On May 12, 2021

School board progress: more than a mascot

Dear Editor,

When some school board members state that the Rutland City School Board should have been doing other things, maybe they didn’t notice we were because they were so stuck in retaining the Raider mascot.

Over this last year the School Board has operated schools in person during a pandemic, hired a new superintendent, CFO, director of buildings, grounds and transportation, and school principals. The board has completed its first year of a very active finance committee and passed a responsible budget. The board has been negotiating with all three bargaining units. The board has been engaged with the Coalition for Vermont Student Equity to support Rutland getting more resources from the state to support our struggling students.

These activities did not take place one night a month, like the board meetings most members attended. We had very robust and active committee meetings weekly. The negotiations team had full calendars. The finance committee was in constant communication and adjusting to endless changes with state financial predictions. Those involved in the coalition regarding student weighting are active daily within the group and Legislature and have been meeting weekly for months.

So to say nothing else was done is a misstatement and all about how they chose to participate. Making returning to the Raider mascot and arrowhead imagery the first order of business after board reorganization, with the chair claiming he can invalidate all the work that was done around that mascot, shows that it isn’t about the time or process.

Alison Notte, Rutland

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

If Vt wants a future of abundance, we must choose to build

April 23, 2025
By Miro Weinberger Editor’s note: Weinberger is currently the executive chair of Let’s Build Homes. He was raised in Hartland and served as mayor of Burlington from 2012-2024. If you’ve turned on a podcast, watched a late-night show, or scrolled social media in the past month, you’ve probably heard something about “Abundance,” the new book…

Vermont School Board Asso. supports H.454 ed plan

April 23, 2025
Dear Editor, VSBA supports the bill as a more thoughtful and phased approach than Governor Scott’s rushed, five district proposal. Grounded in a more realistic timeline: H.454 is the most grounded and actionable proposal developed during the 2025 session. It acknowledges the operational realities education leaders face every day. The implementation timeline is more manageable…

Vote Bill Vines for Killington Select Board

April 23, 2025
Dear Editor, At the special election on May 28, I am running for the 2-year seat on the Killington Select Board. An incredibly diverse group of people call Killington home; my partner Mary Furlong and I included. After years of renting a ski house, we purchased our first Killington home in 1995. In 1997 we…

The real enemy isn’t fear, it’s how we let it divide us

April 23, 2025
By Stanley McChrystal Editor’s Note: Stanley McChrystal, who is retired from the Army, is the former commander of U.S. and International Security Assistance Forces in Afghanistan and the former commander of Joint Special Operations Command. He is the author of the forthcoming book “On Character: Choices That Define a Life.” This commentary was first published…