Kate Baggott's Blog: Cornfields of the Sea, page 2

February 3, 2015

The Elegant Suggestion, the Brash Ask

Before I got distracted by municipal politics, the school board election, and wonderful global experiments involving three continents, I talked about writing and selling my books.

Mostly, I talked about not selling books. I tried different marketing tricks both on Goodreads and on Twitter. I had friends engage in virtual festivals of link sharing. At one point, I even said, "I am not asking you to buy my book, but I do hope a few of your friends will like the idea."

The truth is, as much as I prefer the elegant suggestion to the brash ask, the brash ask leads to sales...just not the way people do it on twitter.

When I was a girl, I worked with my parents in their antique business. I was good at sales and I have memories of favourite customers, like the Princeton professor with his exotic New Jersey accent who thought he'd tell me how to recognize hand blown glassware. Sure, that was the kind of thing my parents taught me in the cradle, but it was motivated by joy and excitement. And, he bought the hand blown glass bottle that had also been hand painted with violets.

But here's the thing, the professor was looking for hand blown and hand painted glassware. He valued it. It was an easy sell and I gave him $2 off because he loved it and I wanted him to buy it.

Books don't work that way. I don't think they can. Sure, maybe there is a similar model when an author is completely self-published and goes out to events all the time to meet people and talk to them. But, in publishing models there are just too many people who invest too much time and energy and need to get paid.

And that means we can't dance around making elegant suggestions that you might *love* my books. Instead, we have to find some way to be brash and say, hey, "you like to read AND you've got five bucks. Why don't you just go buy, Dry Stories or Love From Planet Wine Cooler"?
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Published on February 03, 2015 08:03 Tags: dry-stories, ebook-marketing, ebook-sales, kate-baggott, love-from-planet-wine-cooler

January 15, 2015

St.Catharines Municipal Council Integrity Commissioner Complaint

This post is only for those interested in signing the collective complaint to the integrity officer on the Dual Representation violation of the Ontario Municipal Act.

Those of you who want to sign should send me an email via http://www.katebaggott.com

Integrity Officer
Municipality of the City of St. Catharines
C/O Office of the City Clerk
50 Church St.
St.Catharines, ON
L2R 7C2

Dear Sir or Madame,

We, the undersigned Canadian citizens and legal residents of St.Catharines, are submitting this formal complaint against Mayor Walter Sendzik for his violation of the Ontario Municipalities Act and for his active role in supporting and promoting motions that encouraged other city councilors to support violations to the Act.

On Monday, January 12, 2015 St. Catharines City Council voted 6 to 7 in favour of appointing city councilor Matt Harris to represent our city on Regional Council while holding onto his ward seat on municipal council. Mayor Sendzik presented this practice of Dual Representation, promoted its adoption and was active in soliciting support for the motion.

More specifically, the public record of the city clerk and that presented by local media have recorded the following: Mayor Sendzik hand-picked Councilor Harris to act as Dual Representative, Mayor Sendzik made a YouTube Video to promote his position in favour of Dual Representation and his particular support for Harris in the role of Dual Representative. The record also shows Mayor Sendzik sent emails to all councilors and made telephone calls to selected city councilors to ask for their support on this issue.

It is our feeling that the entire process of Sendzik’s Dual Representation campaign violated established and ethical practices of governance, ignored the results of recent local elections and flaunted democratic values of debate and access to due process. We also object to the the disenfranchisement of the 8300 people who voted for the seventh place finisher who, according to local precedent and established practice, should have been appointed to serve as Regional Councillor. However, it is Mayor Sendzik’s violation of the Ontario Municipalities Act and his promotional actions that encouraged city councilors to also violate the Act on this matter that constitutes the basis of our complaint.

Dual Representation, in the manner Mayor Sendzik presented, orchestrated and promoted, contravened the Act that upholds democratic principles and democratic governance practices. Municipal Affairs Minister Ted McMeekin’s office confirmed that the council vote in support of Matt Harris acting as Dual Representative was in violation of the act just two days after the vote was held. “You can’t change things mid-stream. I’m not sure that would be very democratic,” said Mark Cripps, senior communications adviser for the Minister told the local newspaper, the St.Catharines Standard, in an article published on January 15, 2015.

