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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
District
hires new school chief The Sisters
School Board has reason to believe that the third time is a charm. On its
third attempt, the board hired a superintendent for the coming year.
The man selected as interim
superintendent on a one-year contract last week is Lynn Baker, who has
been the superintendent of Cashmere School District in Washington state
for the past four years.
About 10 miles west of Wenatchee
in the heart of a fruit-growing valley, the Cashmere district is similar
in size and character to Sisters. It has 1,400 students who attend three
schools -- an elementary, a middle and a high school. The community has
many recreational attractions and sees "a lot of tourists coming over
from Seattle and Tacoma every weekend," Baker says.
Twice before, the Sisters
board agreed on a choice for someone to succeed Superintendent Steve Swisher,
who has retired and is leaving at the end of this school year. One nominee,
Doug Jantzi of Central Point, withdrew at the last minute while the second,
Charles Hellman of Rogue River, could not agree to the board's contract
terms after accepting the appointment.
Given the shortage of time,
the board then launched a search for an interim superintendent who would
work for just one year. For that purpose the board used a list of candidates
for interim jobs maintained by the Oregon School Boards Association, a
list primarily composed of retired administrators looking for temporary
assignments.
Baker was a late addition
to the list. He signed up when he heard about the Sisters opening from
Joe Crowder, superintendent of the Jackson Education Service District
in Medford, whom Baker succeeded in Cashmere. Baker had been looking for
an Oregon job because after a person has worked in Washington schools
for 30 years, he explained in an interview with The Nugget, "the retirement
system becomes regressive. You lose about two percent a year (and) if
you do not get at least a 2 percent raise a year you are actually losing
on retirement."
The board interviewed three
retired Oregon school administrators in addition to Baker. Ironically,
Baker made a strong impression on the board partly because he made it
clear that he would like to have the job on a regular basis, staying for
several years. "One year would not be enough to make a positive difference,"
he told The Nugget. He said he expects to be a candidate for the permanent
position.
With caution born of painful
experience, the board did not announce its choice until Baker had agreed
to the terms of a contract and had officially signed on.
After everything was completed,
Board Chairman Jeff Smith said, "I'm extraordinarily pleased to have Lynn
Baker as our interim superintendent. He has a wealth of experience in
a variety of districts. He came to us highly recommended by his current
board chair and Doug Nelson, the superintendent in Bend" (see below).
Smith confirmed that the new
man is interested in staying longer than a year: "Clearly one of the advantages
of his availability is the possibility that he could be our long-term
superintendent." Nothing is certain in that regard, however. "There is
uncertainty about how we'll approach that issue and it is partially dependent
upon the relationship we develop with Lynn Baker over the next five or
six months," Smith explained.
Baker is a Washington native,
born in Aberdeen, where he also got his first teaching job, as a junior
high math and language arts teacher in 1971. The next year he moved to
an assignment more suited to his training, as a high school social studies
teacher in the same district.
Baker received a bachelor's
degree in history, with a minor in geography, from Central Washington
University in Ellensburg in 1971. He received a master's degree in education
from the University of Washington in 1980 and a doctorate in education
from Washington State University in 1997.
He held teaching and assistant
principal's jobs until 1989, when he was named principal of Pullman High
School in eastern Washington. He was actually picked for that job by Doug
Nelson, whose name is familiar to Central Oregonians who follow education
news.
Nelson, who became superintendent
in Pullman just two months before Baker became principal of the district's
only high school, was chosen superintendent of the Bend-La Pine School
District three years ago. Baker finds the connection a coincidence but
says Nelson had nothing to do with his decision to seek the Sisters job.
Baker was clearly aiming for
a superintendency when he embarked on his studies for a doctorate at WSU.
When he won his first chief executive's job, he had just been elected
president-elect of the Washington Association of Secondary School Principals.
He never took office, though, because he became a superintendent at the
end of the year and in Washington superintendents have their own, separate
statewide professional organization.
Although the men were not
acquainted before now, there are at least rough similarities between Baker's
career and that of the man he will be replacing. Steve Swisher grew up
in Klamath Falls and earned his bachelor's degree in math from what was
then Southern Oregon State College in Ashland, in 1972. Later he obtained
a master of arts in teaching from Lewis and Clark College in Portland.
Swisher started teaching in
1972, just a year later than Baker. He was hired as a math teacher and
head wrestling coach at Aloha High School in Beaverton.
Eventually he moved through
several secondary school administrative jobs until 1990, when he won his
first superintendency, at South Lane School District in Cottage Grove.
He left that post in 1994 and worked two years as director of apprenticeship
for the Oregon Bureau of Labor before moving back into education in 1996
as the superintendent in Sisters.
Both Swisher and Baker are
53. Baker said he and his wife, Janet, will look for a place to rent in
Sisters. They have two daughters and a son, the youngest of whom is graduating
from high school. |
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