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MEET LINDSAY THOMASSON

Running for Piedmont Board of Education, 2022
Experience:
  • Lindsay Thomasson worked with not-for-profits, private foundations, and non-governmental aid organizations for over 5 years. Her demonstrated organizational skills including ability to lead team-oriented and complex projects have assisted her as she has worked with teams from 35+ countries. [Source: Linkedin]​

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Why are you running?

My education and qualifications are: As the parent of students currently at PMS, Havens, and in preschool, I have held numerous volunteer roles over the past five years, giving me a robust understanding of how our district works, its strengths and weaknesses. I served as Havens’ Parent Club President, on the LCAP Committee, Superintendent Community Advisory Committee, and Wellness Center Committee, to name a few. As a member of PUSD’s Board of Education, my priorities would be to ensure PUSD has the leadership and resources to provide students an excellent, well-rounded academic experience, including the hiring of a superintendent aligned in our goals, and attracting and retaining well-qualified, diverse, engaged educators. This will allow PUSD to truly equip students with the essential critical-thinking, STEAM, and language arts skills needed to succeed at the universities and in the careers of their choosing. I have attended California public schools my entire life, culminating in degrees from Cal Berkeley and UCSD. Piedmont schools are the foundation of our community, yet the past three years have been divisive. To move forward we must engage in meaningful community dialogue, be pragmatic and creative, ensure all stakeholders are engaged in our decision-making processes, and always put students first. [Source]

“Superintendent Booker has led us through an incredibly difficult time as a district [...] Transitions are often bittersweet, however this one provides an opportunity to turn the page,” said Piedmont parent Lindsay Thomasson.

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Piedmont Post - May 18 2022

In public comment at the board meeting, prior to Booker’s statement, a number of parents voiced their support for removing masks indoors when able.

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“Many of the things that make school joyful, the [things we have] memories of as adults, many decades later, have not returned,” said Piedmont parent Lindsay Thomasson, giving examples of school performances, field trips, and classroom parent volunteers.

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“They haven’t ever looked around the class and seen what their classmates’ and teachers’ faces look like. They don’t know what their smiles or frowns look like,” she added.

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Piedmont Post - Feb 16, 2022

From the Piedmont Post
September 21, 2022

 

School Board Election Preview – Candidates’ Q&A

By Jay Russell

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Part two in a series Three candidates are running for two open seats on the Piedmont School Board in the November 8 election.

 

The Piedmont Post will provide extensive coverage on candidates for School Board and for City Council. The Post’s first month of campaign coverage will alternate weekly between City Council and School Board. This week, all School Board candidates were asked to answer the two questions shown below. Due to space limitations, candidates were asked to contain their answers to 150 words per question.

 

QUESTIONS:

1. If elected, how would you utilize the ample amount of parent involvement in Piedmont to benefit the schools?

 

2. PUSD was tasked with finding three new principals and an interim superintendent last summer. What needs to be done to attract and retain top administrators in the district?

LINDSAY THOMASSON

1. Utilizing Parent Involvement

In my roles as Havens Parent Club President, on the Superintendent Advisory Committee, and in numerous volunteer roles, I’ve experienced firsthand PUSD’s parents’ willingness to give generously of their time, money, and talents, including raising millions of dollars annually for PEF. I value this involvement as one of PUSD’s greatest resources.

 

Yet, many parents voice frustration that they aren’t engaged with the district in meaningful ways. There is not a systematic way for parents to have a seat at the table when decisions regarding new courses, curriculum or hiring occur. I will form district sub-committees that have formal application processes, terms, and responsibilities. They will be subject to the Brown Act so will conduct business in public like the board is required to do. They will ensure stakeholder feedback and buy-in throughout the process. I will also work to increase transparency around administrator hiring processes.

 

2. Retaining Administrators

PUSD should conduct exit surveys of all educators, both administrators and teachers, who depart the district. They must be done in a way that educators feel comfortable responding forthrightly. Responses should be shared with the board and superintendent so we can quickly identify and address concerns, and remedy issues.

 

We also need to have robust conversations with all stakeholders to determine our community priorities. What are our goals for our students when they graduate from our schools? Our collective values as they relate to education? When we can articulate these goals, we can hire administrators who support them, and in turn can support our administrators in achieving our collective objectives. Clear direction from the board on goals and objectives, and allocating funds accordingly, is critical. Administrators who feel supported and empowered to work collaboratively with stakeholders are much more likely to apply, and stay, in Piedmont administration and teaching positions.

