![]()
|
|||||||||
|
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. |
Lasken
named board chair Sisters
attorney Glen Lasken was elected chairman of the Sisters School Board at
the board's annual organizational session last week. Senior board member
Bill Reed was chosen vice chairman.
The board also briefly discussed
two pending issues: a proposed daycare operation at the new middle school
(the existing high school) to serve teachers and other school staff members
and a dilemma caused by the installation of wrong-sized windows in the
media center of the new high school.
Lasken has two children enrolled
in the local school system. One will be entering sixth grade and the other
fifth grade this fall. The new chairman was first appointed to the board
in 1999 to fill the unexpired term of retired educator Guy Gleason, who
moved out of the district. He was elected to a full four-year term in
June 2001.
Lasken succeeds Jeff Smith,
a California university professor who commutes to his job from Sisters.
Smith served as chairman for the past year, helping to steer the board
through two major undertakings, both of which remain unfinished.
One was the construction of
a new high school. That $21-million project is nearly complete and is
scheduled to be ready for the start of classes September 15, but several
niggling problems -- such as the media center windows -- remain.
The board is awaiting more
information on options before deciding what to do about the windows, which
are shorter than those called for in the plans.
The second large task involved
the search for a new superintendent to succeed Steve Swisher, who retired
and completed his duties June 30. The search is officially over, but perhaps
only temporarily. Lynn Baker, former superintendent of Cashmere schools
in Washington state, has taken the Sisters post on an interim basis for
2003-04.
Baker has expressed strong
interest in keeping the job on a regular basis, with indefinite tenure.
Eventually the board must decide whether to sign him up on that basis
or open another search for a "permanent" superintendent.
At the board's July 2 meeting,
several teachers who have formed a Daycare Committee presented a formal
request to place a childcare facility in a room in what will be the new
middle school.
"There is a great need in
the community for more daycare options, particularly for children under
the age of three," they said in a letter. "Currently, choices for infants
and toddlers are scarce."
Board members expressed support
for the idea but also voiced some concerns. While a more elaborate proposal
was in their hands at last week's meeting, the board decided to put the
question off until later in the month.
Daycare advocates are asking
for no direct financial support; the center would be self-supporting through
fees paid by parents. But several board members indicated that they would
prefer to have the center's employees be privately employed by an independent
contractor rather than be listed as district employees.
As is the board's custom,
the July organizational meeting was held at one of the member's homes
rather than in the lecture/drama room of the high school, the usual site
for regular board meetings. Last week's session on a warm summer evening
took place around a patio table at Bill Reed's house on the Old McKenzie
Highway. |
|
|||||||