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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
School
board wraps up candidate interviews The Sisters School
Board has completed interviews of all five candidates who remain under consideration
for the job as Sisters School Superintendent.
Two of the seven semifinalists
selected by the board earlier this month have dropped out.
Judy Delahunt, a former personnel
director for Redmond schools and a current member of the Redmond School
Board, withdrew after being named interim superintendent of the Redmond
school system for 2003-04. She will temporarily replace Superintendent
Jerry Colonna, who last week was chosen as the next superintendent of
Beaverton schools, the state's third largest school district.
Despite successfully conducting
his candidacy for the Beaverton post, Colonna has continued to serve as
the chief consultant for the Sisters search on behalf of the Oregon School
Boards Association.
The second Sisters semifinalist
to drop out last week was Merrill (Jack) Adams, superintendent of schools
in Colville, Washington. Adams withdrew partly because of scheduling problems
and because he is also an applicant for other superintendencies in Oregon
and California.
On Friday and Saturday, March
14-15, the Sisters board interviewed the remaining five candidates for
the local post: Yvonne Curtis, principal of Terrebonne Elementary School
in Redmond School District; Tim Comfort, principal of Sisters Elementary
School; Wayne Kostur, superintendent of Rainier School District in northwest
Oregon; Doug Jantzi, director of secondary education and director of curriculum
and assessment for Central Point School District in southern Oregon; and
Charles Hellman, superintendent of Rogue River School District in southern
Oregon.
The 10 non-board members of
the search committee sat in on the interviews, which were conducted in
the Sisters High School building. They did not ask questions of the candidates
but they shared their impressions and evaluations with board members after
the interviews.
At the end of this exercise,
board members decided to check references and conduct background checks
of the candidates, largely by telephone, during most of this week and
to discuss their conclusions at a meeting Friday afternoon, March 21.
At that meeting the board
is expected to select two or three finalists and schedule a round of public
sessions for them in Sisters later this month. In the meantime, board
members will probably visit the home districts of the finalists to inquire
about their standing and reputation.
This search was triggered
by current Sisters Superintendent Steve Swisher's announcement that he
would retire in April. He was a candidate for executive director of the
Confederation of Oregon School Administrators, but was beaten out in that
competition by Kent Hunsaker, superintendent of Bethel schools in the
western suburbs of Eugene.
Swisher has promised to keep
working after his retirement until the end of the school year to help
his successor during the transition.
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