THE SPOKESMAN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 2021 P5 School board, Part 2: All candidates for Positions 3-4 would be newcomers to elected office All six candidates running for positions 3 and 4 inter- viewed in this article have never served on the board, and none have held elected office. Position 3 Jill Cummings said she is fa- miliar with both the financial world — she’s an administrator with Summit Bank — and, as a mother of two Redmond stu- dents, the education world. “I think we’re dealing with the two most important things to most people: their kids and money,” said Cummings, 41. “I feel uniquely qualified with both.” Two of Cummings’ main concerns about Redmond schools deal with the ripple ef- fects of COVID-19: learning loss and falling enrollment. The student population fell by 400 this school year, and the district is only planning for about 250 of those students to return in September. State funding is tied to student population. “For budgets, that’s going to wreak havoc,” Cummings said of the enrollment drop. Lavon Medlock, a health care administrator for St. Charles Health Services and a mother of two Elton Gregory Middle School students, said her pas- sion for education started early. Growing up in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, her par- ents told her that education could provide opportunity, and encouraged her to attend col- lege in the United States. “It opened doors to me that otherwise wouldn’t have been opened, and I want to create that same opportunity for stu- dents locally,” Medlock, 43, said. Medlock is a member of Redmond School District’s equity task force, which was formed in September 2020 to address inequities in local ed- ucation. Celebrating diversity — whether it’s diversity of race, gender or thought — is import- ant for helping local students succeed in the modern world, Cummings Gonzalez she said. Ron Osmundson, a day- care co-owner and former assistant football coach at Ridgeview High School, said he was prompted to run for school board after being dis- mayed from seeing online school first-hand. If elected, he hopes to make some curric- ulum changes that are easier for younger students and have a heavier emphasis on post- school adult life, he said. “A lot of the curriculum was tough on students, like they didn’t understand,” said Os- mundson, 40. “Sometimes the teacher was a little too strict and was starting to get un- nerved with students.” Osmundson has three chil- dren, with the oldest expected to start kindergarten at Sage El- ementary School in the fall. He ran for Redmond City Council in November 2020, landing in fifth place out of nine candi- dates with about 11.5% of the vote. He is currently an ap- pointed member of the city’s budget committee. One of Osmundson’s top is- sues with Redmond schools are Lawson Lopez high schools hosting vaccine clinics without requiring paren- tal consent, he said. “What scares me is that these kids are able to make these decisions without getting any kind of guidance or any kind of thought into it by their parents,” he said. “They’ll just do it by themselves or be pressed under peer pressure to get them.” Position 4 Oscar Gonzalez, currently a staffer with Bend nonprofit Latino Community Associa- tion, was an administrator for the KIPP Academy charter school in Houston in the ‘90s and ‘00s. That school had stu- dents attend class during sum- mer to keep them from losing knowledge — and that’s some- thing he’d like to implement in Redmond. “It’s just a radical, revolu- tionary concept that worked, especially for our kids, who were already two or three years behind,” said Gonzalez, 60. “I really feel strongly that kids taking summer off is so anti- quated.” Gonzalez’s children are Ways you can support Thelma’s Place: • Vehicle donations • Cash donations • Sponsorships • Volunteer CHILD CARE AN INTERGENERATIONAL PROGRAM Your support makes a difference! Redmond: 541-548-3049 Day Respite and Support Groups www.thelmasplace.org Medlock Osmundson grown adults, he said. Gonzalez also believes the Redmond School Board — which is entirely white — needs Latino representation. As of October 2019, 18% of Red- mond students identified as Latino or Hispanic. “A lot of kids that typically fall through the cracks ... I don’t think they really had much of a voice at the table,” said Gonza- lez, who identifies as Latino. “I felt compelled to be that voice.” Carmen Lawson is the only teacher running for a Red- mond board seat — she teaches kindergarten at Madras Ele- mentary School. She believes that experience gives her an advantage in figuring out how to best help students and keep Redmond teachers happy. “I can collaborate well with staff and teachers and admin- istrators, and understand the stressors they’re in, because it’s the job I do every day,” said Lawson, 42. “Whatever deci- sions (the board) is making, it affects the workplace of a teacher, and the workplace of a teacher is the environment of students’ learning.” Lawson has three sons in Redmond schools: one each at Redmond High School, Elton Gregory Middle School and John Tuck Elementary. Keri Lopez, an administra- tive assistant for Bend contrac- tor Rogue Builders, said her top priority is keeping students learning in-person next fall. She’s worried about all students being forced back to distance learning, she said. “It should be something people need to think about,” Lopez, 41, said. “I’m concerned about it.” However, part- or fully-on- line school programs should be made available for students and teachers who prefer it, she said. Lopez is the mother of a fifth grader at Tumalo Community School and a sixth grader at Obsidian Middle School. “That really is important for teachers, to feel supported,” Lopez said. “They have the op- portunity to say (to parents), ‘Hey, can you run and make copies of this, so I can eat my lunch?’” e e Reporter: 541-617-7854, jhogan@bendbulletin.com Attention Parents of 2021 Grads! Help make some memories! The Bulletin is publishing a special Class of 2021 Graduation section on May 30 to celebrate graduating Central Oregon high school students. Enter a congratulatory message or a short biography along with a photo for just $25. Your messages will be grouped together by school and published in full color. Call The Bulletin Advertising Dept. for more information. 541-385-5809 Advertising deadline: Monday, May 17