EDITORIAL: UPDATED: On June 4th 2012, four adult friends of student "RS" got up to speak to the Lake Washington School Board and Superintendent about his mild mood disorder called
Cyclothemia or "
Bipolar III." One speaker was his mother. "RS" was a Senior at Lake Washington High, a 2-3 sport athlete and an honor roll student more than once. According to Mr. Keller, "He was on track to graduate until earlier this year when he came down with onset of manic depression. This child is a couple credits short of graduation."
All four of RS's supporters asked the Board and Superintendent to make an exception and allow RS to Walk with his classmates during graduation ceremonies. Mr. Phillips and Keller spoke up saying, "RS spent thirteen years in LWSD Kirkland schools growing up with his friends and their request was based on him staying with the group of kids he's been with his entire life. He was a model citizen for Kirkland," said Phillips. Phillips pleaded during his three minutes, "Right now RS feels ostracized and doesn't quite grasp why he can't graduate or complete things right now. Let him Walk with his friends to at least give him dignity. Hopefully, this summer he'll know his next assignment is to finish high school."
The school board was thoughtful and deliberative.
Director Chris Carlson recommended the Administration look for "a compassionate clause as for any illness" in the laws governing this plea.
Director Siri Bliesner recommended looking at the policy statement in the "504 medical component." In the end, the
Kimball Administration made the decision
not to let RS walk. (Dr. Kimball retires mid-July.) According to Keller,
David Larson, School Support for Lake Washington High, concluded verbally that RS wasn't disabled, he was never hospitalized and his psychiatrist diagnosed him with only the mild mood swings of Bipolar III.
This RS story reminds me of my best friend in high school, "Robert." He was voted "All School Boy Athlete" by his peers and graduated on the Honor Roll. He and two girls got seriously drunk just before graduation and painted a neighbor's fence with slanderous graffiti and then on his high school gym. He was allowed to walk - with all humility - only to have Bipolar 1 episodes his senior year in college and a diagnosis in 1980 seven years later. Once struck with a chronic illness one is always recovering. The mortality rate from Bipolar I and II is 20% from suicide, he lost his brother to it, and bounced back from multiple job losses.
The bright spot for Robert and RS is how far medications have come -- from the lithium trials of the mid '60's - when "taken" with sobriety. RS has plans to go to Bellevue College next year for his certificate. I'm sure our LWSD community is 100% behind RS and wishes him a full recovery and a bright futrure in whatever career he chooses.
By Bob Yoder
Suggested reading: "The stigma can hurt, badly," By Jim Colvin, author of "H.E.R.E. and Getting There," a book about designing treatment systems to reduce stigma. "Wenatchee World," 7/8/2012.
Letter to Editor includes a response from the Kimball Administration and a new report from Yoder:
http://redmondcity.blogspot.com/2012/07/letter-kimball-administration-callous.html