Mayor Sendzik’s actions on this matter were not only in violation of the Act, but they encouraged others to support violating the Act. It bears mentioning that Mayor Sendzik took the oath of office on 1 December 2014 and publically swore to uphold the Ontario Municipalities Act. With this Oath, Mayor Sendzik accepted responsibility for taking training on the Act and to educate himself about its contents.

Unfortunately, Mayor Sendzik’s violation of the Ontario Municipalities Act and his Oath of Office are not the only breaches of citizen confidence on this matter. In violating the Act, he has also broken with the Code of Conduct that governs the behaviour of elected officials on St. Catharines Municipal Council. In particular, he broke this expectation from his fellow citizens as outlined in the Code of Conduct published on the city of St.Catharines web site:

• members are expected to serve the public interest by upholding both the letter and
the spirit of the laws and policies established by the Federal Parliament, Ontario Legislature, and St. Catharines City Council.

In view of our perception that Mayor Sendzik has violated the Ontario Municipalities Act in promoting and encouraging the adoption of Dual Representation, that he has violated his Oath of Office, and that he has violated the published Code of Conduct that governs the behaviour of the elected officials who make up St.Catharines municipal council, we ask the Integrity Office to launch a full investigation of Mayor Walter Sendzik’s campaign to appoint municipal councilor Matt Harris as Regional council when Dual Representation contravened the Ontario Municipalities Act.

With kind regards,
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Published on January 15, 2015 10:10

December 20, 2014

Writer-Citizen: DSBN Trustee Election Wrap Up

Remember those elections we had in Regions and Municipalities across Ontario in November?

I wrote a series of posts about the local public school board election and, since the results were made public, I've been keeping quiet. I've been feeling mildly guilty about not commenting, but I've had good reason for that.

A Little Background:

Yes, this is a writer blog but I am a citizen with children in the District School Board of Niagara public school system. There was been a woeful lack of coverage of the school board election, so I used my role as a general busybody and citizen to interview the 9 candidates competing for the 4 seats representing St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake. 6 of the 9 candidates responded to my questions in full and the 3 who didn't appeared at the Meet and Greet event on October 17th that I wrote about too.

There were 4 trustee seats available that represent the citizens of both St.Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake. Dalton Clarke, who had served on the board since 1968, decided not to seek re-election and there was hope that things could be shaken up.

In the end, there were only two candidates I felt completely comfortable endorsing, Jennifer Ajandi and Linda Crouch. Both of them were elected.

That said, I had no confidence in long-time trustee Lora Campbell or Jonathan Fast. They were both re-elected.

Shortly after the election, I interacted with a voter on Twitter who said his wife was unhappy with two of his school board choices on the ballot. When I asked who they were, he responded "Fast and Clarke."

When I told him there was no Clarke on the ballot, he corrected with Campbell.

It's pretty clear that the phenomenon of "name recognition" is the biggest force in determining election outcomes. Fast and Campbell won by huge majorities because they split Clarke's name recognition when he wasn't on the ballot.

Naturally, it's not as simple as that. In the end, parents of active students in DSBN schools are a statistical blip in the electorate. Most of us were born during the period demographer David Foot called "the Baby Bust" in his book Boom, Bust and Echo (Macfarlane Walter & Ross, 1996).

In Niagara especially, thanks to our mild climate, senior citizens between 65 and 85 are not only more active voters, but they represent the single largest group in our community. I also noticed that active seniors are more likely to go out to election debates and candidate meet and greets than any other age group. There's good reason for that. Parents are exhausted at the end of the day. Every single one of us. Add to that the difficulties and expense of evening child care, a shortage of events and lack of candidate communication and you've got a perfect storm for voter-disengagement.

