Meet Superintendent Steven Schoonmaker

WEBUTUCK — Steven Schoonmaker has surely been busy for the past two weeks.

It’s summer vacation for students, but Schoonmaker, who recently became the first permanent superintendent for the Webutuck Central School District since Richard Johns left last summer, has a lot on his plate for the next few months.

Since Johns left, the district has been through three different interim superintendents and a number of administrative changes, including most recently 7-12 Principal Drew Hopkins, who turned in a letter of resignation at the end of last month.

It should be promising, then, that Schoonmaker used the word “stability� several times over the course of an interview with The Millerton News last week, as he begins the challenging process of earning the trust of the students, staff, the Board of Education, parents and community members, which is not always the easiest juggling act.

Schoonmaker comes from a background that is half in education and half in his family’s nursery farm business. He came to education later in life, but has served as superintendent for the Greenwood Central School District in Steuben County, Willsboro Central School District in Essex County and Spencer-Van Etten Central School District in Tioga County.

All have student populations around or well below Webutuck’s. But Schoonmaker pointed out that he has also served several terms on Ulster County’s BOCES Board of Education, with demographics nearing 20,000.

“I’ve had the opportunity to work at all different levels,� he said. “But I value the opportunities that a small school provides.�

If you ask Schoonmaker about his accomplishments as a superintendent, there’s a good chance he’ll remind you he is “12 for 12 with public votes� — that’s five budgets, four transportation bonds, two capital projects and one capital reserve bond.

According to him, the perfect record is an indication of trust from the surrounding community, and it’s something most would agree that Webutuck needs in a superintendent. The Board of Education acknowledged at a meeting this month that it is still dealing with such issues stemming from Johns’ tenure.

“That stability starts with the top,� the new superintendent said. “My job is as much facilitator as it is manager.�

Schoonmaker also pointed out that the stability and trust should come from systems and processes that don’t fall apart when it loses a particular individual. The effectiveness of a school district is the result first and foremost of a sound structure, he said.

“This is not a one-person business,� he explained. “You accomplish things together ... and the absence of one person shouldn’t stop that process.�

He’d only been in office for a few days when interviewed and couldn’t say much as far as Webutuck’s specific issues, only that meeting with the Board of Education and the community was invaluable to his future role in the school district.

“I don’t have a hidden agenda,� he said. “I don’t have specific goals. My job is to help the board and the community move the district in the direction that they want to take it.

“I want people to see me as a person as much as a superintendent,� he continued later on. “It’s important because for me to understand the community, not only do I have to approach them, but they have to feel comfortable approaching me.�

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