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Posts Tagged ‘Nancy Conard’

Coupeville graduates Morgan White and Nancy Conard have large leads in the race for election to the school board.

Day two results reinforced day one.

The voters have spoken and Morgan White, Nancy Conard, and incumbent Sherry Phay are likely winners in the race for the Coupeville School Board.

The trio will join Christine Sears and Glenda Merwine.

Phay, who was running unopposed for a second term, has 2,158 votes as of Wednesday night’s second release of totals by the Island County Auditor’s office.

The other two races showcase Coupeville grads who have gone on to make major contributions in their hometown community.

White, a business owner and mother of two children attending Coupeville schools, leads businessman Ward Sparacio 2,207 to 950 votes.

Conard, who was town mayor for two decades, and also held multiple positions in the Coupeville school district, including Business Manager, is rolling against internet crank Paul Rempa.

Her opponent essentially vanished from the race after being called on the carpet publicly and privately for lies about his service (or lack thereof) with Central Whidbey Fire and Rescue.

Conard, who is helping raise her granddaughter, a freshman at Coupeville High School, is ahead 2,427 to 777.

White has won 69.91% of counted votes, with Conard sitting at 75.75%.

That’s a slight bump upwards from day one, when the duo stood at 69.44% and 75.51%, respectively.

There have been 20,887 ballots counted through Wednesday night, and the next update will be released Thursday, Nov. 4 at 6 PM.

 

For updated totals, pop over to:

Click to access Current_Results.pdf

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A clean sweep, so far.

For the first time in its nearly 10-year history, Coupeville Sports issued political candidate endorsements, and all three of my selections are rolling to victory.

If things hold, Nancy Conard, Morgan White, and incumbent Sherry Phay will join Glenda Merwine and Christine Sears on the Coupeville School Board.

Phay was running unopposed for a second term, and has received 1,874 votes through the first release of vote totals Tuesday night by the Island County Auditor’s office.

The other two races feature Coupeville grads with distinguished resumes being embraced by local voters.

White, a mother of two and business owner who has been highly-active in Coupeville schools, leads Ward Sparacio 1,895-834.

Meanwhile, Conard, former long-time town mayor and Coupeville Schools business manager, is paddling internet troll Paul Rempa 2,100-681.

Conard has garnered 75.51% of votes tallied, while White has claimed 69.44%.

With the first release of numbers, 17,617 ballots have been counted, with an estimated 1,800 left to count.

The next update will be released Wednesday, Nov. 3 at 5 PM.

 

To see current results in all Island County races, pop over to:

Click to access Current_Results.pdf

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Morgan White

Nancy Conard

I am not impartial, and I’m not going to pretend to be.

My original plan was to follow the historical path of the newspapers and do interviews with the candidates for the Coupeville School Board, letting them present their ideas and beliefs in (hopefully) straight-forward news stories.

But the more I thought about it, the more I reflected on it, I realized that path wasn’t the path for me.

I am not impartial, and I’m not going to pretend to be.

Of the five candidates for three open positions, one, Sherry Phay, is assured reelection, as she’s running unopposed.

I strongly support and endorse her, not that she needs either my support or endorsement.

Phay has been a strong, vocal addition to the board, someone willing to speak out, step up, and stand tall in the service of making sure Coupeville schoolchildren get the best education possible.

Her continued board membership is a true win for our community, and she, Glenda Merwine and Christine Sears form a solid core as directors.

Venessa Matros and Kathleen Anderson, who are both wrapping up their runs on the board, deserve praise for all they have accomplished, as well.

Both were involved for the right reasons, were deeply-committed, and put community above self in their actions.

Those are traits which have served previous board members of note, from Don Sherman to Brent Stevens and on.

This year’s two contested races, which will be decided in November’s general election — there’s no primary needed in Island County this year — feature two Coupeville grads who would be outstanding additions to the board.

Nancy Conard and Morgan White are immensely-qualified, and would bring passion, persistence, and pride to their positions.

Their opponents, Paul Rempa and Ward Sparacio, respectively, are running, seemingly, for one reason — Island County conservatives are putting a concentrated effort into getting bodies on all three Whidbey school boards.

I’m not going to badmouth the duo in this article, other than to say that in attending a lot of events in Coupeville, I have yet to see either man in person.

Perhaps I need new glasses, perhaps not.

Conard and White, on the other hand, are a frequent presence.

The former, who was the business manager at Coupeville High School for decades, as well as mayor of her hometown, is helping raise her granddaughter, who will be a freshman at CHS this fall.

The latter, an Air Force veteran, has two children who are blazing a path through our schools even as we speak.

Conard and White are at games, they are at school events, they are actively, intimately involved in volunteering.

They are committed, and were so long before the day they filed to run.

Conard followed her Navy father to Coupeville in the early ’50s — she was pushing two-years-old and didn’t have much of a choice — and has remained here for much of her life.

