Six candidates seeking election to the South Washington County school board weren't in attendance Tuesday night at a candidates forum being filmed in St. Paul Park.
That still left 11 candidates on hand, however, enough to require the League of Women Voters to roll out one group of five and then a second shift of six to take questions about subjects ranging from all-day kindergarten to the racial achievement gap.
Voters in the state's sixth-largest school district have a lot to sort out before the polls open on Nov. 5.
In addition to deciding who among the 17 school board candidates will fill five seats — a majority of the seven-member board — voters will determine, too, whether to renew existing levies, whether to approve an additional $6.9 million in annual operating funds and whether to dedicate $8 million toward the purchase of land for future building needs.
Four incumbents are seeking re-election, and each of them — Tracy Brunnette, Laurie Johnson, David Kemper and Katy McElwee-Stevens — advocated last week for voter approval of each of the three spending measures that they'd earlier agreed to put on the November ballot.
Brunnette, Kemper and McElwee-Stevens are among 14 candidates who filed for the four four-year terms up for election on Nov. 5.
Johnson is seeking a two-year term, and was the lone candidate among the three competitors for that seat — David Firkus and Susan Richardson being the other two — to appear at Tuesday's forum. Of the district's funding needs and a recent string of budget cuts, Johnson said: "Our belts are as tight as they can be right now."
Brunnette has said that while her children have graduated from the district, she remains passionate about education. Asked on Tuesday about the "emerging issues" facing the district — a question that each candidate had a minute to answer — she chose to remind people that the district should not lose its focus on student achievement.