"A group is trying to take over the Medford schools. I'm trying to stop them, and just elect people who want good schools."
Neighborhood door-walker
That is the message of a door-to-door campaign volunteer meeting voters in East Medford.
Walking door-to-door during a special election campaign is both frustrating and enlightening.
Frustrating, because the door-to-door canvasser -- let's call him Bill -- knocked on 70 doors this week and discovered that not a single person he spoke with had a clear idea who was running for school board, and what the issues were, if any.
Illuminating, because Bill said he met friendly people happy to visit about the state of the country, of whom about a third said they expected to vote in this local election even though they didn't know much.
The special election elects candidates for the library district, school board districts, the transportation district, the community college district, fire districts, and more. Ballots were mailed two weeks ago. They are due by May 20.
A voters pamphlet, with a short statement of candidacy by each candidate, is sent to every household about the time that ballots arrived. It is also available online. Here is mine, in Jackson County. Click.
Bill, the neighborhood door-knocker, has no special relationship to the candidates he was hoping would win. He had met them at candidate forums. He told me they seemed "normal," "intelligent," "well-intended." He put them in a general category of "responsible public-spirited citizens" -- the sort of people he thought would hire a reasonable new school superintendent to replace the one who resigned amid the growing culture war disruptions taking place at school board meetings.
Bill's favored candidates are Angela Zbikowski, Sandra LaNier McHenry, and Cynthia Wright.
Bill sees the disruption at school board meetings as part of the larger, populist war of opposition to professionalism and expertise, whether about vaccinations or education. There is a national movement to remove material that acknowledges past prejudices against Native Americans, Blacks, Asians, and other non-White people from libraries and curriculum. It is why baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson and the Black Tuskegee Airmen got scrubbed from federal websites. It isn't that Jackie Robinson and Black pilots did not exist. It is that recognizing that they overcame prejudice puts the White Americans who supported slavery, Jim Crow segregation, and broken treaties with Native Americans in a bad light. Students might feel less patriotic. White students might get a sense that they benefited from privilege.
So, who does Bill hope does NOT win election?
In Position One, Curt Ankerberg is well known locally. His voters pamphlet reflects his opinionated pugnaciousness. Less well known, but more potentially disruptive than Ankerberg, is another former office-seeker, Logan Leverette Vaughan. Running in the same position is Cheyla Breedlove. Her voters pamphlet statement leaves unacknowledged that her husband, Donovan Donnally, is also a candidate for the school board in Position Two. They are a mini voting bloc. Both Breedlove and Donnally received close questioning at a candidate forum, with questions designed to tease out to what degree they intended to bring a Christian nationalist agenda to their potential board service. They are widely suspected of that intention, but they answered questions carefully, saying that they respected a separation between church and public education. Bill heard them and doesn't believe them.
In Position One, there is a safer, better alternative to those candidates: Angela Zbikowski. She is the one Bill recommended to his neighbors.
In Position Two, Sanda LaNier McHenry is a candidate and the alternative to Donnally, so she is the one Bill recommended as the better choice.
Position Three has three candidates. Taryne Saunders also attended that candidate forum I attended. She presented herself as the angry outsider, someone whose comments at prior board meetings got her banned from the meetings. She said her removal was unjust. Her voters pamphlet language emphasized "working with," but her tone at the forum -- and her past behavior -- suggests she intends to be a disrupter.
There are two alternatives to Saunders in Position Three. Erik Johnsen is recommended by the Medford Education Association -- the teachers union -- and Cynthia Wright, a long-established veteran of the school board. Bill's own orientation is toward continuity and stability and attention to the task of hiring a new superintendent, so he prefers Wright.
Bill's preferences may not be the same as other local readers. People who want a real shakeup, one that redirects the Medford schools toward MAGA culture wars, and perhaps a surprising out-of-right-field new school superintendent, would probably do best to do the opposite of Bill. Voters who think that school board meetings would profit from continued disruption and conflict might choose to vote for Curt Ankerberg or Cheyla Breedlove in Position One, Donovan Donnally in Position Two, and Taryne Saunders in Position Three.
I personally am looking for stability and low conflict. I don't want school libraries and curriculum whitewashed. I don't want police to need to be stationed at school board meetings to keep order.
Like Bill, I voted for Angela Zbikowski, Sandra LaNier McHenry, and Cynthia Wright.