Open forum meeting held to discuss LCHS
returning to the Central State Eight Conference
Part Two: Community members speak on proposed LCHS conference
move
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[May 12, 2021]
In part two of the open forum meeting held to discuss the
possibility of LCHS returning to the Central State Eight Conference
takes a look at the points the speakers brought forth on Monday, May
10, 2021.
Blinn Bates, Landon Hullinger, Lynn Paulus, Judy Lumpp and Jarred
Brown each addressed the crowd Monday night and offered several
valid points on the issue at hand.
Blinn Bates, a 2001 graduate of LCHS, resides in Lincoln with his
family and he took the podium first to offer his thoughts in favor
of Lincoln returning to the Central State Eight Conference. Two
important points that he emphasized were “the education of our
students and the safety of our students.”
Bates asked the question, “What is the purpose of the school and
what is the purpose of the school district?” He then answered that
question by referring to the district agenda. “Inspiring each
student to be a successful life-long learner,” said Bates, “That’s
what we’re here for and that’s what we’re supposed to be doing. It’s
a worthy cause.
“School’s exist to do that and luckily in Lincoln we’ve had a
history of being able to do that for a long period of time,”
continued Bates, noting that extracurricular activities are an
important part of growing and learning and becoming productive
citizens.
“In my opinion, and I think most will agree, those extracurricular
activities cannot detract from the purpose of education. I think
what we’ve gotten ourselves into with the conference we are in now,
I think there are situations where it does. I think the distances
that these students are asked to travel to extracurricular events is
tremendous. We are taking kids out of school early. We are bringing
them back late.”
Bates brought up the fact that it can’t be easy for 20-30 kids to be
on a school bus for five hours and try to get their homework done or
study for a test.
“By getting kids home late, I just don’t think that puts them in the
best position to perform at their best,” said Bates. "If they’re not
rested they cannot perform at their best. We’re just not giving them
the tools to succeed.”
Bates then brought up his concern for the safety of the students,
coaches and volunteers, who often times have to travel two-lane
highways late at night in questionable weather conditions to get
back home from an event.
“I don’t personally believe that prioritizes the safety of these
individuals,” said Bates. “It would be a tragedy if something were
to happen that we could avoid.” Bates also said, “There’s a plethora
of cities around here within a 30-40 mile drive that we can compete
with. That helps everyone I think. That interstate drive is much
safer. It’s much quicker. And, you know, why not? This is not an
anti-Apollo Conference stance by any means. I think it’s a good
conference but the distances simply get impractical, in my opinion.”
Bates ended by thanking the board and noting that the change back to
the Central State Eight would be a tremendous opportunity for the
school. He also expressed his appreciation to the board for allowing
voices to be heard on this issue.
Current LCHS senior and Class of 2021 Student Body President Landon
Hullinger emerged from the bleachers next to take the podium. He
began by thanking Mr. Stricklin for his presentation and noted that
he was in favor of moving back to the CS8.
“My freshman year was the first year Lincoln came into the Apollo
Conference and it has not been easy,” said Hullinger.
Hullinger told the story of his grandfather giving him a pocket
flashlight to use for studying on the bus on a trip back from
Mahomet-Seymour during Finals. “That’s really hard,” he said. “You
can’t expect a student to excel in the classroom if they’re not
given the time to study. There were times I had studying to do and I
just couldn’t get it done on the bus.”
Hullinger also noted how the students needed technology but it just
wasn’t there on a bus that was traveling down a two-lane country
road late at night, especially around Charleston and Effingham.
“The WiFi is not out there,” said Hullinger. “It’s hard to get a
connection.” Hullinger’s comments drew applause from the crowd as he
stepped away from the podium after thanking the board and Mr.
Stricklin for hearing him out.
Lynn Paulus, a Lincoln resident and parent to three girls who have
all attended LCHS, took the podium next. Two of Paulus’ older
daughters played sports in the CS8 and the youngest daughter, Emily,
is a senior who never experienced the CS8 competition. Emily played
three sports all four years in the Apollo Conference.
“I am very familiar as a parent of student-athletes,” began Paulus.
“I use the word student-athletes, we aren’t athlete-students, to
recommend or support your decision, or hopefully your decision to
move back to the Central State Eight. The Apollo Conference has some
very talented girls teams from top to bottom in all three sports
that my kids played, volleyball, basketball and softball.”
“The Central State Eight has terrific talent in that conference,”
continued Paulus. “The biggest thing I noticed when we left the
Central State Eight was our exposure of our student-athletes, from
the media coverage to just the exposure to scouts and individuals
that know the sport. Once we left the Central State Eight, it may
not have been intentional, but it seemed like the city of
Springfield pretty much stopped covering us, especially girls
sports. They continued to cover the boys basketball program, which
is great, but if you look at the girls sports, once we left
Springfield and the Central State Eight, that coverage went by the
wayside, which hurts those individuals, those girls, that want to go
on and pursue their dreams in college and have that extra exposure.
