When classes begin in September, the Huntington School District’s PTA organizations will be up and running with the ringing of the first bell.
Individual building PTA organizations as well as the PTA Council have all be reconstituted with changes to their respective executive boards. Officials have already met and sketched out plans for 2019/20.
“We are privileged to work with such an outstanding group that is wholly dedicated to supporting every district student and program,” Huntington Superintendent James W. Polansky said. “We thank them sincerely for their volunteerism and look forward to a great year in 2019/20!”
The district’s new PTA Council executive board consists of Kristin Kanzer (president), Jennifer Carrillo (co-vice president), Tonya Guandique (co-vice president), Mariam Murtaza (secretary) and Carolina Addeo (treasurer).
Huntington’s PTA individual school executive boards include:
Huntington High School: Toniann Mangan (president), Michele Sabatino (co-vice president), Alice Marie Rorke (co-vice president), Rene Babich Dumas (corresponding secretary), Laura Befumo (recording secretary), Susan Lyons (treasurer), Dana Forte (PTA Council delegate) and Kimberley Steinberg (PTA Council delegate).
J. Taylor Finley Middle School: Sara Baliber (president), Tina Evans (co-president), Kerri Rinaldi (co-vice president), Fidelia Zivkovic (corresponding secretary), Suzanne Hepworth (recording secretary), Meghan Knieriem (treasurer), Christiane Flewelling (PTA Council delegate) and Allison Schirripa (PTA Council delegate).
Woodhull Intermediate School: Tara Poli (president), Kayte Camarata (vice president), Kelly Donovan (corresponding secretary), Jennifer Tullo (recording secretary), Kerri Malone (treasurer), Fidelia Zivkovic (PTA Council delegate) and Jennifer Carrillo (PTA Council delegate).
Jack Abrams STEM Magnet School: Colleen Perfetto (president), Jenn DiBenedetto (co-vice president), Kimberley Steinberg (co-vice president), Melissa Argaman (corresponding secretary), Shannon Mindich (recording secretary), Katie Dopico (treasurer), Janine Luca (PTA Council delegate) and Kim Piccora Einemann (PTA Council delegate).
Washington Primary School: Kathleen Camarata (co-president), Jessica Taylor (co-president), Deirdre Cunningham (co-vice president), Suzanne Hepworth (co-vice president), Molly England (corresponding secretary), Yesilin Bonilla (recording secretary), Danielle Falk (treasurer), Donna Alberico (PTA Council delegate) and Shakira Bublin (PTA Council delegate).
Southdown Primary School: Devon Perotti (president), Jennifer Tullo (co-vice president), Rachel Stein (co-vice president), Katie Golden (corresponding secretary), Jaclyn Larkin (recording secretary), Jessica Chiclacos (treasurer), Mary Halder (PTA Council delegate) and Adam Jessie (PTA Council delegate).
Jefferson Primary School: Danielle Cooley (co-president), Wendy Nabore (co-president), Jenna Campos (co-vice president), Kiara Echavaria (co-vice president), Laura Catlan (corresponding secretary), Rachael Brown (recording secretary), Yovani Campos (treasurer), Angela Ackerly (PTA Council delegate) and Fidelia Zivkovic (PTA Council delegate).
Flower Hill Primary School: Christine Gentile (co-president), Noel Meystrik (co-president), Kim Gilroy (co-vice president), Kerri Harris (co-vice president), Kacey Knauer (corresponding secretary), Meredith Shanley (recording secretary), Shannon Delaney (treasurer) and Jenna Prada.
Special Education PTA (SEPTA): Rene Babich Dumas (co-president), Denise Murtagh (co-president), Kerri Brandine (co-vice president), Corinne Heffernan (co-vice president), Kristin Peters (corresponding secretary), Miho Verfenstein (recording secretary), Charlene Fehrenbacher (treasurer), Tonya Guandique (PTA Council delegate) and Meaghan Buffa (PTA Council delegate).
