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2002 Display
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Steve
Swisher takes new job in Brookings Sisters School
Superintendent Steve Swisher will trade the high desert for the beach next
school year. He will become interim superintendent of the Brookings-Harbor
School district on the southern Oregon coast. Brookings and Harbor are neighboring
small towns at the mouth of the Chetco River, not far from the California
border.
"I got the call about a week
ago," Swisher explained last week. The call was from the Oregon School
Boards Association, which was helping Brookings find a new chief executive.
The current superintendent, Paul Prevenas, announced recently that he
was leaving at the end of the school year to take a job as headmaster
of a private school in Hawaii.
Swisher drove from Salem,
where he had been attending a meeting, to Brookings for an interview with
school board members and other district officials. He was the last of
four candidates to be interviewed. But before he was a mile out of town
on his way home, he got a call on his cell phone telling him the board
wanted him to fill the one-year position.
Swisher, 53, came to Sisters
in 1996. He officially retired in January but agreed to continue working
on contract until the end of the school year to help with the transition.
The Sisters board last month
chose Charles Hellman, 59-year-old superintendent of Rogue River schools
near Medford, to succeed Swisher on July 1.
The Sisters school boss originally
hoped to become executive director of the Confederation of Oregon School
Administrators, but was beaten out in tough competition for that post
by an old acquaintance, Bethel School Superintendent Kent Hunsaker.
Swisher said he would not
be a candidate for the permanent job in Brookings.
He and his wife will "get
an apartment or a small house or something like that" in Brookings but
will retain their home in the Tollgate subdivision near Sisters.
One advantage of the new job
for Swisher is that Brookings is in Curry County, which has a population
of only 22,000.
Public Employee Retirement
System rules forbid retirees from working more than about half-time for
any PERS employer unless the job is in a county with a population under
35,000.
Brookings-Harbor School District
operates three schools -- elementary, middle and high school -- the same
as Sisters. But its enrollment is more than half again as large, 1,900
students compared with about 1,200 in Sisters.
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