A Quickie This and That, November 15, 2025

Update:

Via The Seattle Times:

Tyran Stokes, the No. 1 nationally ranked boys basketball recruit, has enrolled at Rainier Beach for his high school senior season and was on campus Thursday, according to multiple reports. 

The 6-7, 230-pound small forward joins a decorated program that went 28-3 last season en route to winning its 10th state title.

We've heard this story many times from RBHS as well as from Nathan Hale HS and from Garfield HS and it doesn't always turn out well. But always, best of luck to RBHS. Re Stokes:

Stokes is eligible to play for Rainier Beach per the WIAA rulebook’s section 18.12.2.1, which requires “a student whose transfer to a new school or school district is based on a bona fide change of residence to a new school or school district due to an actual physical relocation of and with the entire family unit to a different residence and coupled with termination of all occupancy of their previous residence.”

Stokes withdrew from Notre Dame in Sherman Oaks, Calif., in early November after “facing disciplinary issues at the school, including altercations with students,” according to Sports Illustrated’s Tarek Fattal.

“He served a suspension that kept him sidelined during multiple high school football games this season, and has not been at school this week, according to sources close to the situation,” Fattel added.

end of update

First, I was looking over the district calendar and saw two items in December worth noting.  

1) The new Board members will be installed on December 3, 2025 at a Special Board meeting, starting at 4:30 pm. 

2) I took a count of days (including weekends) for the Winter Break. It comes out to 16 days because somehow, there will be three weekends in this break. Good luck, parents. 

3) The Seattle Times had an editorial entitled: 

Philanthropy done right for the benefit of WA kids

The Washington Legislature’s commitment to our youngest residents, while well-intended, has faltered in recent years as lawmakers prioritize other spending. This editorial page has long lamented that trend, and now finally some soul-raising good news on that front from philanthropy — with teeth.

On Wednesday, Gov. Bob Ferguson unveiled a new partnership between Washington and philanthropists at the Ballmer Group to expand early childhood education. Founded by former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and his wife, Connie, the foundation will pay for up to 10,000 more low-income children in the state’s Early Childhood Education and Assistance Program, known as ECEAP.

Near-term, the partnership rescues ECEAP after repeated cutbacks made by state lawmakers. Looking further out, the Ballmers’ investment could reverberate for generations, improving more children’s school trajectory, their adult lives and, ultimately, the state’s economy.

That’s the stated aim of philanthropy, to deploy private money in ways that make a difference to society. But it doesn’t always happen. Often, foundations fund pet projects for a limited time, then move on to something else.

So this offering by the Ballmer Group means more stable funding. However, there is also this brilliant part:

But there’s a catch: If the Legislature cuts one dollar of existing money for ECEAP, the Ballmers’ grant evaporates. 

That’s leverage, using private money in a savvy way to improve public policy.

I agree. While I think it might be better overall to tax the rich but this is still a good thing.  

4) One thing I noticed recently while listening to a Board meeting - they stopped doing the pledge of allegiance. Thinking about it, that might have been during the Hampson Board years. I assume the land acknowledgment is the substitute but it's hard to know why when the Board itself doesn't acknowledge it (at least not to my memory). Does it matter?

Lastly, I know quite well that I am not "on the ground" in Seattle. I also know that I am not an SPS parent any longer. 

But I'm the ONLY one who covers all this stuff. 

There is probably no one outside JSCEE who  reads the BEX/BTA committee minutes but me and Chris Jackins. 

There is no one who covers nearly every single meeting, gavel to gavel, but me and Jackins. And I even do a write-up of the highlights or live blog. 

Because public education has become such a larger issue nationally, I've covered state and federal stories for years.  I even went to hear Betsy DeVoss speak.

So when I read elsewhere that "no one" is covering public education in Seattle, I get beyond miffed or annoyed. I get upset.

I do welcome and applaud all the current activist SPS parents out there. 

But I would appreciate the mention that I've been doing this work for a very long while.  I rarely see that happen and it's insulting. 

You know who you are. Do better. 

Comments

Anonymous said…
You and Chris Jackins are definitely not the only ones reading BEX/BTA committee minutes.

But hey, at least you didn't knock on Kathleen Smith's door and ask her to run for the school board, handing Liza Rankin a crucial ally and removing Sarah Clark from the board, as Chris Jackins supposedly did. So at least you have that going for you. Nobody still here in Seattle will ever trust or work with Chris Jackins again because of that colossal mistake.

Truth Squad
I’ll be interested to see if Smith will be the disaster you think she will be. I mean her learning curve will be huge but aligning with Rankin? We’ll see.

Great that others are reading those minutes but I have a bully pulpit to call it out.
Anonymous said…
Democrats passed $9B in new taxes. The nine billion tax increase represents the largest tax increase in state history. While passing the largest tax hike, Olympia Democrats eliminated funding for a successful foster program (Tree House), ECAP, care for drug addicted babies and medicaid funding.

Ballmer is bailing out the state. I'm glad that he won't allow any funding to get diverted.

Special thanks to Melissa. She has been a dedicated servant for over two decades. Melissa covers Seattle Public Schools like no other.

~ Failing Mark for Democrats
Benjamin Lukoff said…
Truth Squad, why did Jackins (supposedly) do that?
Anonymous said…
Benjamin, nobody yet knows, but that's the big question. It boggled my mind when I heard it.

And Melissa, if you want people to take you seriously and give you credit, you also need to show you know what you're talking about. When you say "we'll see" about aligning with Rankin, you're showing that you don't.

Smith has been aligning herself with Rankin for the last six months. Those of us actually here on the ground in Seattle have seen this up close and in person on the campaign trail. Her campaign manager is a close Rankin ally and Smith herself takes her cues from Rankin.

In June she told the Rainy Day Recess podcast that Rankin is who she most wants to work with. Her website is full of Rankin-speak. The section on school closures is very similar to what Rankin has said on the subject. In October Smith's answers to the Seattle Times on school lunch closures, a long word salad about the board not interfering in operations, was almost verbatim what Rankin said at a board meeting on the subject. Either Rankin actually wrote that answer for Smith (which is what I suspect) or she is already so closely in alignment with Rankin that she's able to say the same thing herself. Either way, it's clear that Smith is allied to Rankin, and you're inaccurate to claim otherwise.

Truth Squad
1) I've been right more than wrong for a very long time. I don't get to get it wrong sometimes? That's a high bar but at least I sign my name to all that I write. 2) I listened to that podcast and Smith said it was because Rankin asked the most questions which is actually true most of the time. I do find Smith's choice of manager troubling.

Calendar Reader said…
Winter break always has three weekends. It's two weeks and the weekends before, between, and after.
Calendar, not when my kids were in school. I know this because one son has a birthday very close to Christmas and he was in school for it.

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