The Origins of Huntington’s PTA
The Huntington School District has one of the longest and proudest traditions of any district in the country. For 96 years, the Parent Teacher Association, or PTA as it is widely known, has been an active partner with the educational professionals responsible for educating the tens of thousands of students who have moved through district classrooms.
The forerunner of Huntington’s PTA was formed in 1923 at what was then known as Lowndes Avenue School in Huntington Station. After the building was doubled in size over parts of 1926/27, the school was renamed in honor of former President Theodore Roosevelt. The dedication ceremony drew dignitaries from across the town and was even attended by Mr. Roosevelt’s widow, Edith and his fifth child, Archibald.
Nucleus of Parents Met in 1923
“The nucleus of the first PTA of Lowndes Avenue School/Roosevelt School, consisting of about six parents, met together in Room 115 to discuss ways and means of providing free milk to a large number of undernourished children whose parents were economically unable to supply their children with the necessary amount of milk for good health,” wrote Roosevelt Principal Agnes B. Bailey in 1958. “This was about 1923.”
The parent’s milk campaign was the start of something special in Huntington. “At this time we were buying milk in quart bottles (retail price) and serving it in paper cups,” wrote Mrs. Bailey. “The front of our auditorium was the area used for this purpose.”
The group’s first organized fundraiser was a roast beef dinner prepared and served on the second floor of the old four-room School Street School. It was located across the street from the current Jack Abrams School parking lot (the one with the basketball courts on the south side of the building).
Parents from Two Schools Affiliate
After a period of rapid enrollment growth, Lincoln School was erected on E. 9th Street in Huntington Station adjacent to St. Hugh of Lincoln Roman Catholic Church in 1923/24. (Woodbury Avenue Grammar School was built at the same time.)
By 1925 the parents of Lincoln’s students had affiliated with parents from Lowndes Avenue School to organize the district’s first PTA. “The first two years this organization included parents and teachers from both Huntington Station schools,” according to Mrs. Bailey.
By 1927 “the parents in Roosevelt School felt they could do more for our children working as a separate unit, so they withdrew and formed their own PTA,” wrote Mrs. Bailey, who served the district as a principal for 36 years, longer than anyone else.
“Our PTA over many years has contributed much to the welfare of our children,” wrote Mrs. Bailey. “I recall programs of free milk when needed, graham crackers with milk for all children, [and] the purchase of a radio. During the war, a program was set up to supplement family budgets; in some cases eyeglasses, tonsillectomies, and many other necessary and worthy causes.”
A No-Nonsense Principal
Mrs. Bailey was in a unique position to see the genesis and growth of Huntington’s PTA. Her career in Huntington began on September 7, 1921 as a fourth grade teacher at Lowndes Avenue School. The next year she moved to the eighth grade level. In 1924, only her third year in the district, she was elevated to principal of the school.
Regarded throughout the community as a no-nonsense principal, Mrs. Bailey had a stern appearance that discouraged anyone from challenging her. She was said to have run her school with an iron hand. Prior to the opening of Robert K. Toaz Junior High School in 1939, Lowndes Avenue/Roosevelt School accommodated students from kindergarten through eighth grade.
After 36 years as principal, and 38 years in the district, the 65-year old Mrs. Bailey decided it was time to call it quits. She sent a letter to Superintendent J. Taylor Finley on March 23, 1959, announcing her intention to resign for the purpose of retirement, effective at the close of the school year in June.
“The parents of our PTA have always been cooperative with one primary objective in view – that of the welfare of children,” wrote Ms. Bailey.
Over the past 96 years, the PTA in Huntington has spearheaded countless initiatives in every building and on every grade level. It has been responsible for raising hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not millions, to promote and enhance the educational experience of young people of all ages.
The memory of Mrs. Bailey has virtually disappeared from the community’s consciousness, although at least one current high school teacher aide still recalls the legendary principal. It was Mrs. Bailey and a group of dedicated parents that gave birth to Huntington’s PTA, an organization that continues to make the district and its schools a better place.