WHITMAN – In the end, it was their equal commitment to working toward a school budget that best serves all Whitman students that made the decision so difficult.
“It;s awful,” School Committee Chair Beth Stafford said after nine of 13 applicants for the two vacant Whitman seats on the W-H School Committee that made the choice so hard. Heather Clough, Kevin Mayer and Charles Slavin III did not attend the meeting. “We have quite a difficult decision, I think. We had some great people.”
Those who did brought strong backgrounds in education, law, small business, real estate, special needs parenting and education and technical fields.
“This is difficult,” Stafford said of the applicants’ experience. “I had to sit in that chair before and it’s very difficult, what they had to do, but I think we learned so much more about them than you do in a regular election.”
The election metaphor was mentioned more than once.
“It’s like going into a ballot box,” said Select Board Chair Carl Kowalski.
“Pretend you’re going to a ballot box, who are you going to vote for,” Stafford said. “When you say a name, you have confidence in that person you are selecting.”
The five Whitman Select Board members and four Whitman members of the School Committee were then asked to put themselves in the shoes of a voter for the two ballots, as each gave the name of the applicant they supported. Ballots were cast until a candidate received a majority of five votes for each vacancy.
“We’re not going to ask questions,” Stafford said in response to a question from School Committee member Rosemary Connolly.
Kowalski placed all names in nomination toward the two rounds of votes.
The nine interviewing candidates: Stephanie Blackman, P. Christopher DiOrio, Nicholas Femia, Anna Hourihan, Chris Marks, Annemarie Odle, Ginger Sullivan, Ryan Tressel and Danielle Winn, each had 10 minutes, with Stafford timing them, to speak about how they would support the district’s towns and students.
“Thank you very much, guys,” Stafford joked, as the candidates filed back into the Select Board’s meeting room. “You have made it awful.” In May, of any of the candidates wish to go on, can try again by campaigning for the seats when they come up again in May.
The first ballot was to fill the seat vacated by the death of Fred Small in late July. At the end of the first ballot, Stephanie Blackman and Chris Marks were both short of the needed five-vote majority on Ballot 1, but Select Board members Justin Evans and Shawn Kain added their support for Blackman, along with School Committee members Dawn Byers, Steve Bois, Rosemary Connolly and Stafford,
“Stephanie, you won a seat,” Stafford announced.
Ballot 2 followed the same route, ultimately giving a seat to Marks in a second run at the seat vacated by David Forth’s resignation. DiOrio with two votes and Marks with three votes were the top vote-getters in the first round, with Marks ending up with Byers and Kain shifting their votes to Marks to put him over the top. DiOrio ended up with four votes.
“I hope everybody thinks about it, watches, comes to our meetings, we appreciate an audience when we have school committee meetings,” Stafford said to the candidates who came up short. “We appreciate input, we always like input. Stay with it and don;t get discouraged and try again.”