Kent School Board meeting draws crowd to the microphone

The first school board meeting of the year brought congratulations, thank yous and further discussions of both class size and funding issues during the public-comment section of the Kent School Board’s Sept. 23 meeting.

The first school board meeting of the year brought congratulations, thank yous and further discussions of both class size and funding issues during the public-comment section of the Kent School Board’s Sept. 23 meeting.

The meeting, the first since the Kent Education Association’s strike came to a close, brought out a packed house that included teachers, parents, candidates, classified workers, members of the Kent Parents Coalition and Stand for Children and even the school board president’s wife, all of whom waited to to speak.

The meeting was the board’s first since Aug. 26, the night the KEA voted to go on strike. A meeting scheduled for Sept. 9 was deferred due to a lack of action items or presentations on the agenda.

While the meeting began with the usual school business involving discussions of an upcoming bond vote and enrollment figures, the majority of those in attendance waited for their chance to address the board.

First to speak were members of the district’s classified employees unions, thanking the board for thinking of them during the teacher strike.

“Classified people were in a quandary,” said Karen Rutledge, speaking on behalf of office professionals. “Thank you for all the support you gave classified people during that time. It was great.”

Classified staff are only paid while school is in session, something the district gave as one of its reasons to seek an injunction to end the strike.

Lee Thoren, a field representative for the Public School Employees food service division, said the district went “above and beyond” in dealing with classified staff during the strike and thanked them for the open lines of communication they maintained during the work stoppage.

“I don’t know that Kent’s efforts have been equaled,” he said. “What a show of value and respect.”

The comments, however, prompted teacher Cathy Jones to also address the board and the audience regarding the relationship between teachers and classified staff.

“Your treatment was different from ours,” Jones said, adding she felt the board and district showed little respect to teachers during bargaining and failed to keep open the same lines of communication.

Jones apologized for the inconvenience to classified staff, but said she and her fellow teachers thought often of the classified employees and said they were aware of the plight of classified employees during their strike.

Jones also said she hoped that teachers and classified employees could come together again for the good of the students.

“Something very divisive, it seems, has happened in our district,” she said.

Charles Allen, founder of the Kent Parents Coalition, which has announced its intention to recall two board members, also addressed the board on the issue of class size.

“We must do better,” he said, and presented the board with a 12-page document comparing class sizes in other districts to those in Kent and containing information from several studies regarding lower class size.

Some of the information in Allen’s packet, however, was misleading, as the comparisons to other districts contained the “caps” from the new KEA agreement, but compared them to the “goals” from at least two other districts (Auburn and Federal Way).

Also speaking was Dan Morris, of Stand For Children, who encouraged those in the audience to volunteer with his group, which will be lobbying the Legislature for increased funding and the passage of the district’s expected levy in February.

Also speaking was Suzanne Berrios, wife of board president Jim Berrios. Suzanne Berrios said she could no longer hold her tongue following the way her husband was attacked and maligned during the strike and listed a litany of things Berrios had done for the students of the district, including meals, donations, food-handling classes and his time on the board and the bond and levy committee prior to that.

“Aside from collecting some signatures,” she said, regarding Allen and his recall petitions, “what have you done for these kids?”

“Well, that was awkward,” Jim Berrios said, when Suzanne Berrios stepped down from the podium, injecting a bit of humor into the proceedings.

Alan Sutliff also addressed the board regarding his time on the Citizens Budget Review Committee. Sutliff said he felt like “one of many pawns” in the run-up to the strike because he felt the proposed budget-cutting priorities, which were discussed at a pair of public workshops in February, were little more than bargaining tactics for the board.

Steve Goliff was the only member of the public to address the rescheduling of the Sept. 9 meeting, saying he was “furious” at the decision to cancel the meeting because the was “not enough content.”

Goliff said he agreed that the Legislature should better fund education, but said it in no way affected the district’s treatment of teachers, including his wife, whom he said teaches at Panther Lake.

During the comment period, the board listened, but did not respond. The board rarely, if ever, responds to comments from the public.

During board comments, Chris Davies encouraged those in attendance to investigate Stand for Children as a group dedicated to education.

Berrios also said he supported what Stand was trying to do and again denied claims that the board was inaccessible during the strike, saying he and fellow board members responded to e-mails and phone calls and met with teachers on multiple occasions.

Berrios also expressed concern about the divided nature of things in the district, but said despite continued threats of a recall he continue to do what he thought was best for the students in Kent.

“My commitment is to these kids and I will continue to do that,” he said.


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

Firefighters from Puget Sound Fire and Renton Regional Fire Authority were able to extinguish the fire within an hour of arriving to the scene. Courtesy image.
Fire at self-storage building near SR 167 ruled accidental

Fire was met with a response from over 60 firefighters from Kent and Renton crews.

File photo
Federal Way man dies after fight at Kent bar

Kent police were dispatched to a bar in the 1700 block of West Meeker Street late Thursday night (May 2) after they received reports of a physical fight in the parking lot.

A scene of the recent vandalism to electrical infrastructure near Renton. Photo courtesy of King County Sheriff’s Office
Vandals damage electricity infrastructure in South King County

Two recent attacks near Renton are estimated to have cost $90,000.

Green River. File photo
Project targets major flooding of Green River

The risk posed to the 21-mile corridor could affect more than 27,000 residents and the stability of 28,000 jobs.

.
Kent woman arrested after being linked to daughter’s homicide

Kent police responded to a domestic violence case on April 28 that… Continue reading

Gov. Inslee announces the $45 million EV rebate program on April 23. Courtesy image
Governor announces rebate program for EV purchases

Washington is the first state to prioritize low-cost leases for electric vehicles.

t
Kent seeks federal funds for Mill Creek Middle School project

Estimated cost of $20 million to resolve flooding issues

t
Medical examiner identifies man found dead in Kent near railroad tracks

26-year-old man died from multiple blunt force injuries

t
Reichert shares details of Green River Killer case with Kent students

Former King County sheriff tells about Gary Ridgway and how the crime was solved

t
Kent Police arrest man for reportedly raping two women

Man, 39, allegedly attacked women in his car; first case in October 2023, second case February 2024

t
Voters strongly defeating Kent School District levy

Nearly 60% against Capital Projects and Technology Levy on April 23 ballot

t
Kent Police pursue, arrest two 14-year-old boys for armed robbery

April 23 incident began at convenience store along West Meeker Street; ended on Military Road South