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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
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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. |
District
offers schools chief two-year contract The
Sisters School Board has offered Lynn Baker of Cashmere, Washington, a two-year
contract as Sisters Superintendent of Schools.
Baker has been serving as
interim superintendent since contract negotiations with candidate Charles
Hellman fell apart last spring. The board sought to fill the position
before too much time had elapsed and an extensive search had to be conducted.
According to Glen Lasken,
school board chairman, there is a pool of potential interim candidates
that the Oregon School Board Association has "in their vest pocket" at
any given time. This is how the board found Baker.
"We didn't do on-site visits
and for that reason we did the interim contract," said Lasken. "The budget
isn't really put together until next spring which also underscores why
we're doing a two-year contract. We haven't really had a chance to see
him in action with budget matters."
The negotiations are being
handled informally. There is no written contract yet. A tentative salary
of $91,800 has been informally offered.
"Dr. Baker had some requests
which we have evaluated and sent back to him. The ball is pretty much
in his court right now," said Lasken. "I'm very confident that we'll reach
a term of agreement with him in the next couple of weeks."
Baker has 30 years of experience
as a teacher and administrator in the state of Washington. He has a doctorate
in education administration.
The biggest challenge facing
the superintendent will be to manage the finances of the district given
the uncertainty the Oregon system imposes.
Lasken says, for example,
that the district doesn't know how much the voters are going to give them
to work with.
A referendum on a temporary
tax increase that would sustain school funding is expected to make the
ballot in February.
If the tax proposal is rejected,
schools may have to make do with less funding.
Also, Baker is not familiar
with the Oregon finance system, Lasken noted.
"He'll have to learn it,"
said Lasken.
The next challenge is how
to improve on a district that's already in good shape.
"It's not as though he's coming
onto the Titanic after it has hit the iceberg," Lasken said. "How do you
step into something like that and shine?"
The school board chairman
concluded, "Dr. Baker is wise and conservative in his approach. I'm optimistic
that he'll work out.
"I feel he's someone I can
trust." |
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