Public Schools

SEIU 925 Member, Mountlake Terrace custodian and chess coach retires

Herald Net

By Noah Haglund, Herald Writer

Bill Rasmussen remembers the year he coached the Mountlake Terrace High School chess team to a national tournament — and an awkward lull during his conversation with coaches from around the country.

As they sat around table during matches in Kansas City, Mo., his counterparts started talking about where they were from and the subjects they taught.                                                       Bill Rasmussen

“Somebody asked me what I taught, and I said, ‘Oh, no, no, I’m a custodian,’” Rasmussen recalled. “It wasn’t rude, but they kind of went off and had their discussion. You could just see the shades come down over their eyes.”

That was in 1990, about midway through Rasmussen’s long career as a custodian with the Edmonds School District. That school year, his chess squad finished second in Washington and ninth in the national tournament, securing his reputation as one of the top high-school chess coaches in the region.

While teachers elsewhere might have looked askance at Rasmussen’s profession, it attracted little notice at home. Folks at his school were accustomed to the cheerful jack-of-all-trades who wasn’t afraid of using a six-syllable word such as “extemporaneous.”

“Kids like Bill, and he ran the chess team very well,” said Gil Comeau, a long-time Mountlake Terrace High science teacher and Rasmussen’s predecessor as chess coach. “The Terrace custodians have always been that way. They’ve been home-grown and fairly connected to the students.”

These days, Rasmussen, 61, is easing into retirement, which becomes official Oct. 1. He spent his last work day at the school this summer.

Over recent games of chess with his 80-year-old father at a Starbucks in Mill Creek, Rasmussen reflected on a job that began in August 1973. After stints at Lynndale Elementary, Cedar Valley Elementary and other schools, he joined Mountlake Terrace High School as head custodian in 1984.

Anybody could be forgiven for thinking that there were a lot of custodians named Rasmussen in the Edmonds School District. It’s a vocation Rasmussen has shared with three other members of his immediate family.

His father and original chess teacher, Ray Rasmussen, retired as Evergreen Elementary’s head custodian in 1992; his sister, Sue Rasmussen, 60, worked for nearly two decades at Scriber Lake High School before changing careers in the late 1990s. Pete Rasmussen, 49, the youngest of eight siblings, is Lynnwood Elementary School’s head custodian.

Bill Rasmussen has four grown children, though none of them have so far followed his career path.

Rasmussen attended Mountlake Terrace High after his family moved from Minneapolis in 1966. After graduation, he served in the Navy, studied history at Shoreline Community College and worked briefly in Seattle at the Boeing Co. and Bethlehem Steel Co.

When he returned to work at the high school, he had to adjust to using first names with his old teachers instead of “Mrs.” or “Mr.”

His typical day began at 5:45 a.m., turning on lights, opening hallways and checking the heating system. He kept the cafeteria tidy before and after breakfast. Then there were a couple of hours for repairs before lunchtime brought an onslaught of cleaning and policing.

“The head custodian does some cleaning and a lot of PR,” he said. “You do a lot of good deeds for folks.”

Elementary-school children always seemed willing to help. By high school, student attitudes changed. He wondered why teachers often wanted to assign detention students to work with him.

“It sends the message that work in general is punishment, that physical labor is punishment and our work in particular is punishment,” he said. “I must be really terrible – I got life.”

Some students would tell him, “I’d never want your job,” then show up a few years later to ask about job openings for custodians.

Edmonds School District employs 94 custodians. Pay ranges from about $37,000 to $44,000 per year. The job includes responsibilities for health and safety, such as earthquake damage assessment, and is technically different from a janitor.

Rasmussen’s career as a chess coach began in 1986. He described himself as a B-level player, which he said is the chess equivalent of being a brown belt in karate. His students during the 1990 tournament included three A-level players, “a couple notches down from a master, but a whole lot better than I am,” he said.

Chemistry teacher Bill Bond coached Snohomish High School’s chess team when they nurtured a friendly rivalry with Rasmussen and his players.

“That was all due to Bill, he was a great coach,” Bond said. “We’d be thinking every year, we’ve got to get ready for the Terrace match.”

A court case that originated in the Castle Rock School District in the mid-1990s helped end Rasmussen’s coaching career. The upshot was that custodians and other classified employees who work 40-hour weeks would get paid overtime for any school activities beyond their regular shifts.

Though Rasmussen said he gladly would have coached for free, the pay requirement would have sapped the chess team’s budget.