Still, school board elections remain difficult. Members of the Catholic school board were acclaimed in this area, but their EQAO results are better, they haven't been plagued with school closures and their special needs students are accommodated and enriched.

Among public school supporters, our community has been full of educational controversy. We've all be affected by school closures, mega school construction, a new and difficult emphasis on the business of busing (school busing in Niagara is all run by private companies) and a lack of concern for neighbourhood health and communities. We've also shown a great deal of concern about Director of Education Warren Hashizaki's salary that, in 2012 was already approaching a quarter of a million dollars a year.

There are pockets of vocal and effective activism. In Niagara-on-the-Lake local parental activist group, CARE is engaged in a legal battle challenging school closures in the town. The group sort-of supported Fast in a quiet and legally careful way and it was a smart move. The realtor's face appears on his business's advertisements and he's an active member of his large faith community, both of which made him likely to win. And, to be fair, he has publicly supported the amalgamation of the Catholic and public school boards...albeit before NOTL town council, he has never moved the issue onto a school board agenda.

Once an election is held, we all have to work with the representatives the majority selected and, sometimes, there are surprises of hard work and astonishing ethics. I didn't support Mayor Walter Sendzik during the election campaign, but I've been happy with what I've seen of him so far on issues of poverty and community engagement. Fast may yet surprise us in the same way.

In the meantime, Linda Crouch stands out in the continuation of her campaign of public engagement to inform others about the province's proposed changes to the school closing process.

Would I Do It Again?

Citizen journalism is an important movement, but I have to make a living ( I have books out by the way) and the time I spent on this blog was limited by the demands of working and parenting. While I did a lot of research and have contact with people inside and outside the board in every capacity, there was a lot of rumour I could not investigate or verify. And, in the end I had candidates fill out form responses to questions...which is exactly what the St.Catharines Standard did using their now very limited paid staff. Since this election I've noticed that the Standard has upped its coverage of school board trustee meetings and issues and for that, I think we can thank the people who clicked on links and read this blog series to the tune of 7210 unique views (all posts in the series combined). Since there were only a few dozen votes between the 4th place candidate who won a seat and the 5th place candidate who didn't, that is a significant number.

I've met lots of people and had very interesting conversations with them as a result of this blog series. People who think I look familiar say hi to me at parties because they've read my school board candidate profiles. Those are discussions we need to keep having. As much as young people and activists want to believe all "important issues" are dealt with at the provincial and federal levels of government, the issues that affect our daily lives -- like the education of our children -- are dealt with on a local level where every vote has a huge impact.

Watching the other races for local offices, I have to say the school board race seemed cleaner than the one for regional council, for example. That said, there is still a lot that needs our attention between elections.

There were some elements of fear in undertaking this project that only became clear once it became an influence on the race. A close relative on the supply list stopped getting calls for a few days and we all worried it was the result of "Kate not keeping her mouth shut." It turned out just to be a blip.

Friends who work for and with the school board kept a little more distance in public for a while, or so it seemed. In private there was no question of the persistence of friendship. Being a writer always invites vulnerability, but this was closer to home and more public than personal.

What's Next?

When the candidates have to file their financial information, I will try to review it -- if I can handle paying any freedom-of-information request fees that I hear are being charged now.

In reading the improved school board coverage, I've been surprised by the number of trustees who talk about their support of and expressed loyalty for senior staff at the board. To me, this shows a tendency to simply accept recommendations at the expense of critical examination and review, which is the primary responsibility of school board trustees. I don't have time to attend school board meetings on a regular basis, but I think I can make a resolution to attend at least one in 2015 and would like to challenge all of you to try that too.


Will I be able to do this for the next school board election? Maybe. I don't think I can or should do any more fill-in-the-blanks journalism, even if it is time and cost effective. Next time, all the candidate profiles are going to have to be based on individual records, public profile, experiences and deeper research. If there are to be interviews, they will have to be tailored to each candidate. It's a huge commitment of time and resources I will try to make, but it's a long time away. Keeping track for the next four years and keeping the discussions going may well be the way forward for all of us.