So for that reason I highly encourage you to move back to the
Central State Eight.”
[to top of second column] |
Paulus also noted her concern about the education aspect of the
student-athletes. “Fortunately the guidance counselors have worked with those
student-athletes the best they could to get those late afternoon classes to be
classes that don’t have a participation requirement or it could be a study hall
or a P.E. class, but that’s not always achievable. So those students are missing
prime education time needed to go on and succeed in life.”
“The other aspect is the school morale, the school enthusiasm,” said Paulus.
“You talked about the rivalries in the Central State Eight. There are some great
rivalries there. You don’t see that as much in the Apollo Conference because
those students aren’t traveling the two hours to come to Lincoln or our students
aren’t traveling the two hours to go there to create that rivalry and that
school morale. So that is another point to consider.”
The last point Paulus brought to the attention of the crowd and the board
involved the community.
“We want to do this for the students, but if you think about it, think of the
number of fans, parents, grandparents that come from Central State Eight schools
to attend the games,” Paulus said. “I mean it’s two, three, four times what we
get for an Apollo Conference game. Where do you think those people are going
when the game is done? Or before the game? They are visiting our restaurants,
our gas stations, our stores. So they’re bringing in more additional dollars
into our community and making our school and our community a better place. For
those reasons I really encourage you to vote in favor of making the switch back
to the Central State Eight.”
Paulus thanked the board and she was also met with a round of applause from the
crowd.
Lifelong Lincoln resident Judy Lumpp spoke next and offered some history. She
said she was on the board when Lincoln was in the Big 12 Conference and her
husband played in the original Big 12.
Lumpp said the reason Lincoln joined the Central State Eight Conference years
ago was because Jerry Overbey, who was the LCHS superintendent in 1985, wanted
the girls to be able to play soccer.
Lumpp also mentioned the fact that a lot of her friends are grandparents and
they don’t go to their grandchildren’s games because of the long distances,
choosing instead to listen to the games at home.
In her closing comments she thanked the board for their time and devotion and
said, “I want you all to know that we just didn’t decide, it took us almost ten
years to find a fit and that was the Central State Eight. Hopefully you’ll study
that and we can go back.”
The last speaker was Jarred Brown, who noted the last time he spoke in the gym
he was giving a commencement speech nearly 20 years ago. He referred to
Lincoln’s stint in the Apollo Conference as a “four-year experiment.”
Brown quickly dove into the facts concerning travel times and distances. Being
in the Apollo Conference more than doubled the amount of travel time, he said.
Rattling off the numbers, Brown concluded, “Apart from Jacksonville, every other
CS8 school is closer than all Apollo Conference schools.”
Brown was also quick to mention the late night travel during the week for
students who had tests the next day, citing that it couldn’t be easy to study on
a bus or after midnight at home.
Another point Brown brought to the podium was the level of competition.
“Playing in the CS8 against some good schools gave student-athletes a place to
showcase their abilities,” said Brown. “For those select few lucky enough to go
on to play at the next level it gives them a lot better chance to be seen by
scouts.”
Brown referred to scouts at a football game in the CS8 who are there looking at
Division I talent and offered this insightful thought, “To be challenged by the
best is what sports is all about.”
Brown said he looked for inspirational quotes by Michael Jordan and Peyton
Manning where they talked about winning games and beating teams who were less
competitive, but he couldn’t find any. He did find these, he said.
“I failed over and over and over again in my life and that is why I succeed,”
Brown credited Michael Jordan with that quote.
“Success is not final. Failure is not fatal. It is the courage to continue that
counts,” said Brown, offering up that quote from Peyton Manning.
“Sports instills drive and passion in its student-athletes,” said Brown. “It
develops the will to overcome adversity. That’s something this generation needs
now more than ever. Success in sports at this level is not measured in wins and
losses. It is measured by what is gained from competition. Playing on a team
that went 4-16 versus a team that went 16-4 makes no difference in the grand
scheme of life. Students aren’t putting their batting averages on college
applications. And they aren’t asked their career win-loss record in football for
their first full-time job interview. What might be more important to the
students in the long run is having their parents and grandparents, friends and
classmates able to come cheer them on at more games. Also the ability to study a
few more hours for Dick Bicknell’s chemistry test might be more beneficial than
a two-hour bus ride home.”
The crowd on hand who remembered Dick Bicknell erupted in laughter.
“I urge the school board to use common sense at this time and not focus on a few
influential voices pushing us into a conference that doesn’t benefit the
students in the long run,” concluded Brown.
Brown stepped away from the podium and the crowd clapped in approval of his
speech.
On that note, Board President Susan Gleason asked if anyone else had anything to
add. No one else got up to speak. Gleason thanked the crowd in attendance and
those watching at home and ended by adding the board will do what is in the best
interest for the students. She also expressed it was important for the community
to be heard.
The board will vote on this issue Monday, May 17, 2021 during their regularly
scheduled board meeting.
[Teena Lowery] |