[Vision2020] Re: [MCAMembers] School Board election today

Donovan Arnold donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com
Tue May 16 13:40:51 PDT 2006


"Dibble said she is in favor of whatever 67 percent of the people of Moscow   want."--DN
  
  I really hope that this statement was NOT what she really said. How could anyone be so shallow and admit it???
  
  Another reason not to vote.
  
  _DJA
  
Bruce and Jean Livingston <jeanlivingston at turbonet.com> wrote:              MCA members:
   
  There  is a school Board election today for Zones 2 and Zone 5.  Please  remember to vote today at the school board district offices, 650 N.  Cleveland St. at corner of F Street.  
   
      Here  is the story covering the MCA's forum with the four candidates,  followed by profiles of the Zone 2 and Zone 5 candidates, all  articles from the Moscow-Pullman Daily News.  
   
  From one of the stories, the following helpful information   appears: "For more information on the race   or the precise location of the zones, contact the district office at (208)   882-1120."   
   
  Bruce Livingston
   
  Moscow School Board   candidates speak on hot issues 

Questions and answers reflect   priorities

By Kate Baldwin Daily   News staff writer 
Published: 05-11-2006   

Moscow  parent J.D. Wulfhorst thinks the strong interest in this year’s  school board elections is evidence of a changing time for the district.    
“The level of interest to get involved is an  excellent indicator and a hopeful sign for the community’s future,”  he said. 
  
Wulfhorst was one of about 20  residents to attend the Moscow Civic Association’s candidate forum  Wednesday — and he can’t even vote in the Tuesday election. 
  
He  lives in a zone other than 2 or 5, which has seats up for election. But  that doesn’t stop him from still knowing who he’d like to see win  seats on the board, he said. 
  
Moderator Kenton  Bird gave the four candidates a chance to offer opening statements  before he broke into the question and answer phase with tough questions  like: how many school board meetings have you been to? 
  
Zone  5 incumbent Margaret Dibble swept that answer as she had not missed a  meeting during her three-year term and she also attended a majority of  the facilities meetings. 
  
Zone 2 candidate Mark  Hubbard joked that the closest he had come was chaperoning his  children’s junior high dances. But both he and his Zone 2 opponent,  Jennifer Watts, had been somewhat involved through Parent Action Team  meetings and some facilities meetings. Zone 5 challenger Larry Woodbury  said he had not been to school board meetings but had been a part of  his children’s activities. 
  
Bird covered more  robust topics, including the State Board of Education’s proposed high  school curriculum redesign that would require more math and science for  students. 
  
He asked the candidates for their thoughts on how they would address this   massive change.   
  
“If  the state board and the Legislature passes this, we have to expand our  capacity to teach science and math. We’ll have to follow it to meet  the law,” Watts said, acknowledging the inability of a school board  to ignore a state mandate. 
  
The others agreed,  all saying they hoped for sufficient funding and incentives to meet the  need for more teachers and better science labs if the redesign becomes  law. 
  
“In the business world we talk about leveraging key people,” Hubbard said.   
  
He said he’d get creative and try ideas like slightly bigger class sizes with   more aides to help.   
  
Bird also led a question and answer series on facilities.   
  
“This is the $64,000 question,” he said. “Are you in favor of a new high   school, and, if so, where?”   
  
Woodbury was in favor of a new school.   
  
“At  first blush I think a new high school would make more sense than trying  to remodel one,” he said, though his final decision would depend on  what the finances and budget allow. 
  
Watts and Hubbard also favored a new high school.   
  
“I went to this high school,” Watts said. “I think I thought back then that   we should have had a new high school.”   
  
She  favored something that would have appropriate science labs and other  school facilities to help attract strong teachers to the district. 
  
Hubbard wanted a location that would provide easy access.   
  
Dibble said she is in favor of whatever 67 percent of the people of Moscow   want.   
  
Bird asked what approach the candidates would take to improving facilities.   
  
“We  got the answer to that loud and clear a couple years ago,” Dibble  said. “We had a comprehensive (plan) but it went down in flames.” 

   
  Zone 5 candidates share   commitment to education 

Margaret Dibble, Larry Woodbury want   to put their ideas to work for students

By Kate Baldwin Daily News staff writer 
Published: 05-09-2006   

Voters will choose May 16 between   two Moscow School Board candidates to fill a three-year term representing Zone   5.     
The  zone covers a large territory of the district that forms a dog-leg to  the right: by starting in the southwest corner of the district,  extending north in a narrow strip along the border with Washington, and  then stretching east across the northern portion of the district to  include Moscow Mountain. 
  
The election will be  from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Moscow School District office,  located at F and Cleveland streets. 
  
The Moscow Civic Association is sponsoring a public forum with the candidates   at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the 1912 Center.   
  
  
  
Margaret Dibble   
  
Incumbent  candidate Margaret Dibble wants the opportunity to put what she’s  learned over her three-year term into practice. 
  