“That made it un-fun,” he said.

He stepped down in 1996, but in his office still kept chess books that he was more than willing to share. To this day, Rasmussen keeps in touch with several former players, including one who’s about to become his son-in-law.

The Terrace chess club still competes but some local schools have lost funding. Snohomish High School dropped its program in 2009. Everett, Jackson, and Cascade high schools also had teams until 2004 when the Everett School District removed support, said Allan Shell, a coach at Monroe High School and president of the Wesco league for chess.

Membership in the statewide Washington High School Chess Association has been steady for the past five years, though schools face big challenges finding coaches.

“The biggest issue is this: In the past, there was often a person in the building who took an active role in encouraging kids to play,” said Dave Ellinger, the association’s president. “When a teacher takes an interest in making the club more than just lunch meetings, then the clubs thrive.”

Noah Haglund: 425-339-3495, nhaglund@heraldnet.com

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Geneva Elementary’s ‘Superman Dan’ janitor shedding pounds to fund kids’ scholarships

The Bellingham Herald

by Michelle Nolan

When students at Geneva Elementary School gave custodian Dan Kirkman a cape and named him “Superman Dan,” they set a chain of heroics in motion.

Kirkman, 41, was so touched by the students’ unexpected gesture at an assembly in June that he decided to start a scholarship fund for Geneva students who will graduate from high school in 2016-2024. He also was inspired to perform the “super feat” of losing 100 pounds within a year, and he’s seeding the fund by donating $10 for every pound he loses.

“Superman Dan” would not be working at Geneva had it not been for the fire at Whatcom Middle School on Nov. 5, 2009.
Dan Kirkman

Question: Dan, what’s behind these scholarships?

Answer: My goal is to establish yearly $1,000 scholarships for a boy and a girl, through my donations, while working with Debbie Granger in Bellingham Dollars for Scholars, a program of the Whatcom Community Foundation. We’re calling it the Geneva Elementary Inspirational Scholarship Fund. Ultimately, I’d like to see people inspired to see scholarships established at all of our Bellingham elementary schools.

Q: What has getting to know the students meant to you?

A: I worked 17 years as a school custodian in Mount Vernon, then subbed around for a few years in Bellingham. I got a regular job at Whatcom in fall 2009 and began working nights only a few weeks before the fire. When I was assigned to Geneva along with our Whatcom sixth-graders, I began to get to know the kids because there I worked from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Now I’m working 2:30 to 8:30 p.m.

Q: And you hit it off with the kids?

A: They’re wonderful kids, fun to be around, and it’s great when I can get them to laugh and smile. I would even sometimes dance a little jig for them, which would always make them smile.

I’m 6 feet 2 inches tall and I was 335 pounds last school year. I’ve lost 55 pounds so far while working with Dr. Rodney Anderson. I want to lose the full 100 by June.

This is one way of being a good role model and to show the kids what it means to be interested in a healthy lifestyle. I became motivated to really earn the title of superhero, since there are no fat superheroes.

Q: Were you surprised when the kids named you “Superman Dan”?

A: I sure was, although I had hints something was going on. When they called me to the front of the assembly on June 17 on the last day of school, it was such an emotional thing when they gave me the cape and a booklet with the title, “The Top 10 Reasons We Love Superman Dan.”

I was kind of speechless. The teachers involved were Ashley Welch, she sewed the cape; Sam Stapleton-Cousens; and Salina Marth.

Q: What has helped you take these kids into your heart?

A: It’s realizing that taking a few moments out of our busy lives to talk with a child, to listen to a child, and most importantly to laugh with a child, can have an amazing impact and leave a positive and lasting effect. It’s a gift that’s priceless and one we all should share.

We never know which moments will have the greatest impact, thus they must all be cherished. Seeing how the simplest things in everyday life can light up a child is surreal. Nothing compares to taking our life’s experiences and sharing them with a younger generation to help guide them on their journey. In many ways, I think that’s what we’re all here for.

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SEIU Member’s Essay Changed The Way Some Schools In Marysville Serve Lunch

One Essay Changed The Way Some Schools In Marysville Serve Lunch
The Effort To Recycle Now Heading To Elementary Schools

Parella Lewis | Staff reporter | KCPQ 13
May 26, 2009

One essay changed the way Marysville Middle School served lunch. And now the change is spreading to other schools in the community.