In case you want to review who we are dealing with, here is a list of all the candidate information posts I wrote to cover the race:

ELECTED, Ajandi, Jennifer



Atamanyk, Gary



Bradnam, Alex



Re-ELECTED, Campbell, Lora



Christie, Adam



ELECTED, Crouch, Linda



Re-ELECTED, Fast, Jonathan



Longhurst, Eva



Sherwin, Al

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December 18, 2014

Not a year in review

December is almost over and it's the usual time for a "year in review," but I just don't have one in me.

I just can't recount the state of the world right now, but I can add my voice to the many who believe that hope persists and that our whole mass of humanity can and will, eventually, do better to each other, to our planet and to all the creatures on it.
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Published on December 18, 2014 08:43

November 18, 2014

Celebrate Breathing?

Last year, I wrote a post about a moment of completely unsubstantiated happiness. Sometimes, it really is enough to breathe deeply and feel the pleasure of just being alive...even if it is polar vortex cold outside.

This year, my kids and I have had some hardship, but mostly we're happy people living great lives. Last month, I hosted the launch of the print edition of Dry Stories with friends and family here in St.Catharines at the Fine Grind Cafe. My kids worked the event and sold books, local celebrity Laurie Boese did a fabulous reading of Finnegan & Grandfather Cheng and my mum came, so I read a story she inspired.

All in all, there is a lot to be happy about and a lot to celebrate. So I am going to. Since I live in St.Catharines where needs are great, but hearts are even bigger, I've decided to celebrate. The first local resident who Tweets me a pic of themselves donating a new toy to a local charity toy drive will get a signed print copy of my new book Dry Stories. My twitter handle is @baggyk

EDIT: This is now open Canada-wide (sorry, I can't afford international shipping). First Canadian to tweet me a pic of themselves donating a toy gets the signed copy of Dry Stories.

I'd also like to take this opportunity to challenge the other authors with Morning Rain Publishing to spread a little happiness in their communities using their books.
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October 23, 2014

Thank You Malala

Yesterday, when I found out Parliament was under attack, my first instinct was to go pick up my children at school and go hide out at home. Then, I remembered that Malala was on our soil and I got brave.

Today, I celebrated living in a democracy by voting early. Yes, I have been driving everyone I know crazy with my endless discussion of the local school board race.

Education is stability, democracy and human rights all rolled into one.

Thank you Malala, for being here and reminding me.

description

Malala Yousafzai
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Published on October 23, 2014 10:04 Tags: dsbn, malala, school-board-elections

October 18, 2014

Writer-Citizen: DSBN Trustee Candidates & Voting Strategy

Yes, this is a writer blog but I am a citizen with children in the District School Board of Niagara public school system. There has been a woeful lack of coverage of the school board election, so I used my role as a general busybody and citizen to interview the 9 candidates competing for the 4 seats representing St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake. 6 of the 9 candidates responded to my questions in full and the 3 who didn't appeared at the Meet and Greet event on October 17th that I wrote about this morning.

There are 4 trustee seats available that will represent the citizens of both St.Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake.

The only two candidates I feel completely comfortable endorsing are Jennifer Ajandi and Linda Crouch.

I do not feel completely comfortable endorsing Gary Atamanyk because of his age. That may or may not be important. I'm not completely comfortable endorsing Alex Bradnam because I don't think he's been scrutinizing how events unfold and how Ministry of Education directives are applied at the board offices closely enough.

That said, I have no confidence that the DSBN will be able to meet the challenges it currently faces if Lora Campbell and Jonathan Fast are re-elected and keeping them out is a priority.

I haven't decided whether I will adopt a bullet voting strategy and support only Ajandi and Crouch in the hopes that they will have a better chance of getting in, or if I will support Ajandi, Crouch, Atamanyk and Bradnam to try and keep Fast and Campbell out. I'm researching both approaches and discussing the merits of both strategies with everyone. I hope you'll join in and send me a tweet or FB comment on this issue just like you have over the past few weeks.

