian Gianello via email or in person conversations.

“As of yet, I have not been given a solution to this issue. I have been told that we would discuss seeking a remedy to the shortage at a later time once the budget situation changes.”

Gebhard states the current crew has had to flex schedules “to accommodate for this significant loss of work hours.”

This has increased the workload for remaining workers, while “many other cleaning tasks are being left undone due to lack of time.”

“In the 20 plus years that I have been a custodian of the Coupeville School District, there has never been a school year where there was no middle school custodian,” Gebhard writes.

“We have never been asked to find a way to cover the middle school building by stretching out our work hours and cutting back our cleaning services, in addition to our regular areas of responsibility.

“I’m not entirely sure as to why our district has decided that the current situation is sufficient or that we just have to work our way through this shortage of funding, but I find it deeply concerning that we would sacrifice cleaning/sanitizing/disinfecting and stretch our current custodial crew out in this manner.”

Gebhard also expresses the concern the new superintendent, when hired later this year, may decide to keep staffing at current levels.

“At our current custodial staffing level, we are holding ground on basic cleaning, with no time for deep cleaning or classroom sanitizing,” he writes.

“If we were to lose more custodial hours in the form of a RIF, we would be forced to move our custodial staffing hours again and quite frankly this would likely require the elementary school to be placed on an every other day cleaning schedule.

“It’s really hard for me to say this, but our buildings will continue to not receive the cleaning they need, and this will result in unsanitary conditions for our students.”

In the letter he calls for the situation to be addressed.

“It is my honest feeling that if we are told that we must lose another custodian for the upcoming school year, the impact to our custodial staff and buildings will be tremendous,” Gebhard writes.

“Our custodians will be overtaxed with larger areas to clean, and our buildings will suffer and degrade at a quicker rate.

“We really need to strongly consider what our cleaning goals should be for our district before implementing any further changes to our custodial staff. I can’t emphasize the importance of this enough.”

 

To read Gebhard’s letter in full, pop over to:

Click to access P%20Gebhard%20Letter%20to%20the%20Board%20.pdf

 

UPDATE 3/25 — The letter is no longer available to read, as it was removed from BoardDocs at the request of its author.

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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

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Coaches like Wolf boys' hoops guru Anthony Smith (John Fisken photo)

  Coaches like CHS boys’ hoops guru Anthony Smith have agreed to sacrifice time and work their schedules around a season. When athletes (and parents) don’t want to do the same, why expect a free ride? (John Fisken photo)

High school sports can be tough.

Not everyone can play them. Not everyone should.

But, if you, as a player, and you, as a parent, make the decision to do so, realize you’re going to have to occasionally step out of your entitled world and face off with reality.

Not every kid makes varsity. Not every kid gets the same playing time.

Right there, sports just introduced you to the cold, hard reality of the real world.

Those with internal fortitude will press on and work harder, and, possibly, hopefully, be rewarded for the time, effort and sweat they put in.

Sports teach tough lessons, but they also show reward can come (sometimes, not always) when effort is put in.

But then you have parents such as Kimberly DeJesus, who just had a letter to the editor published in The Whidbey News-Times.

In the letter, which I have linked to below, she cries (a lot) about coaches having practices during holidays.

Her main point:

I, as a parent who had children in school, would not allow my children to practice on holiday break, especially if we were traveling out of town to visit relatives.

And then if the coach(es) wouldn’t let my kids play because they missed practice, oh my.

You would not want to take me there, as it would be my decision that we left town, not my kids’.

Let’s go through this, shall we?

1) In the state of Washington, athletes have to have a certain number of practices in to be eligible to play in games.

With barely two weeks from the first official day of practice to the first basketball game (and athletes needing 10 practices to be eligible), coaches have little choice but to have practices AROUND the holiday (none that I know of had day-of-Thanksgiving practices).

So, while you scream at the coach, you ignore the WIAA, which set the practice requirements.

2) When you signed your kid(s) up, you saw a schedule. You knew, in advance, when the practice and games were. It is your choice if you want to have them play or go on vacation.

You don’t always get to have it both ways.

The coaches, who have committed to the season and agreed to work THEIR schedules around the holidays, certainly don’t.

3) So, we’ll say your child is not at practice. Other players are.

Fine. Your choice to make, as a parent. No one disputes that.

Yet you want them to be rewarded the same as the players who sacrificed, who scrapped, who committed heart and soul to the program. Who actually showed up.

Or else you will throw a snit fit.

Thereby teaching your children that if you’re not given everything you want, regardless of whether you worked for it and deserve it, the only way to solve the problem is to scream and cry and pretend to be abused.

And we wonder why so many high school coaches burn out and walk away after just a few years.

The letter:

http://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/opinion/letters/284017111.html

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