From the Exedra -

September 30, 2022
 

We asked all city council and school board candidates to fill out a questionnaire to better understand their priorities and positions. Many are hosting meet-and-greets and can be spotted around town — including a League of Women Voters Piedmont School Board forum that was held on Sept. 29 (watch the video HERE) — but if you can’t make it to one of their events, these Q&As are a good starting point.

What is your age and how long have you lived in Piedmont?

I’m 42 years young and have lived in Piedmont for 5 years.

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What you do for work, either in or out of your home?

I worked in management consulting to non-profit organizations, private foundations, and corporate grant-making programs. More recently, I owned a small business before pivoting to dedicate my time to volunteering in our community, primarily in our schools.

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If you have children, do they attend, or have they attended, Piedmont schools? If so, which ones?

I have three children: a 7th grader at PMS, a 2nd grader at Havens, and a three year old who will start kindergarten in the fall of 2024. I will have children in PUSD schools until 2037 – I have a very personal stake in the on-going success of our schools.

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Have you worked or volunteered in Piedmont schools (or elsewhere) previously? If so, in what capacity(ies)?

Experience matters! I have volunteered extensively in our community, primarily in our schools. Since my children started in Piedmont schools five years ago, I have taken on a wide range of volunteer roles. Through these roles I have built key relationships, developed a strong understanding of how our district operates, learned the challenges of balancing oftentimes conflicting interests, and seen first-hand many of the challenges facing our district. 

Some of the leadership roles I have held include: Havens Parent Club President, parent representative on the Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP) and Superintendent Community Advisory Committees (SCAC), and Wellness Center Support Committee (WCSC) co-leader. I have also worked with SERVES to expand our community services efforts beyond Piedmont’s borders.

What does public education mean to you?

I am a firm believer in the transformative power of quality public education. It should empower students to achieve their fullest potential as productive citizens and provide all students with what they need to be successful in the university or career of their choosing regardless of ethnicity, gender, race, religious affiliation, or ability. Public schools are a melting pot for our broader communities where students with a diverse set of experiences, perspectives, and priorities come together to learn not only from their teachers, but to collaborate with one another. 

I attended California public schools from kindergarten through graduate school, culminating in a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science from UC Berkeley and a Master’s Degree in International Affairs with an emphasis on Non-Profit Management and Public Policy from UC San Diego. California public schools have given me a strong foundation to succeed; they should offer the same opportunities to future generations.

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What inspires you to run for office?

My extensive volunteer work within the community has given me a front row seat to PUSD’s strengths and challenges. Getting involved and creating solutions is critical to effective leadership. Now more than ever, we must prioritize meaningful community dialogue, be pragmatic, proactive, and creative, ensuring all stakeholders are engaged in the decision-making processes, while making certain the students’ needs come first.

We have not had an individual with current elementary or middle school students on the Board for some time; I have both. It is critical that we have a parent with students in the district as part of the superintendent hiring process and the ongoing decisions that affect our students and schools.

My experience has shown me where the levers of change are in PUSD. I will work to ensure the district is sustainable and in a position to offer the exceptional, well-rounded educational experience the PUSD community expects for our students now and into the future.

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What are your qualifications to be on the School Board? Any special skills or experience the voters should know about?

In a recent meeting, Superintendent Evans acutely observed that “Piedmont is a community built on relationships.” I have spent the past five years building and investing in relationships in this community both as a parent who has taken an active role in the community and through my significant volunteer experiences. Through these key stakeholder relationships, I’ve developed a strong understanding of how our district operates, learned the challenges of balancing oftentimes conflicting interests, and seen first-hand many of the challenges facing our district. My endorsements list speaks volumes about the community members who have stepped up with enthusiastic support for my campaign.

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What do you see as the most challenging issues currently facing the school district?

Given a national teacher shortage and because a significant number of Piedmont’s most experienced teachers are retiring in the next few years, our ability to recruit and retain excellent, diverse, engaged educators will be critical to PUSD’s continued ability to provide academic excellence to all its students. There is ample evidence that teacher quality directly affects student outcomes. I am committed to ensuring we have high quality teachers, particularly in hard-to-hire positions.