“It  takes a while to learn what’s going on, and I’ve learned a lot,”  said the Moscow resident of more than 20 years. “I’m not starting  from the beginning.” 
  
She joined the Moscow  School Board in July 2003. Dibble has served as vice chairwoman of the  board and the chief negotiator for the district in contract discussions  with its teachers’ union. 
  
She also has  attended state school board association meetings where she learned that  other districts look at Moscow with envy. 
  
“We’re way ahead of other districts. We’re on top of things,” she said.   
  
Dibble  referred to a number of legislative policies and changes, like the new  health and wellness policies, that the district quickly adapted to in  advance of state and federal guidelines. She also pointed to the new  job-sharing policy for teachers and new hiring practices as signs of  progress. 
  
Her list of goals include:   
  
* Improving the district’s academic achievement;   
  
* Securing a permanent facility for Paradise Creek Regional High School, the   alternative high school; and   
  
* Passing a bond to upgrade aging school facilities.   
  
“The  buildings are getting old and they were built for a different style of  education,” she said. But she appreciates the challenges that  surround a facilities bond, including the fact that any bond proposal  requires an approximate 67 percent approval from voters. The school  board can talk to the people and the people can talk to the board, but  everyone has to understand where people on the other side of the issues  are coming from, she said. 
  
Dibble said facilities are not something the school board can fix alone.   
  
Likewise,  she also wants to expand the offerings in the district by coordinating  with other programs like Lewis-Clark State College in Lewiston. 
  
Dibble  wants to develop more paths for students’ diverse educational needs,  including students at the alternative high school and in the  professional-technical education classes. 
  
“It’s  a real mix of kids there,” she said. “I see them (at the school)  fulfilling a need and I seem them misunderstood.” 
  
CANDIDATE BIO   
* NAME: Margaret Dibble   
  
* RUNNING FOR: Moscow School Board Zone 5 trustee as
incumbent   
  
*  PERSONAL: 55, married to Martin, a 
self-employed farm equipment  mechanic who also shears sheep and alpacas; three children, one a  senior at Moscow High School and two graduates 
  
*  OCCUPATION: Research 
support scientist in the University of  Idaho’s Department of Plants, Soils and Entomological Sciences 
  
* INOLVEMENT: Volunteer with 4H, Girl Scouts and church   
  
  
Larry Woodbury   
  
Candidate Larry Woodbury knows he has a tough fight against the Zone 5   incumbent.   
  
“It’s good she has support for her, but I don’t know if it’s good for me,” he   joked.   
  
Woodbury  came to his decision to run for the board through an unexpected  accident. He suffered a serious injury on the ski slopes this winter,  breaking vertebrae in his neck and back. The recovery period left him  in the hospital with a lot of time to measure the impact of his life. 
  
“It’s why I decided to get involved and give back to the community,” he said.     
  
Woodbury  said facilities are one of the biggest issues that need addressing. It  seems like the community is divided between maintaining community  schools and building new, he said. 
  
“The board needs a package to get the majority of both parties on board with   a solution we can live with.”   
  
If elected, he said, he plans to learn the issues and make things happen.   
  
“When we decide we want to do something, my wife and I, we jump in with both   feet and make it successful,” he said.   
  
Woodbury  moved to Moscow with his wife in 1984. They started their family  business, Four Seasons Lawn Care, as a way to pay for their education  at the University of Idaho. He received his bachelor’s degree in  education but decided to continue developing his small business. 
  
He believes that his focus on customer service can be a tremendous help if he   serves on the school board.   
  
“A lot of my job is trying to please people, finding their needs and meeting   them,” he said.   
  
Before moving to Moscow, he also served as a U.S. Marine for four years.   
  
“I  traveled the world, but this is the place for me,” he said. “I’d  like to see it maintain its charm and hometown feel.” 
  
Woodbury  grew up in family that also supported education. His father served on a  school board, his oldest brother is a retired teacher and his sister  has been a librarian. 
  
“I always planned on going into teaching,” he said. “Maybe one day I’ll go   back to that.”   
  
He  wasn’t sure what he wanted to do when he was a young man just handed  his degree, which is how he landed in the military. 
  
“Being in a college town, everyone thinks that everyone is going to college,”   he said.   
  
He wants to know if the students in nontraditional tracks are succeeding too.     
  
“I  wonder if needs are being met, if something more can be done,” he  said. “More professional-technical programs, that’s what I’d like  to see.” 
  
CANDIDATE BIO   
  
* NAME: Larry Woodbury   
  
* RUNNING FOR: Moscow School Board Zone 5 trustee   
  
*  PERSONAL: 48; 
married to Pat, a co-owner of Four Seasons Lawn Care;  five children, one at McDonald Elementary School, one at Moscow High  School and three graduates. 
  
