Leaving high school for college
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Andrew Edwards
After nearly two decades working with local high schools, Bonnie
Castrey decided it was time for a change.
Castrey has been a school board member with Huntington Beach Union
High School District since 1985 -- before this year’s senior class
was born. But this year, she is looking for a new job as a trustee
with the Coast Community College District, which includes Surf City’s
Golden West College.
Castrey is looking for a new post with the specific intention of
ousting the incumbent, Armando Ruiz. Ruiz has been a trustee since
1983 and is expected to formally retire from his day job as a
counselor in the South Orange County Community College District on
Oct. 31. Ruiz’s upcoming retirement has been clouded in controversy
because a loophole in the state’s retirement system would allow him
to boost his pension by thousands of dollars if he also retires from
his trustee position that day, even though he could be elected back
into the job on Nov. 2.
“It’s an ethical issue for me,” Castrey said. “A trustee has to be
trusted by the public.”
Ruiz has declined to announce whether he will or will not retire
from his trustee’s post, and described his retirement as a private
financial matter with no bearing on educational policy.
“I like to talk about policy issues, and there’s no policy issues
involved, and it’s all personal,” he said.
Castrey is a professional mediator, and was appointed to the
Federal Service Impasses Panel in 1995 by President Bill Clinton. The
body mediates disputes between federal agencies and their employees.
She was selected as chairwoman in 2000.
She left the seven-member panel in 2002 when all of its members
were summarily fired by the current administration, she said.
Castrey traces her mediation skills to her childhood in the snowy
environs of Buffalo, New York, where as a child, she helped her blind
and diabetic grandmother with money and insulin shots.
“I learned at a very early age to work with people and solve
problems,” Castrey said, adding that she believes listening to audio
books with her grandmother honed her listening skills.
Aided by a scholarship, Castrey studied nursing at the University
of Buffalo’s Edward J. Meyer Memorial Hospital. While a student, she
made the decision to head out west while shoveling snow at 4 a.m. so
she could get in her car and get to class.
“I went into my house and went to mother and said, ‘When I get out
and get my license, I’m moving to California,’” she said.
She made the move in 1964 and earned her nursing degree at Cal
State, Long Beach. Her activities with the nurses’ union eventually
led her to find a new line of work in 1975 the Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Service. While on assignment in Hawaii, she met Robert
Castrey, another mediator who would become her husband. Their
marriage began as a long-distance affair, with her in California
while he stayed in Hawaii.
“It was telephone bills and flying back and forth,” she said. “It
was wild, but it’s been a great marriage.”
They already have 10 great-grandchildren, but she considers all of
her district’s high school students as part of her family. She said
her proudest achievement with the high school district was working to
help create the Academy for the Performing Arts, which opened on the
Huntington Beach High School Campus in 1993.
The academy was created to consolidate existing art programs for
talented students while the district was in the throes of budget
cuts, recalled former board member Bonnie Bruce. Bruce described
Bonnie Castrey as a “consummate board member” who dedicated many
hours to the job and was focused on students.
“It was always keeping cuts away from the classrooms,” Bruce said.
“Kids were always first.”
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