Moreover, the pandemic left our community divided, and deprived us of the opportunities to come together, discuss our priorities, find commonalities, and develop tangible solutions to some of our most pressing challenges. We must find our way back to the Piedmont community ethos of “yes we can!” and the sentiment that we are all on the same team. Division is harmful to our community and students; we need leadership that will prioritize transparency, constructive dialogue and stakeholder engagement.

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What do you see as strengths of the Piedmont schools?

Our schools are the bedrock of our community and the strong reputation of our schools is the primary reason many families move to Piedmont. The Piedmont community’s engagement with its schools is second to none – this community investment, by Piedmonters both with and without students in PUSD schools – is rare and is one of our greatest strengths. 

Additionally, both parents and teachers generally have high expectations for their students and are willing to provide support to help them succeed. We have historically been a “destination district” meaning we have been able to attract and retain high quality teachers, many of whom have made their careers in PUSD. Our new high school campus provides incredible opportunities to our students to learn in a twenty-first century environment to help prepare them for their future careers.

 

What will be your top priority if elected?

My top priority will be ensuring that PUSD schools are a place where all students are able to thrive. This requires that we have a rigorous academic program taught by excellent teachers with robust social-emotional support in a caring and inclusive environment.

Specifically, I will achieve this by working to:

  1. Provide all PUSD students with an excellent, well-rounded academic experience with the essential STEAM, language arts, and critical thinking skills necessary to succeed at the universities and in the careers of their choosing;

  2. Support robust social-emotional learning to ensure students develop positive relationships, healthy identities and make responsible decisions;

  3. Rebuild trust and accountability, ensuring transparency across the district and between stakeholders with the right policies and processes; 

  4. Attract and retain excellent, diverse, and engaged educators; and

  5. Consistently engage all key stakeholder groups, working collaboratively as decisions are made.

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Do you see yourself being especially involved in any particular school issue or program, whether or not it’s your top priority?

I have a strong interest in the curriculum adoption process, specifically putting structures in place so that stakeholders feel engaged and invested in new curriculum. There is widespread stakeholder agreement that the current process is broken. The top-down model that has been in place for some time has resulted in a lack of trust amongst teachers and parents alike. Teachers have shared with me that they don’t feel that they are engaged or consulted in curriculum adoption processes.

Similarly, parents feel that they are completely shut out of decisions about curriculum adoption and are only consulted after a decision has been made – there is scarce opportunity for meaningful feedback, including from community experts. At a minimum, the Curriculum Adoption Committee, which last met in 2014, should be revived as a collaborative forum for stakeholders to collaborate around curriculum adoption.

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If you are elected to the School Board, you will be involved in the search for a new superintendent. What will you look for in a candidate?

I will look for a candidate with successful teaching and administrative experience leading a district like Piedmont. The candidate will be a consensus builder who views engaged stakeholders as a strength, and who is able to navigate between an invested parent population and meet the needs of district educators, administrators and staff, while putting students first. 

Specific qualities I will look for are:

  1. A visionary with dedication to and plan for providing educational excellence to our students to equip them to thrive in the twenty-first century universities and careers of their choosing;

  2. An inspirational leader who is passionate about creating a learning environment which encourages each student to reach their full potential while enjoying learning; 

  3. Someone who recognizes the importance of having strong social-emotional supports in place and is experienced in creating an inclusive learning environment; 

  4. A firm commitment to transparency;

  5. Financial intelligence.

  6. ​

Student surveys show many Piedmont students are struggling after the pandemic. How should PUSD work to resolve lingering learning loss and mental health challenges?

We should have strong systems in place to monitor for early student warning signs paired with evidence-based interventions to help students recover both emotionally and academically.

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PUSD must determine what learning loss has occurred and be transparent with parents so we can collectively work towards resolution. To address learning loss, PUSD should provide high-quality instruction based on current and comprehensive evidence. Evidence shows that learning loss is likely to show up differently across grades and subjects; interventions should vary accordingly. Research-backed solutions including supportive school environments, high-dose tutoring, and extended learning time interventions help accelerate learning loss recovery. 

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Similarly, PUSD should be providing proactive social-emotional lessons to help kids cope with stress and anxiety paired with enhanced support through the Wellness Center for those identified to be at elevated risk for mental health challenges.

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Teacher recruitment and retention has been a challenge for Piedmont in recent years. What should Piedmont do to improve this situation?