* OCCUPATION:  Owner and president of Four Seasons Lawn Care; owner of a 10,000-piece  tree farm; and owner of rental properties 
  
* INOLVEMENT: Volunteer with the National Ski Patrol, Boy Scouts troop leader   and church 
   
  Zone 2 Moscow School Board   candidates share a dedication to education 

By Kate Baldwin Daily News staff writer 
Published: 05-03-2006   

Voters will have two Moscow School   Board candidates to choose from for a three-year term in Zone 2 on May 16. 
    
Zone  2 is roughly bounded on the north by D Street, on the west by Van Buren  Street, on the south by Sixth Street and the Troy Highway, and extends  east to the school district boundary. 
  
Mark Hubbard   
  
Candidate  Mark Hubbard said he’s ready to use his financial knowledge to help  the district. No stranger to budgets, he said he enjoys making the most  out of limited resources. 
  
One of eight  siblings, Hubbard grew up on a large farm. “We were sensitive to the  costs of levies and bonds but we were still proponents of education,”  he said. 
  
“We’ve always supported bond  levies,” Hubbard said. “But I think if we do it again we need to  look at all the options, and the public needs to be apprised.” 
  
He  expects many factors will come into play as Moscow’s facility needs  are explored, including questions of location and whether to build or  remodel. 
  
“I’m very analytical in nature, and as a credit officer I need to look at all   the angles,” Hubbard said.   
  
“I  have a wide parameter,” he said. “We don’t need a Taj Mahal …  but we don’t want kids wearing coats in school because the  buildings’ heaters are breaking down.” 
  
Hubbard said, if elected, he would want to assure the public that the   district is being efficient with education dollars.   
  
Hubbard  attended both Grace public schools and Bonners Ferry public schools in  Idaho. He graduated from Bonners Ferry High School. He then went on to  the University of Idaho to graduate in 1981 with a bachelor’s degree  in agricultural economics. 
  
A longtime Bonners  Ferry resident, Hubbard worked with the school district’s facilities  committee on a bond levy in 2002 for a new high school. Their effort  faced problems similar to Moscow’s and also failed, he said. 
  
He returned to Moscow with his family in August 2003.   
  
“I’m hoping I can make a difference,” he said.   
  
Candidate Bio   
  
NAME: Mark C. Hubbard   
  
RUNNING FOR: Moscow School Board Zone 2 trustee   
  
PERSONAL:  50, married to Lisa, a full-time student at the University of Idaho who  will begin student teaching this fall; two children, one Moscow High  School graduate and one at Moscow Junior High School. 
  
OCCUPATION: Assistant vice president of commercial and agricultural lending,   at FirstBank Northwest in Moscow.   
  
INVOLVEMENT: board member, Boundary Community Hospital in Bonners Ferry,   Bonners Ferry school facilities committee.   
  
  
  
Jennifer Watts   
  
Zone  2 candidate Jennifer Watts said she believes education is one of the  biggest investments people can make. “I’d like to see improvements  in our facilities, especially the elementary schools and the high  school science labs,” said Watts, who supported the failed April 2005  bond measure. 
  
“In the long range, Moscow  does need to plan for more kids, maybe not in three years, but the town  is growing,” she said. 
  
Watts decided she was ready to get involved after following the district’s   efforts to run another bond levy this year.   
  
“I’m hoping to be a listener,” she said.   
  
She  also has a strong interest in raising science literacy levels. She said  she views the State Board of Education’s high school curriculum  redesign efforts as an opportunity. 
  
As a  graduate student at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., Watts wanted to  share her interest in the field. She organized a workshop to inspire  girls in junior high school to choose science and math electives in  high school by introducing them to female scientists. 
  
“I  grew up around people who support public education,” said Watts,  whose father was a professor at the University of Idaho. 
  
She said the entire community influenced her, people like her former teacher,   State Rep. Shirley Ringo, D-Moscow.   
  
Watts  attended Moscow public schools, graduating from Moscow High School in  1983. Then she spent a year as an American Field Service exchange  student to the Netherlands. 
  
A bachelor’s  degree in microbiology from UI followed. She returned to Moscow in  August 1996 and has stayed close to home ever since. 
  
“I’d  really like to see a board that works together and works well with the  superintendent,” Watts said. “I think that’s happening now and  I’d like to continue that.” 
  
Candidate Bio   
  
NAME: Jennifer Watts   
  
RUNNING FOR: Moscow School Board Zone 2 trustee   
  
PERSONAL:  40; married to Jan Boll, an associate professor of biological and  agricultural engineering at the University of Idaho; two children, one  at Russell Elementary School and one at West Park Elementary School. 
  
OCCUPATION: Research assistant professor in Washington State University’s   Institute of Biological Chemistry.   
  
INVOLVEMENT:  West Park School’s Parent Action Team, Moscow Elementary School  Science Fair volunteer, Palouse-Clearwater Environmental Institute  member, Moscow Arts Commission summer band member. 
  
  
For  more information on the race or the precise location of the zones,  contact the district office at (208) 882-1120. Polls will be open May  16 at the district office, 650 N. Cleveland in Moscow. 



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