UPDATE: After consulting with other citizens engaged in this campaign & looking at the results of the 2010 election, I have decided to endorse four candidates for the four seats: Jennifer Ajandi, Linda Crouch, Gary Atamanyk and Alex Bradnam represent the very best choices on the slate.

If you are uncertain about any of them, under vote and support only the 1, 2 or 3 you are absolutely comfortable with. It is better to under vote than to vote for a candidate you know nothing about.

This post reflects whom I've decided to endorse and this summary post explains why. As usual, here is a list of all the candidate information posts I wrote to cover the race:

Ajandi, Jennifer



Atamanyk, Gary



Bradnam, Alex



Campbell, Lora



Christie, Adam



Crouch, Linda



Fast, Jonathan



Longhurst, Eva



Sherwin, Al

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Writer-Citizen: Lessons from the DSBN Candidate Meet & Greet

Yes, this is a writer blog but I am a citizen with children in the District School Board of Niagara public school system. There has been a woeful lack of coverage of the school board election, so I used my role as a general busybody and citizen to interview the 9 candidates competing for the 4 seats representing St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake.

Three candidates, Gary Atamanyk, Jonathan Fast and Eva Longhurst chose not to respond to my questions. At first, I attributed this refusal to answer to arrogance in one case, lack of familiarity of the issues in another case and fear of being held accountable in the third case. If a candidate refuses to answer questions from the electorate during an election campaign, how responsive to our concerns and questions can we expect them to be after they are elected?

Luckily, I had the opportunity to challenge my assumptions. After no events were scheduled for a trustee candidate debate, candidate Linda Crouch organized a public meeting for October 17 with the St. Catharines & Niagara-on-the-Lake English Public Trustee Candidates. The event was held at the Grantham Lions Club last night between 6 and 8PM. About 60 people, including many candidates for city and regional council, as well as trustee candidates from outside St. Catharines & Nigara-on-the-Lake attended the Q & A style debate. Candidates Alex Bradnam, Lora Campbell and Adam Christie did not attend the event. Bradnam was said to be at a fundraising event at Eden Secondary School. There were no rumours about where octogenarian Lora Campbell (CORRECTION: Campbell told The St.Catharines Standard she is 71) or young sports coach Adam Christie were.

This is what I learned: there is a painful lack of knowledge about what the role of a school board trustee entails, what their responsibilities are and what the trustee has to ensure happens. ADDITION: As a point of contrast to my summary, I recommend reading The Standard article about the event. I also recommend reading the OSSTF questions to candidates.

I went into the meeting suspecting that Eva Longhurst is a well-intentioned Sunday school teacher and grandmother who, because she wrote; "The in depth questions that you are asking show me that you are not just an average voter;" has no in-depth grasp of the issues facing the students in our schools, the challenges faced by our staff or the operations of the Board of Education itself.

This suspicion was confirmed.

Attendees at the meeting now know quite a bit about Longhurst's family, her one son, grandchildren and step-grandchildren and her brothers and sister with special needs who did not receive the education they deserved. We also learned that she has been in contact with teachers and parents by email and has learned that teachers feel disrespected by the board and that some parents are removing their children from the public system and into separate or private schools to get away from the influence of ethnic groups who are moving into the schools. While I do not know how many teachers or parents Longhurst has exchanged emails with, or what schools they are affiliated with, I find it difficult to believe that her exchanges have been so numerous or extensive that she would engage with all of them while refusing to answer 12 questions from me.

Based on the one-paragraph statement he issued to me, I went into the meeting believing that Gary Atamanyk is an arrogant has-been who expects to coast onto the board given a list of support roles on his short and simple template web site. Atamanyk certainly comes across as arrogant, but that ceased to matter because he is so well-informed about school board process, procedure and, most-importantly, the legal responsibilities of school board trustees who are accountable for ensuring that everyone employed by the board from the Director of Education to the care-takers follows Ministry of Education directives to the letter, that there is full transparency in terms of hiring, budgeting and curriculum delivery and the human rights of students and all board employees are respected at all times.