Research shows that an effective teacher is the most important factor contributing to student achievement. Ensuring we offer competitive teacher compensation packages – both pay and benefits – is critical. We should review our district budget annually to identify the changes and compromises we must make to pay our teachers a competitive wage. Inadequate teacher pay is a statewide issue; the status quo is unsustainable. We must figure out how to maximize teacher pay with PUSD’s limited resources while also demanding that the state provides funds for all districts to pay teachers a living wage.

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Moreover, our teachers must feel supported by the parents and community as a whole. The past two years have been divisive; finding our way back to a place of mutual respect and collaboration is critical to ensuring that PUSD is a desirable district for teachers to work in.

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PUSD’s budget depends on state and local funding. What would you do to ensure our funding is robust?

The cost of educating a Piedmont student will be $21,478 next year: with 9% funded by the Giving Campaign, 28% by parcel taxes, and 63% by the state.

Our schools are the reason many families move to Piedmont. Ensuring PUSD provides opportunities for all students to thrive is critical not only to attracting families to the district but keeping students enrolled. Strong enrollment is tied directly to state funds, parent donations, and community support.

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The School Board should actively collaborate with other districts to lobby for state funding. In 2021, California ranked 36th nationally in per-pupil funding. California spent an average of $11,269 per pupil compared with $20,610 in New York and $16,984 in Massachusetts. It is critical that our state invest more in our schools.

Finally, we should have a financial advisory committee composed of a set group of stakeholders with robust financial skills that meet at a regular intervals, similar to what Ross has established.

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How should PUSD tackle the issue of declining enrollment?

The enrollment decline is multi-faceted. Not only is enrollment declining statewide, and in the Bay Area in particular, but our schools also lost students to private schools during pandemic-related school closures. Yet, while campaigning, I have met a number of new families who have recently moved to Piedmont specifically for the schools. Ensuring that Piedmont remains a destination district is critical. 

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As families move into the district, we should ensure they feel included in the community, and work to understand what brought them here so that we can hone our strengths as a district. Similarly, when families leave the district, we should conduct “exit interviews” to understand why they are leaving. While these responses will undoubtedly vary, and it is impossible for a district to have a zero percent attrition rate, as we see trends we should actively work to find solutions to prevent further attrition.

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The current board and administration have redoubled their commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion. How do you think the Board should support these goals?

For students to learn effectively, they need to feel supported and like they belong. Havens Principal Anne Dolid summarized her DEIB goal in a way that resonated with me. She aims for all Havens’ elementary students to reflect and say “my elementary school experience was amazing, everyone knew me and I belonged.” 

Although students’ needs change as they progress into middle and high school, the need to feel supported, included, and engaged does not. It is essential that we come together in discussion and define our DEIB objectives and how we will meet them so the greater community feels invested in the outcomes.

We must reconcile the misguided tension between academic excellence and DEIB; this is not an “either/or” scenario. All families that I have met with want their students to learn in a rigorous academic environment that meets students where they are at and provides appropriate support so that students can achieve their fullest potential in their universities, careers, and beyond

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California’s most recent attempt to overhaul the state’s math curriculum framework has sparked debate. How do you think PUSD should approach K-12 math instruction?

In the most recent Program for International Student Assessment rankings, the US ranked 38th in math. The crisis is more dire in CA which ranks in the bottom quartile among states for 8th grade math scores.

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CA’s goal of improving math outcomes, particularly for disadvantaged students, is overdue. However the proposed framework is entirely untested. Over 430 academic staff members at colleges and universities, including UC Berkeley, Caltech and Stanford, recently signed a statement criticizing the framework and argued it will inadequately prepare students for college-level math courses and exacerbate existing racial and gender disparities in STEM.

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CA should look to states that have strong math outcomes and model its framework on their proven successes. PUSD should use evidence-based curriculum, particularly for core math, instead of adopting an untested framework. We should continue to offer differentiated math pathways while working towards improving math outcomes for all students.

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School Board members must navigate a wide range of parent opinions and demands. How will you handle those pressures?

The key criteria for being a strong Board Member is the ability to conduct research, take differing perspectives into account, and make a well-educated decision that puts our students’ needs first. Serving as Havens Parent Club President during the 2020-21 school year was a crash course in juggling parent demands. There was extreme community division during that time and, as a parent club president, I was responsible for taking all perspectives into account and ultimately for advocating for the best interest of our students. 

