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Coupeville High School Vice Principal Leonard Edlund will not return during the 2023-2024 school year.

Meanwhile, Dean of Students Tom Black, originally a budget cut, has been returned to full-time status after starting the year as a part-timer.

Those changes were announced in an email Friday by Coupeville Superintendent Steve King.

The pertinent details:

Recently, we learned that Mr. Edlund, our MSHS Assistant Principal, will not be able to return to work during the 23-24 school year. 

Given this, we are adjusting our plans for staffing and administration support for the secondary campus for the remainder of the school year.

At the beginning of the school year, we made the following changes to help absorb the loss of Mr. Edlund:

1. We brought Mr. Black back to work on a part-time basis as a temporary Dean of Students.

2. To continue providing leadership for our Career and Technical Education Program (CTE), we brought on Susan Haldezos-Galligan, formerly Johnson, to be our CTE Director.

3. We restored days to Allyson Cundiff’s contract that had been cut over the summer so she could assist Mr. (Geoff) Kappes with staff evaluations.

With the updated information regarding Mr. Edlund, we are making changes to the plan for the remainder of the school year.

First of all, we will continue to support the changes made above.

Last week, when we learned that Mr. Edlund would not be returning, we restored Mr. Black to full-time.

We are also exploring the possibility of hiring an interim assistant principal for the remainder of the school year, with Feb. 1 as a potential target start date.

This plan is still being developed, and all options are being considered as we find a viable option to support students and staff while considering the financial implications.

Unfortunately, this evolving situation has affected the secondary campus while increasing district expenses.

I want to thank everyone for their continued work absorbing the significant workload in Mr. Edlund’s absence.

We will inform you once we have finalized our plans for the remainder of the school year.

Meanwhile, we’re all keeping Mr. Edlund in our thoughts and wishing him a full recovery.

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Coupeville Middle/High School Vice Principal Leonard Edlund, seen here in 2022, is a popular, hardworking administrator. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville Middle/High School will be without an assistant principal for several months as Leonard Edlund takes a medical leave.

Edlund has been employed by the Coupeville School District since 2021.

Before that he was a principal in Arizona and an assistant principal in Tacoma.

In his absence, school administrators will shuffle duties and welcome back 19-year vet Tom Black, whose Dean of Students position was cut when the 2023-2024 budget was approved.

Coupeville Schools Superintendent Steve King released the following statement Friday afternoon:

 

Late last week we learned that our MSHS Assistant Principal will be out on medical leave and will not be returning until at least January of 2024. 

While I received permission from Mr. Edlund to share that he is on medical leave I ask that we respect his privacy during this time.

Please join me in hoping that he makes a healthy return to work.

Since we learned this unexpected news late last week, we have been working on how to continue the duties typically assigned to our Assistant Principal.

I want to thank union leadership and our administrators for their quick assistance.

Here is an outline of our plans:

To address daily supervision and assist with discipline issues, Mr. (Tom) Black will be returning on a part time basis as our temporary Dean of Students.

We are thankful that Mr. Black is able to return and believe that this will be well received by our school community.

In order to have our Career and Technical Education (CTE) program continue to have leadership, our former Coupeville teacher, Susan Haldezos-Galligan, formerly Johnson, will become our Interim CTE Director for the duration of the 2023-2024 school year. 

We are thankful for her willingness to help us in this area and we are fortunate to have someone of her caliber to lead our program.

Mr. (Geoff) Kappes will need additional support with teacher evaluations so we are restoring Allyson Cundiff’s contract days that were reduced since last year so she can do the evaluations of some of our secondary teachers. 

Mr. Kappes and Mrs. Cundiff will be announcing teacher evaluator assignments in the days ahead. 

We are thankful that Allyson is willing to take on this additional work.

If we have any changes to these plans, we will let you know.

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Coupeville paraeducators, including some seen here, will be affected by budget cuts. (Photo courtesy Shelly LaRue)

Some see numbers on a spreadsheet, others see faces.

Except some of those faces won’t be around this fall, as passage of the 2023-2024 Coupeville school budget carries with it the loss of multiple employees.

When the School Board voted 4-1 Thursday to accept a budget presented by Superintendent Steve King and Finance Director Brian Gianello, it also confirmed more than a million dollars in cuts.

Dean of Students Tom Black is not coming back, despite a vocal grassroots movement in which person after person testified to his impact on their lives.

Jessica Caselden remains a teacher, but her other position, as Athletic Trainer, will no longer be funded, despite a letter campaign led by Coupeville High School softball players.

Two paraeducators formerly paid with Covid-era ESSER funds have not been retained, while another was eliminated by attrition.

The district originally posted a job opening to replace a fourth paraeducator who left the district, but are no longer planning to fill that position, King confirmed at a previous budget workshop.

All remaining paraeducators are losing a half hour from their day.

This comes as district officials have said the plan is to keep Coupeville’s special needs students with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) in-house, instead of giving state money to other school districts in trade for adding those students to their own programs.

For a full list of cuts, pop over to:

https://www.coupeville.k12.wa.us/Page/300

That list, last updated June 21, does not reflect one recent change — reducing the number of teachers being cut.