Of all the candidates, Gary Atamanyk was the only one fully-versed in these issues with a plan to require all elected trustees to take the training modules and seminars provided by the Ministry.

Yes, Gary Atamanyk is a wonderful resource whose knowledge and experience should be welcome by every member of our community. Unfortunately, he is so frail and his memory failed him a few times during the debate. It is difficult to imagine him being able to complete a four year term. He would be the perfect candidate...if he were only 10 years younger.

Atamanyk's platform to require all trustees to take the Ministry-provided courses is certainly necessary. After serving almost four complete years on the board, Jonathan Fast proved that he still has no grasp of the legal responsibilities of a school board trustee. Throughout the debate he referred to the jewels of the DSBN such as the robotics program at Governor Simcoe and Woodend Outdoor Education Centre, programs that Fast himself had nothing to do with creating, funding or sustaining.

As the only Niagara-on-the-Lake resident on the board, he has been a passionate defender of Parliament Oak Elementary School and spoken out against its proposed closure. Unfortunately, he has not backed up those passionate speeches with practical proposals of community partnerships, shared-resource models or investigation of alternative resources to keep the school open. Since he has tried to subvert the procedural model of board discussions not once, but twice inappropriately bringing school board issues before Niagara-on-the-Lake town council, town residents might be better served by looking for a sympathetic non-resident candidate to support.

I also went into the meeting with high hopes for both Adam Christie and Al Sherwin . Adam Christie described himself as being "from a younger generation than the rest of the candidates" and I hoped we might have someone keen, ready to learn and passionate about the direction of education in Niagara and in the world at large. He's also from Niagara-on-the-Lake and I hoped he might be a better representative than the incumbent trustee from the town. I had hopes, but he did not show up at the meeting. According to reports from other parents at the meeting, he did attend an all-candidates event in Niagara-on-the-Lake earlier in the campaign, but came across as "a young guy and kids' coach" without the necessary experience or knowledge to stand for trustee.

I wanted to hear more about Al Sherwin's experience working for First Nations communities in Manitoba. In Niagara, like in the rest of the country, the population of students from First Nations is growing. As a result, staff, students and trustees at every level of the board are going to need greater awareness of First Nations issues, more profound environmental science education, active training in cultural recognition and inter-cultural reconciliation. Al Sherwin could have spoken to these issues and his experience with them during any of the questions asked, but did not.

He also showed a lack of awareness on the legal responsibilities of a trustee and a lack of understanding about how our students and teachers use technology for educational purposes. While his mispronunciation of "wifi" was entertaining, it did not breed confidence that he would support the development of 21st century skills in our schools. His joke about being retired with time to give and being "the last on the ballot" revealed a lack of serious interest in winning a seat.

When it comes to 21st century skills and current trends in education, diversity and community-building Jennifer Ajandi stood out. Ajandi's educational background (she holds a Phd in Education) did not alienate her from the community in the hall. She offered information where it was lacking in both the audience and among the candidates panel. Her passion for diversity and commitment to evidence-based decision-making was welcome. If there are alternatives to school closures while working within the frame work of the ARC process, Ajandi has already investigated it and already has proposals to offer.

While there are 9 candidates in the election for four seats on the board of trustees, there has often seemed to be only one runner in the race. Linda Crouch has been that runner. And, when it comes to research, Linda Crouch has certainly done hers. Since losing a seat by only 169 votes in 2010, Crouch has worked tirelessly as a DSBN watch dog and community advocate over the last four years. While she's certainly a bit of a hot head, she's a hot head who has done her home work, learned processes and has demonstrated her commitment to making the operations of the DSBN transparent to the public gaze. At the meeting her revelation that DSBN properties have been sold off at well-below market value alone should be enough to get her elected.

Since I briefly mentioned Adam Christie who was not at the meeting, it's only fair that I also mention Alex Bradnam and Lora Campbell and what I have learned about them through discussions with the larger community.