I have subsequently served on the Superintendent Community Advisory Committee, site council and as a LCAP Parent Representative, in addition to other volunteer roles. I have honed my ability to listen to all perspectives and make decisions in the best interest of our students and community. I will lean on community support groups to provide me with information and data to make well-educated decisions.

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Is there anything else you’d like to share with voters about your candidacy?

I am proud to raise my family in Piedmont. My desire to serve on the school board stems from a desire to serve this community that I love. The outpouring of support my campaign has received is humbling. I aim to run my campaign in the same way that I will serve as a School Board Member, with honesty, respect, and dignity. As a community leader, our kids look to us as role models; I take that responsibility seriously. I don’t have all the answers, but I will work collaboratively and in good faith with all stakeholders to do what is best for all Piedmont students.

Please share your candidate website and email with voters.

https://www.lindsayforpusd.com | lindsay@lindsayforpusd.com

From the Piedmont Post
October 5, 2022

 

Part four in a series


As the Post’s coverage of the local election enters its fourth week, the school board returns to the focus. Fresh off their League
of Women Voters online forum on Thursday night, the three candidates are hitting high gear in their campaigns for the two open
seats.


Every week, two questions are sent out on Thursday and candidates are instructed to limit their answers to under 150 words.
 

Week 4 QUESTIONS
1. Piedmont schools are constantly making adjustments to class offerings, recent new
classes include: Guitar Engineering, Entomology, Financial Literacy and Film as Literature. If you could pitch a new class for any grade level, what would it be?


2. The teachers union just reached a tentative agreement with the district for a 7.5% raise. What else can the school district do now and what needs to be done moving forward to recruit and retain
the highest quality teachers in Piedmont?

RUCHI MEDHEKAR

1. Your idea for a new course at PUSD?

I would first and foremost engage our secondary students and ask what courses they would like to take that PUSD isn’t currently offering. In developing a list of potential options, I would look to neighboring schools (both public and private), specifically at hands-on, project-based courses with an emphasis on math, science, and engineering courses to take full advantage of our beautiful new high school STEAM building. Some new course ideas I would explore pitching include:

  • design engineering

  • mechanical engineering

  • introduction to algorithms

  • video game development

  • software for social good

  • product design

  • design for sustainability

  • climate change and climate action

  • environmental economics

  • interdisciplinary studies of science

  • introduction to entrepreneurship

  • cryptology

  • game theory

 

I would also like to explore increasing our foreign language offerings at all grade levels, including in elementary school.


2. Retaining Teachers

Research shows that an effective teacher is the most important factor contributing to student achievement. Ensuring we offer competitive teacher compensation packages – both pay and benefits – is critical. We should review PUSD’s budget annually to identify changes and compromises we must make to pay our teachers a competitive wage with PUSD’s limited resources while advocating for the state to provide sufficient funds for all districts to compensate educators adequately.

 

When a teacher leaves the district, we should conduct an exit interview to understand why they are leaving. We should actively work to find solutions to prevent further attrition.

 

Finally, our teachers must feel supported by parents and the community as a whole. The past few years have been divisive; finding our way back to a place of mutual respect and collaboration is essential to ensuring that PUSD is a desirable district for teachers to work in.

From the Piedmont Post
October 12, 2022

 

Part five in a series

 

With Election Day less than four weeks away the Piedmont Post has escalated its coverage of the two local elections, school board and city council. Starting this week and until the election on Tuesday November 8, this Candidate Q & A section will feature weekly answers from the school board candidates. Two questions are sent out on Thursday via email and candidates are instructed to limit their answers to under 150 words.

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Week 5

SCHOOL BOARD

Two open seats; three candidates.

 

QUESTIONS – Week 5

 

1. Piedmont High School’s football team recently had to cancel its Homecoming football game. The team’s entire season is in jeopardy and the school’s 100-year-old program is in danger. What do you think needs to be done to continue the tradition, and how can you assist?

 

2. In February 2019, the School Board voted 4-1 against accepting $390,000 in federal funds to staff an armed police officer on campus. Do you see value in having an armed officer on campus? What is your view on campus safety?

