Politics

Ingraham High principal controversy heating up

Update: Seattle Public Schools has decided to bring Principal Martin Floe back to Ingraham High School for the next school year. See blog item above for details.

Ingraham High principal controversy heating up
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Ashli Blow

Update: Seattle Public Schools has decided to bring Principal Martin Floe back to Ingraham High School for the next school year. See blog item above for details.

A respected and beloved high school principal got fired in Seattle. That action has ignited a firestorm of controversy for Seattle Public Schools.

The firing has also left substantial confusion.

Martin Floe, principal at Ingraham High School for the last six years, is the employee in question. He has since appealed that decision.

Interim Superintendent Susan Enfield is likely to hear a great deal of parental concern about the action. She will attend a meeting with parents at the  school at 6:30 p.m. today (May 17).

State law and Seattle School Board policy contradict each other on the matter of appeal. Under state law, a hearing examiner is to be chosen by both sides to hear the appeal, but under Board policy, the Board would hear any appeal.

The district is following state law. The hearing could come as soon as two weeks from now with a ruling 10 days after the hearing. Interestingly, Floe could request an open hearing, which could shed some light on the reasons behind this firing.

Principal shifting is an action that strikes fear in the heart of every Seattle Public School parent.  The district rotates or removes principals with dizzying speed and often parents are left with no explanation; sometimes, there is not even an opportunity to help pick the next principal.

What might be the key issues in this dispute?

A vote was taken by Ingraham staff and, of those in the building that day, 100 percent voted to support Principal Floe.  Parents and students started a Friends of Martin Floe Facebook page that now has over 1,100 members.

Seattle Schools has real and pressing issues before it. That it has stumbled so badly on this decision does not speak well for a district already on shaky ground.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal