Posted: 8:32 p.m.
Monday, Jan. 26, 2015
SCHOOL SPENDING
Board approves Middletown superintendent’s retire/rehire
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/rick-mccrabb/" rel="nofollow - Staff Writer MIDDLETOWN — Despite reservations from union members,
the Middletown City Schools District board of education unanimously approved
the retirement and rehiring of its superintendent. More than 100 of the 400 Middletown
Teachers’ Association union members — just as the previous board meeting —
attended Monday’s meeting and voiced their displeasure with Superintendent Sam
Ison’s performance during the past two years. The union members filled the
city’s council chambers, with the overflow crowd sitting in the balcony. After the vote, most of those in attendance
left the meeting. Ison said he was “honored and very humbled”
after the board showed its confidence in his performance. Ison, 58, who has
served as superintendent for two years, will retire on June 30, 2015, then be
rehired July 2, said Marcia Andrew, school board president. Andrew
said the retire/rehire will save the district money because it won’t have to
hire an interim superintendent. Ison also has volunteered to surrender two
months of his retirement that will save the district an undisclosed amount of
money, she said. Ison has agreed to return for $120,000 a
year and eliminate his 5 percent bonus, which will save the district about
$12,000 a year, Andrew said. Ison’s 2014 salary was $123,791. The contract is for three years with a
possibility of a fourth year. Also, Andrew said, the board is allowed to
give Ison a 90-day notice, then fire him without cause with no severance. Ison has said he wants to remain
superintendent because he’s seeing improvements in the district’s academics and
residents recently passed a bond issue and improvement levy that will fund the
building of a new middle school and renovating Middletown High School. “He does care and he wants the district to
succeed,” Andrew said. Ison said he hopes the emotions shown by
the union “can drive actions.” He promised to improve communications between
the administration and the district’s staff. He also wants to periodically meet
with the faculty council and improve the climate and professional development
in the district. Ison called communication “a two-way and I
am reaching out.” He then addressed the teachers in the room:
“I do believe in you.” Before the vote, Terry Cole said he
graduated from MHS, then earned his bachelor’s and masters degrees from Miami University
with the goal of returning to Middletown
as a science teacher. He has taught in the district for six years and he had
planned to stay until he retired, he told the board. Now, he said: “I can’t imaging staying
right now.” He called losing quality teachers
“sickening” before adding, “I don’t feel valued by the downtown administration.
We feel like we are inadequate. It’s a negative climate.” Two members of the Middletown community voiced their support of
Ison. Rick Pearce, president of the Chamber of Commerce Serving Middletown, Monroe and Trenton,
called Ison “very compelling” and said
his enthusiasm is contagious. Peggy McClusky, who worked for Middletown
City Schools for 28 years, said she has been a friend of Ison’s for 20 years,
and she encouraged him to leave the Lebanon
district and accept the administration position in Middletown. “I don’t know anybody better,” she said.
She called Ison “hard working and a dedicated” person.
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