Bradnam, a retired principal is well-remembered as a guitar-playing inspiration by many of his former students -- those who are still in the region. While I am concerned that his responses indicate too much of a buddy-buddy relationship with superintendents, and a belief that provincial directives alone resolve long-standing issues, he may be sensitive enough to require a simple heads-up. Ministry directives regarding posting, interviewing and hiring are being subverted and more attention needs to paid to hiring timelines. Right now, willful lack of timeliness on the part of specific superintendents is disrupting and devastating special needs students with sudden changes of teachers and, especially, EAs.

Lora Campbell is rumoured to be in her 80s, but as I have not seen her at any events, I cannot confirm or deny the rumour. (CORRECTION: Campbell told The St.Catharines Standard she is 71). Her responses do indicate that she feels simply sitting on a committee is enough. She did not outline any of her efforts or accomplishments or special work completed on those committees. Her contributions appear to be minimal and she glossed over several in-depth issues. The statement on hiring nepotism that is a prevalent topic of discussion among the community at-large was met with the response: "I was not aware we had an issue of this nature."

After reading Campbell's responses to my 12 questions and comparing them to media reports of board activities, I had no reason to believe that Campbell has been doing more with her trustee seat than keeping it warm.

Ultimately, what needs to made clear both to candidates and to the public at large is that the board of trustees has nothing to do with what happens in the classroom. We have people who are trained to take care of that and they are called teachers and educational assistants. What the school board does is oversee the administrative areas: the Director of Education, his or her supervision of the superintendents and those support staff who manage and spend a budget of over $430 million dollars a year. We cannot afford to have trustees who don't understand their role or their responsibilities. But more important the money is our emotional and ethical investments. The educations of 36,000 students are at stake.

This post reflects whom I've decided to endorse and this summary post explains why. As usual, here is a list of all the candidate information posts I wrote to cover the race:

Ajandi, Jennifer



Atamanyk, Gary



Bradnam, Alex



Campbell, Lora



Christie, Adam



Crouch, Linda



Fast, Jonathan



Longhurst, Eva



Sherwin, Al

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October 15, 2014

Writer-Citizen DSBN Trustee Candidate Jonathan Fast

Yes, this is a writer blog but I am a citizen with children in the District School Board of Niagara public school system. There has been a woeful lack of coverage of the school board election, so I am using my role as a general busybody and citizen to interview the 9 candidates competing for the 4 seats representing St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake.

Jonathan Fast has chosen not to respond to my questions. I encourage voters in St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake to attend the "meet the candidates" event on Friday (complete details follow the content of this blog post) to ask Jonathan Fast questions themselves.


Had Mr. Fast chosen to respond, his responses would have been presented in the same form as all of the other candidates with two additional questions related to his public performance over the past year. However, it would be dishonest of me to pretend that I am completely neutral about Mr. Fast's performance as a public school board trustee. A year ago, I asked for Mr. Fast's resignation and as a result of this newspaper article:

http://www.niagaraadvance.ca/2013/10/...

And again a few months later as a result of this article:

http://www.niagaraadvance.ca/2014/02/...

My belief is that school boards can only function when their trustees follow established processes.

This post reflects whom I've decided to endorse and this summary post explains why. As usual, here is a list of all the candidate information posts I wrote to cover the race:

Ajandi, Jennifer



Atamanyk, Gary



Bradnam, Alex



Campbell, Lora



Christie, Adam



Crouch, Linda



Fast, Jonathan



Longhurst, Eva



Sherwin, Al

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Published on October 15, 2014 13:06 Tags: dsbn-candidates, jonathan-fast, trustee

Writer-Citizen DSBN Trustee Candidate Eva Longhurst

Yes, this is a writer blog but I am a citizen with children in the District School Board of Niagara public school system. There has been a woeful lack of coverage of the school board election, so I am using my role as a general busybody and citizen to interview the 9 candidates competing for the 4 seats representing St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake.

Eva Longhurst has chosen not to respond to my questions. Below is a copy of our complete email correspondence. I encourage voters in St. Catharines and Niagara-on-the-Lake to attend the "meet the candidates" event on Friday (complete details follow the content of this blog post) to ask Eva Longhurst questions themselves. I regret that the formatting, font colour and font size of Ms. Longhurst's signature have been lost.

On 6 October 2014 12:52, Kate Baggott wrote:
Hi Eva,

Given the lack of media coverage of the DSBN election race, I have decided to interview the candidates myself and share the results with my friends and family via Facebook, Twitter and my blog. Here are the general questions I will be asking all the candidates. There is some variation in wording for those who are seeking re-election versus those who are seeking election for the first time. If I have engaged in communication with a candidate in the past, I make note of it in the email. As you are not a sitting trustee, there is nothing to note in this case.

1. What in your background do you believe prepares you for this public office?

2. What has been your role in community volunteer work, educational activism and politics?

3. While local elections are not party-driven, do you have any party affiliations that influence your political ambitions?

4. How would you describe the current relationship between elected trustees and hired superintendents? Or, what should that relationship look like?

5. The province offers trustees various forms of procedural guidance and training in legal and procedural responsibilities of trustees. Which of these forms of guidance and training will you use and/or participate in to prepare and undertake your role as trustee?

6. Where do you stand on the issue of amalgamation of school boards in Niagara and in Ontario as a whole?

7. Where do you stand on the issue of provincial oversight of school closure decisions and financial transparency of the DSBN?

8. Among members of the public, there appears to be a problem with nepotism in the hiring of teachers in the board. Will you look into this issue?

9. The EQAO results in the DSBN are rather troubling, but standardized testing in general is a controversial issue. What do you think of our students' results on the EQAO and about the role of standardized testing overall?

10. Many members of the public are concerned about the level of support for students with special needs. They have also expressed concern about the continuity of staff assigned to particular individuals and the job security of those staff members. What is your position on how the DSBN is doing supporting students who have special needs and the role of Educational Assistants in providing that support?

11. What do you believe is the role of the trustee in supporting participatory democracy and the role of parents in school board operations?

12. Additionally, please provide links to your web site and/or Facebook page and twitter handle.

With kind regards,
Kate Baggott

Hello Ms Baggott,

Before I answer these questions, I would be interested in information about you, and who you represent. The in depth questions that you are asking show me that you are not just an average voter.

BLESSINGS ON YOU

EVA LONGHURST


Psalm 5:3
In the morning, O Lord, you hear my voice;
in the morning I lay my requests before you and
WAIT IN EXPECTATION.


CHOOSE to have A HAPPY DAY

Hi Eva,

I am a writer with children in the DSBN schools. I am in constant contact and discussion with other parents about their concerns all the time. In that sense, I am just an average voter with journalistic experience. I do expect candidates to engage in deep discussion with the electorate, but I do not represent anyone in undertaking this civic duty. I am simply quite shocked by the lack of information available about candidates for DSBN trustee.

Information about my work can be found here: http://www.katebaggott.com

Here is the blog post explaining who I am and what I do on this project: https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog...

:And here are the transcripts of candidate replies that I have posted so far:

https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog...

https://www.goodreads.com/author_blog...

The posts are being and will be shared via twitter and facebook until the day before the election.

All the best,
Kate

This post reflects whom I've decided to endorse and this summary post explains why. As usual, here is a list of all the candidate information posts I wrote to cover the race:

Ajandi, Jennifer



Atamanyk, Gary



Bradnam, Alex



Campbell, Lora



Christie, Adam



Crouch, Linda



Fast, Jonathan



Longhurst, Eva



Sherwin, Al

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Published on October 15, 2014 12:13 Tags: candidates-for-trustee, dsbn-trustee

Cornfields of the Sea

Kate Baggott
When I was in high school, I was lucky enough to be part of a writing workshop with author Barbara Greenwood. Every member of the workshop was to write a short story for a group anthology. I thought w ...more
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