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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. |
Keyser
lands Washington principal's position Sisters High
School Principal Boyd Keyser is moving out of Oregon, not just out of Sisters.
In a front-page column in
last month's school newsletter, Keyser announced that he would resign
his post at the end of this school year. A few days later, he announced
that he had accepted a job in Washington state -- principal of Cle Elum-Roslyn
High School. Cle Elum is in the Interstate 90 corridor about 80 miles
east of Seattle.
At its regular meeting last
Monday night, the Sisters School Board accepted Keyser's resignation without
comment.
In doing so, it acknowledged
a March 13 letter of resignation that Keyser addressed to Superintendent
Steve Swisher. The two-page letter extensively reviewed accomplishments
at the high school during the four years Keyser has been principal.
The letter explained some
of his reasons for seeking a new post, along lines outlined in his newsletter
column (The Nugget, March 26).
But it also made specific
reference to Swisher's own retirement. The superintendent formally retired
in January and is working on contract until the end of the school year
to help with the transition as the board searches for a replacement.
Keyser wrote:
"Your own (Swisher's) retirement
means that my chief mentor and the main reason for coming here are disappearing.
The change in leadership at the district level coincides with a shift
in direction from the school board as they take a more active approach
in directing school affairs. The departure of both of us will give the
board more latitude in creating a leadership team that is fully aligned
with their ideas."
Asked about the implications
of that paragraph, Keyser said he didn't mean anything special, just that
whenever top administrators leave a school district it creates opportunities
for a board to move in new directions.
The letter also said, "I am
at a point in my career where I am looking to move to a principalship
at a larger school or perhaps an assistant superintendency."
Keyser was known to be a candidate
for several administrative positions in Oregon. But he also said last
month that he was looking out of state, partly because of all of the budget
cutting and the dismal outlook for school finance in Oregon.
While the position he wound
up with is in another state, it is on the same step on the administrative
ladder as his current job and in a district somewhat smaller than Sisters.
Cle Elum-Roslyn School District has 925 students compared with about 1,125
in Sisters. The high school Keyser will lead has 300 students compared
with about 435 in Sisters.
Cle Elum and Roslyn are separate
communities with the schools they share sited between.
The area is about to receive
an economic boost from a 7,000-acre residential resort that will be built
nearby, which Keyser likens to Sunriver.
Keyser describes the area
as "very similar (to Sisters). It's on the east side of the Cascade mountains
on a major pass that goes between Seattle and Ellensburg." Ellensburg
is the home of Central Washington University.
The 44-year-old educator said
he had personal as well as professional reasons for being attracted to
the area. His parents live in nearby Ephrata and his two sisters and a
son live in Seattle.
Keyser will work through the
end of the school year in Sisters.
His resignation is effective
August 15, when his current contract expires.
The departures of Sisters'
top two school administrators comes at a time when the district is scurrying
to get ready to open a new high school building in September and to simultaneously
move its middle school into the somewhat remodeled former high school.
The district hopes to have
a new superintendent on board by the beginning of the next fiscal year,
July 1.
Swisher has already announced
that when Keyser leaves, the high school principalship will be filled
on an interim basis by Assistant Principal Bob Macauley.
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