LINDSAY THOMASSON

1. Football program in jeopardy?

It is my understanding, based on conversations with football families, that the cancellation of the homecoming game and premature end to the season was the culmination of a number of factors. The varsity football team has few junior players due to the cancellation of practices during COVID; football was much slower to return than other sports. As players were injured, there wasn’t a sufficient number of substitutes and the team was forced to forfeit games. Fortunately, there is a very strong string of sophomore players, many of whom played in varsity games this year. There is also significant interest in middle school flag football which feeds into the high school football program. This, along with robust community support for high school sports, bodes well for the sustainability of the football program.

 

Football Fridays are one of my favorite Piedmont traditions. It was incredibly disappointing for the entire community for the homecoming game to be canceled. Yet, I appreciate how the high school was able to change to a homecoming girls volleyball game instead, particularly given ongoing discussions about Title IX and recognition that girls sports should receive equal resources and recognition.

 

2. Campus Safety and Armed Officer on Campus?

I reached out to Chief Bowers last month to discuss the relationship between the Piedmont Police Department and Piedmont School District. He explained that the relationship is generally collaborative and strong. However, he would like to see [the district] form a threat assessment team, something districts nationwide are implementing in an effort to identify and prevent violent incidents on school campuses. These multi-disciplinary teams are made up of police officers, school counselors, county mental health professionals, and teachers. The School Board, in conjunction with the district and PPD, should make establishment of a threat assessment team a priority; prevention should be our primary objective.

 

I am unconvinced that an armed officer would make our campuses safer and may, counterintuitively, provide a false sense of security. We’re fortunate that PPD is centrally located in close proximity to our schools; they can and do respond quickly to issues that arise. That said, in addition to the creation of a threat response team, It is essential that we continually review our school safety plans and have regular earthquake, fire, and lockdown drills so that everyone on our school campuses is prepared to act quickly if an incident occurs.

From Piedmont Connect 
October 18, 2022

 

Hello Candidates,

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Thank you for offering to run for Piedmont City Council and School Board and to serve as a volunteer for our community. 

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Piedmont Connect is a non-profit organization based in town that advocates for sustainability policies in city and PUSD operations as well as engages our community in sustainability awareness. To that end, we consider it especially important for city leaders to address certain key sustainability issues.

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The Connect Board and its membership would be interested in your answers to the following questions.

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Thank you for your commitment to Piedmont and we’d be happy to answer any questions you have. Piedmont Connect is a 501(c)3 organization and cannot endorse political candidates.

Piedmont Connect Board of Directors

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Question 1: Would you be in favor of a board resolution for all PUSD students K-12 to learn about the impacts of climate change and actions they can take to reduce the impacts? If so, how would you garner support to pass such a learning requirement and curriculum adjustment? 

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Lindsay Thomasson:

That climate change is happening is undeniable. Our children and future generations will bear the impact of decisions we make now. Internationally, young people are demanding climate action. One study found that if only 16 percent of high school students in high- and middle-income countries were to receive climate change education, we could see a nearly 19 gigaton reduction of carbon dioxide by 2050.

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In a recent Piedmont Post response about classes I would like to explore adding to our PHS/MHS course offerings, I included a number of environment-focused classes, including: design for sustainability; climate change and climate action; and environmental economics. However, with our PHS science program already struggling, and with our elementary teachers in the process of implementing a new science curriculum, I am not confident that the district has the bandwidth to add another science curricular mandate at this time. I also believe that top-down mandates are rarely as effective as creating classes that students want to take. Instead of passing a learning requirement, we should be tapping into and supporting students’ desire to learn about a subject on their own. 

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Additionally, we should be looking not only at what we can do to make Piedmont more sustainable, but also what we can do to educate and provide opportunities for students to pursue careers in sustainability in the future. These career paths can include finance, corporate roles, even production. Educating students about the various career paths for sustainability, will help increase demand for classes in this field.

I also encourage community groups, like Piedmont Connect, to work in conjunction with our schools, whether by providing opportunities for hands-on learning at the elementary level or providing internships and other aligned opportunities at the secondary level. It would be incredible for Piedmont Connect to organize an Earth Day celebration in our community with hands-on exhibits and other opportunities for the community to learn more about sustainability initiatives in Piedmont and how we as a community can lean in to support these initiatives. As a School Board member I would enthusiastically support community partnerships to help achieve shared objectives.

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Question 2: What actions will you take to establish objectives and a concrete plan with a realistic timeline for transitioning to a zero-carbon school district in the next decade?