Styrofoam treys were replaced with biodegradable cartons. Composting and recycling is now a daily effort by both the students and staff.. And the end result is about six bus loads of garbage less than before. Principal Pete Lundberg tells Q13 Fox News, “We were producing 25-50 bags of garbage a day. We had like two eight yard dumpsters that had to be dumped twice a week.” Now he says that waste is down about seventy-five percent.

This change was spurred by a custodian at the school. Mathew Edgerton says his daily trip to the garbage got him thinking.”Jumping on the dumpsters try to smash it down so you could close the lid at the end of the night. I guess jumping on the garbage, I’m thinking there’s got to be a better way than this”, explains Edgerton.

His union happened to be having an essay contest, so Edgerton entered. His essay won and [read article]

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Anacortes School District

EMPLOYER: Anacortes School District

2200 M Ave
Anacortes, WA 98221

CHAPTER OFFICERS:

President
Randy Wills

Vice President
Susie Harvey

Secretary/Treasurer
Flora Tenzler

CONTRACTS:

MEMBER RESOURCE NUMBER: 1-877-568-7113

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La Center School District

EMPLOYER: La Center School District

CHAPTER OFFICERS:

Chapter Chair
Mary Byrne

Vice Chair
Winnie Harkleroad

Secretary
Dana Hantho

Sergeant-at-Arms
Deena Strawn

Leadership Assembly
Deanna Strawn

CONTRACTS:

MEMBER RESOURCE NUMBER: 1-877-568-7113

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Lake Washington School District

EMPLOYER: Lake Washington School District

CHAPTER OFFICERS:

President
Donna Unruh

Vice President
Marilyn Stodghill

Conflict Resolution VP
Jeannie Parks

Communications
Janet Zins

CONTRACTS:

MEMBER RESOURCE NUMBER: 1-877-568-7113

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Longview School District

EMPLOYER: Longview School District

CHAPTER OFFICERS:

CONTRACTS:

MEMBER RESOURCE NUMBER: 1-877-568-7113

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Lynden School District

EMPLOYER: Lynden School District

CHAPTER OFFICERS:

President
Paul Hardman
(360) 354-2542

Secretary/Treasurer
Janis Flue

CONTRACTS:

MEMBER RESOURCE NUMBER: 1-877-568-7113

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Marysville School District

EMPLOYER: Marysville School District

CHAPTER OFFICERS:

12 Month Chapter Officers

Vice President
Mike Sweet
mike_sweet@msvl.k12.wa.us

Secretary Treasurer
Matt Sigman
matt_sigman@msvl.k12.wa.us

10 Month Chapter Officers

President Colleen Bradley
colleen_bradley@msvl.k12.wa.us

Vice President
Sonia Schei
sonia_schei@msvl.k12.wa.us

Vice President: Paraprofessional
Debbie Harris
debbie_harris@msvl.k12.wa.us

Vice President: Food Service
Theresa Hart

Vice President: Security
Mike Rainwater
mike_rainwater@msvl.k12.wa.us

Vice President: Transportation
Terri Dawson
teresa_dawson@msvl.k12.wa.us

Secretary/Treasurer
Bonnie Krueger
bonnie_krueger@msvl.k12.wa.us
360.653.0892

Member Political Organizer
Linda Wright
linda_wright@msvl.k12.wa.us

CONTRACTS:

MEMBER RESOURCE NUMBER: 1-877-568-7113

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Everett School District

EMPLOYER: Everett School District

CHAPTER OFFICERS:

President
Donna LaFave
Computer Field Technician
dlafave@everettsd.org
425.385.6046

Vice President of Communications:
MaryLou Nakonecznyj
Help Desk Technician
mnakonecznjy@everettsd.org

Vice President of Political Action:
Patty Ann Toomey
Help Desk Technician
ptoomey@everettsd.org

Secretary Treasurer
Kathy Pickett
kpickett@everettsd.org

Chapter Representative: Food Service
Cathy Rupe
crupe@everettsd.org
425.385.7300

Chapter Representative: Custodian
David Mathews
dmathews@everettsd.org
425.382.6000

MPO & Vice President: Tech
Terie Messick
tmessick@everettsd.org
425.385.7162

Chapter Representative: Grounds
Bill Collins
bcollins@everettsd.org
425.385.5200

CONTRACTS:

MEMBER RESOURCE NUMBER: 1-877-568-7113

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SEIU Local 925
1914 N 34th Street, Suite 100, Seattle, WA 98103 | Tel: (206) 322-3010