Christina Posten is challenging incumbent Lisa Rivera Smith to represent District 2 on the Seattle School Board. A former principal of Whitman Middle School and high school science teacher who is currently taking time off for her first child, Posten says that she was inspired to run to repair Seattle Public Schools.
Posten's priorities for the board center around transparency, community relationships, and school safety. She wants to see outside auditing of how money is being spent, more involvement from schools and the community in the district's budget decisions, and informed decision-making about possible school closures. Posten says the first step to closing the $100 million dollar budget gap is to trim salaries and staff in the district's central office, though this likely would not cover anywhere close to the gap.
When it comes to safety, Posten wants to fund more secure schools with chain link fences. Posten is highly affected by the shooting at Ingraham High, which was perpetrated by a former student at her school. She says it was too easy for the student to re-enroll in another school after threats of violence, and would advocate for schools to implement better plans and safety support systems for students who need them.
Posten is also supportive of providing more services to meet families' basic needs like child care and transportation and would prioritize equalizing the resources between neighborhoods across Seattle.
Posten has some progressive priorities, but as of October 17 she has reported raising no money for her campaign and her website lacks substantial details on how she would make concrete changes at Seattle Public Schools.
Christina Posten is challenging incumbent Lisa Rivera Smith to represent District 2 on the Seattle School Board. A former principal of Whitman Middle School and high school science teacher who is currently taking time off for her first child, Posten says that she was inspired to run to repair Seattle Public Schools.
Posten's priorities for the board center around transparency, community relationships, and school safety. She wants to see outside auditing of how money is being spent, more involvement from schools and the community in the district's budget decisions, and informed decision-making about possible school closures. Posten says the first step to closing the $100 million dollar budget gap is to trim salaries and staff in the district's central office, though this likely would not cover anywhere close to the gap.
When it comes to safety, Posten wants to fund more secure schools with chain link fences. Posten is highly affected by the shooting at Ingraham High, which was perpetrated by a former student at her school. She says it was too easy for the student to re-enroll in another school after threats of violence, and would advocate for schools to implement better plans and safety support systems for students who need them.
Posten is also supportive of providing more services to meet families' basic needs like child care and transportation and would prioritize equalizing the resources between neighborhoods across Seattle.
Posten has some progressive priorities, but as of October 17 she has reported raising no money for her campaign and her website lacks substantial details on how she would make concrete changes at Seattle Public Schools.