Four years on the town council. Two decades as our mayor — and one of the calmest to ever hold the position.

Whether she agreed with you or not, she always gave everyone a chance to speak their piece at meetings, even when it was the town ass-hat, a low-rent lawyer with a punchable face.

Returning to Coupeville High School after college, Conard worked as a secretary, then assistant to the superintendent at her alma mater.

Promoted to district business manager in 1977, she put in 27 years in charge of accounting, financial reporting, and contract-negotiating.

Her books were impeccable, and Conard became president of the Washington State Association of School Business Officials, the first small-district rep to break through a big-city stranglehold on the job.

I’ve known her for years, dating back through the Videoville and Miriam’s Espresso days, and have always found Nancy to be a straight-shooter.

She’s not afraid of conflict, will hold her ground when she has valid reason to do so, but always, always, operates with a deep love for her town and the people she shares it with.

I am not impartial, and I’m not going to pretend to be. I strongly endorse Conard.

The former Morgan Cannon graduated from CHS 28 years after Conard (1998 vs. 1970), and went on to marry Greg White, son of highly-respected Coupeville principal Rock White.

Her ties to her town and its education system are many, and the roots run deep.

Like Conard before her, White didn’t wait for a school board race to contribute, as she is one of those Wolf moms who is everywhere at once.

In the classroom and out of it, be it the PTA, sports, field trips, or drama club, the small business owner finds time to put in the work and we have a better school system, and community, for it.

Personally, I benefit from her camera work, as White has been gracious enough to allow me to use many of her photos from CMS and CHS sports events.

She’s super-involved and has a deep understanding of what needs to be done to help Coupeville’s schoolchildren reach their full potential.

I am not impartial, and I’m not going to pretend to be. I strongly endorse White.

But it goes beyond endorsing this trio of brilliant women, who will help our school board remain the best of the three on Whidbey.

I am deeply cynical about politicians — a byproduct, possibly, of growing up with a conspiracy-loving father, and a jackass of a grandfather who hated ’em all, Republicans or Democrats, crusty conservatives or bleeding-heart hand-wringers, preaching often about the evils of The Man.

Driving my sister, a political junkie, a bit bonkers, I have refused to vote my entire life.

Well, other than a classroom race for 3rd grade president, where I peeked when we were supposed to be voting with our heads down, then promptly voted AGAINST myself so I would lose by one vote…

But this time around, after a half-century of telling The Man to stuff it, I have actually — the pain, the pain — registered to vote in a real election.

My first votes as an adult will be cast for Sherry Phay, Nancy Conard, and Morgan White to be Coupeville School Board members.

It doesn’t have to be a negative vote — no matter what I may personally think of one incredibly morally-deficient, honor thief, internet troll of a candidate.

I registered to vote, and will do so, for positive reasons, instead.

I believe in these three women, and I think their election would be a huge positive for the school and town that I have chosen to write about.

I am not impartial, and I’m not going to pretend to be.

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Central Whidbey Soccer Club participants learn the game early.

Central Whidbey Soccer Club participants learn the game early.

Word has come down from the top.

Coupeville Mayor Nancy Conard has issued a response to those who contacted her after a furor broke out over the non-profit Central Whidbey Soccer Club being ordered to remove its banner sign from the fence next to the overpass at Highway 20.

Her email in full:

Thank you for contacting us with your concern.

Yesterday there was communication between our new Town Planner and representatives of the Central Whidbey Soccer Organization.

As the communication continued, Tammy and I talked and realized there was some misunderstanding and miscommunication.

Tammy forwarded a clarification and apology to the two people with whom she was communicating. It appears her original communications were shared with others, but not the subsequent clarification and apology.

A copy of her email follows:

“After discussing this matter more at length with the Mayor I have come to realize that we have had a communication issue on this. At issue is not that the sign itself is wrong or illegal, it is that it is located on Town property.

The informal practice on signs on the Town/DOT fence has been to allow local non-profits to put up signs for events/activities for up to a week.

It has been observed that this sign has been up for a couple of weeks and we believe that it is time for it to come down.

As I have already discussed with Robert Wood, we are asking that it be taken down by Monday at the latest.

I apologize for the miscommunication. I am new to the community and I am still trying to learn all the rules and policies that govern the Town. I ask that you be patient and bear with me.”

For the last 20 years that I have been mayor, we have had an informal policy of allowing signs to be placed on the fence, and have requested they be limited to about a week.

The time limit is necessary to allow the many organizations who would like this opportunity a chance to put up a sign, and to ensure that the information posted is “fresh.”

Although we informally allow the signs, they are not to be wrapped around the fence and parallel to Hwy 20. DOT will remove signs in that location.

If this explanation does not adequately address your concerns, please let me know. Feel free to share this email with others who may have received some of the communications, but not all.

Thank you.

In a follow-up email, Conard was asked if the CWSC would be allowed to hang their banner in the future, under the one-week time limit. Her response was short and to the point.

“You bet!”

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