Earlier in the evening Thursday, the school board approved the hires of Annie Deposit (K-5), Brett Casey (3rd grade), and Jessica Graham (Elementary School) as part of the consent agenda.

The trio, who come in with lower pay rates than their predecessors, replace teachers who, respectively, resigned, continued a leave, and retired, and are necessary to meet K-3 class size targets.

The cuts, which came at the sole discretion of the superintendent, were made in response to the school board approving a Modified Education Plan in April.

This was after the general fund balance dipped well below the target — 6% of the budget year’s expenditures — and the board instructed King to cut up to $1.45 million.

In his remarks Thursday, the superintendent hit on familiar themes — that, in his opinion, the pandemic, the McCleary ruling, unreliable support from the legislature, and rising costs — are impacting all school districts, and not just Coupeville.

While acknowledging the personal loss entailed in cutting jobs, he stands behind his decisions.

“I applaud everyone’s passion,” King said. “What I am proud of is that we have been able to protect student programs, that we are not discussing the loss of those.”

That was a statement echoed by Gianello, who has only been on the job a short time after replacing the retired Denise Peet.

“There are challenges, but also celebrations. Not cutting programs is one of those, I believe,” Gianello said.

“Is this a perfect plan? Probably not, but I think it’s a good framework with some flexibility in it.”

The budget shows projected revenues of $18,443,000 for 2023-2024, with expenses of $18,438,027, giving Coupeville an excess of revenues of $4,973.

The “flexibility” of the budget garnered much discussion at two lightly attended budget workshops, but in front of a half-full room Thursday, board members largely passed on a chance to rehash their questions.

Several crowd members made public comments, primarily in support of paraeducators.

“Adopting a budget that is intent on decimating paraeducators is not in the best interest of our district, and, most importantly, our students,” said Coupeville Education Support Association President Shelly LaRue.

“Paraeducators are valuable and irreplaceable,” added Coupeville Middle School teacher Katja Willeford.

In the end, board members, eyeing an Aug. 1 Washington state deadline for school budgets, opted to accept the proposed budget.

Christie Sears, Alison Perera, Morgan White, and Nancy Conard voted yes, while Sherry Phay voted no.

“I will not vote for a budget which puts priority on a food program over support staff,” Phay said.

White, who graduated from CHS, is now raising her own children in Cow Town — Cole and Riley — with husband Greg, another Wolf alumni.

In trying to find a middle ground, her voice was overcome with emotion as she put words to the thoughts of many, while never claiming to speak for anyone but herself.

“The conversation doesn’t end here,” White said. “This is the beginning, and it is really good to be having these very hard conversations.

“Kindness has been on my mind a lot lately,” she added.

“I really believe everyone in this room is trying to do the right thing.

“We may disagree on some things, but I hope we can continue to work with kindness, and show love and care for each other, and for the kids we are working for.”

In the end, though, CMS teacher Wilbur Purdue, a 21-year teaching vet and true son of the prairie, probably summed it up best in his comments to the board.

“It’s shaping up to be a challenging year.”

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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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Love the sound of budget numbers being crunched during the drowsy summer months?

I personally don’t, but you do you, and more power to you.

But seriously, the next two meetings of the Coupeville School Board are very important.

At a time when Superintendent Steve King has a mandate to cut up to 1.45 million, and sole discretion as to how to make those cuts, people are justifiably on edge.

The school board issued that mandate after the district’s general fund crashed well below where the board has stipulated it wants it to be.

King has issued three updates on budget cuts — they’re not proposals, they’re already approved — though has altered things slightly.

The most public reversal was changing plans to remove Willie Smith as Athletic Director and hand his duties to Vice Principal Leonard Edlund.

A timeline of those cuts — with Smith’s job change now scrubbed from the original May 1 cut list, giving it the appearance of never having been discussed — can be found here:

https://www.coupeville.k12.wa.us/Page/300

Despite sustained public outcry, the current list of cuts still includes the positions of Dean of Students (19-year vet Tom Black) and Athletic Trainer (Wolf alumni and recent bride Jessica Caselden), as well as reductions in paraeducators.

The proposed 2023-2024 budget was posted on the district website last week, and can be found here:

Click to access DRAFT_2023-2024_F195_Summary_Pages_Fund_Summary_Budget_Summary_GF1-GF15_ASB1_DS1-DS2_CP1-CP3_TVF1.pdf

The school board has two meetings scheduled in the next two weeks, and the budget will be the primary topic of discussion.

Those meetings, which go down at 5:30 PM in the Anderson Board Room (Annex Room #305 at the high school) will not be the same, however.

The July 20 meeting is a board workshop, with the budget, and only the budget, on the agenda.

This is a public meeting, not executive session, and is open to all who wish to attend in person.

It will not be streamed online, however, as district officials choose not to stream workshops.

There is also no public comment taken at that meeting.

The July 27 meeting is the normal monthly meeting, with all the bells and whistles — streaming, live mics for board members, public comment time, and additional items on the agenda.

Willie Smith might even try and slip a middle school coaching hire past me during the dog days, putting it on the consent agenda just to see if I’m awake.

Never know. Have to be ever vigilant.

In more serious matters, the July 27 meeting is the primary budget hearing, and would be the first time the board could take a public vote on the 2023-2024 budget.

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