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Lindsay Thomasson:

This would be an excellent opportunity for PUSD to partner with local sustainability-oriented groups, including Piedmont Connect, to develop ideas to help us make that transition. Ultimately, we must have community buy-in for an initiative like this to be effective. Our students, as the ultimate stakeholders in our schools, should have a significant voice in how we achieve these goals.

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As a School Board member, my job is to listen to community input, and help champion ideas and initiatives. I would welcome the opportunity to meet with Piedmont Connect members to discuss the organization's goals, objectives, and how you envision the transition to a zero-carbon school district. I do not have a background in sustainability or environmental sciences and thus do not feel that I have the expertise necessary to present a concrete plan or timeline for achieving a net-zero school district.

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This is also an area where we should look beyond Piedmont. We are fortunate to have ample green spaces in our city while many of our neighboring communities do not. There is abundant evidence about the benefit of green spaces - how could we partner with schools in Oakland to help them build gardens or develop green spaces for their communities? This would be an opportunity to get a number of community support groups together to achieve shared goals.

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Question 3: PHS/MHS Green Club students raised over $60K towards solar panels on the new STEAM building. What are some of your ideas to raise the $400K plus funds needed to complete this project?

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Lindsay Thomasson:

It is very unfortunate that the solar panels were removed from the STEAM building due to budget cuts. I am extremely impressed with the $60K the students have raised thus far. As there are currently many initiatives vying for community support in Piedmont, the Green Club should look at some outside-the-box ideas for funding the remaining $400K+ for the solar panels.  

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One option is to look at grant funds to pay for at least some of the cost of the solar panels.  Are there state funds? Federal funds? Local corporations that may be willing to make a grant? Whereas many grants are designated for low income schools, sustainability needs to occur where the infrastructure exists - Piedmont has that infrastructure in our new STEAM building. Another idea is to identify an individual donor who would provide a matching or challenge grant. For example, if the students were able to come up with $200K (perhaps through a grant as suggested above), the donor would match funds raised. 

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Question 4: How will you support the district to ensure compliance with SB 1383, the state law requiring the prevention, reduction, recycling and recovery of organic waste?

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Lindsay Thomasson:

It would be interesting to conduct an environmental audit of our schools to determine what steps we could take to reduce our footprint. The World Wildlife Fund has a free tool that allows students to conduct an environmental audit and more detailed pathway audits of their school. An audit would help us to understand where our strengths and challenges exist so that we can develop a more robust plan to address them.

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Organics like food scraps, yard trimmings, paper, and cardboard make up half of what Californians dump in landfills. With the new universal school lunch program, we have a unique opportunity to ensure that all materials used in the production of our school lunches are compostable. Using both reusable and/or compostable materials while preparing and serving students is essential at helping to meet the objectives of this law. Moreover, ensuring that our janitorial staff are recycling all cardboard boxes, paper, and other recyclables at every opportunity should further help us to achieve this goal.

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Question 5: Transportation is one of the largest elements of Piedmont’s in-boundary greenhouse gas emissions inventory. Many parents drive students to and from our schools which are a mile or less from their homes. What will you do to reduce car traffic and miles traveled to-and-from our schools in gas-powered vehicles?

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Lindsay Thomasson:

The reasons parents drive their students to and from school are varied. However, as I have discussed this issue with parents, I have heard significant concerns about traffic safety around our schools: improving traffic safety around our schools will be critical in convincing parents that it is safe for their students to walk to school. 

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Last year, when I served on the Havens Traffic Safety Committee, one idea that surfaced was walking school buses, where parents pool together and take turns walking students to and from school. This would provide additional safety and convenience to families who would like for their students to walk to school but are not confident that it is safe for them to do so on their own. It is also a lot more fun and community-building for students to walk in groups.

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Another common reason that parents drive their kids to and from school is the need to get them quickly to after school activities. Bringing back charter buses, like those that took students to Highlands soccer practices in Alameda before the pandemic, is another option that should be considered to reduce miles traveled to and from school. Additionally, we should consider adding secure bike racks around our campuses and encourage students, particularly those who live further from school, to bike to school. 

Finally, this is an excellent community education opportunity. While many in Piedmont are environmentally-minded, we are all prone to choosing convenience over environmental-responsibility at times. Helping to educate the greater community about the impact of these choices, perhaps in conjunction with our high school Green Team, is an excellent first step towards reducing miles driven in town.

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