March 16, 2023

Several community members on Tuesday, March 14 pleaded with the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” Board of Education to consider hiring back Dan Hecht as the high school principal for the 2023-2024 school year. During its Feb. 15 monthly meeting, the school board, in a vote of 7-0, accepted Hecht’s resignation effective at the end of the school year. ...

By Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat
Benton Mayor Jim Simmons, who is also a Kelly High School alum, former Kelly school board member and whose children graduated from Kelly, addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Benton Mayor Jim Simmons, who is also a Kelly High School alum, former Kelly school board member and whose children graduated from Kelly, addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)

Several community members on Tuesday, March 14 pleaded with the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” Board of Education to consider hiring back Dan Hecht as the high school principal for the 2023-2024 school year.

During its Feb. 15 monthly meeting, the school board, in a vote of 7-0, accepted Hecht’s resignation effective at the end of the school year. As news of Hecht’s resignation spread throughout the district, community members in the form of Kelly alumni, parents, students and past and present educators took to social media to share their reactions of disbelief, sadness and anger over the longtime principal’s sudden departure.

An online petition via change.org garnered over 300 signatures in support of Hecht, who has served as Kelly High School’s principal for 14 years and was one school year away from retirement. Facebook users created an event, “Rally for Dan Hecht,” which encouraged supporters to attend the board of education’s next regular meeting, which was Tuesday in the elementary gym. Hecht’s supporters allege he was “forced” to resign by Superintendent Dr. Bradley Kolwyck and the school board.

Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board members Kellie Bridges and Kris Heacox (middle) and Superintendent Dr. Bradley Kolwyck listen as Randy Swope addresses them during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14 in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board members Kellie Bridges and Kris Heacox (middle) and Superintendent Dr. Bradley Kolwyck listen as Randy Swope addresses them during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14 in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board members Kellie Bridges and Kris Heacox (middle) and Superintendent Dr. Bradley Kolwyck listen as Randy Swope addresses them during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14 in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board members Kellie Bridges and Kris Heacox (middle) and Superintendent Dr. Bradley Kolwyck listen as Randy Swope addresses them during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14 in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)

A crowd of nearly 100 community members gathered for Tuesday’s school board meeting with the majority there to show support for Hecht, who was not present, but his family members were. Per board policy, attendees were allowed to participate in the public comment portion of the meeting. Public comment was granted for those who signed up prior to the meeting, and each person was given three minutes to address the board. Board members were prohibited from making comments.

Eight individuals signed up to address the board. Among the first on the list was Randy Swope, whose son graduated from Kelly High School a couple years ago. Swope also served as Kelly Booster Club president for two years.

“As you can see by the turnout, the community is not real satisfied,” Swope told the board. “You let the best principal in the state leave Kelly High School. We all read the report where it says Mr. Hecht resigned under his own power, but everybody in this gym knows that’s not the truth.”

Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board members listen as Randy Swope addresses them during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14 in the elementary gym. Pictured are, from left: Todd Hall, Gail Riley, David Brashear, Dorothy Lewer and Paul Ruff. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board members listen as Randy Swope addresses them during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14 in the elementary gym. Pictured are, from left: Todd Hall, Gail Riley, David Brashear, Dorothy Lewer and Paul Ruff. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board members listen as Randy Swope addresses them during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14 in the elementary gym. Pictured are, from left: Todd Hall, Gail Riley, David Brashear, Dorothy Lewer and Paul Ruff. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board members listen as Randy Swope addresses them during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14 in the elementary gym. Pictured are, from left: Todd Hall, Gail Riley, David Brashear, Dorothy Lewer and Paul Ruff. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)

Swope said the board let the 2021 Principal of the Year (by Missouri Association of Secondary School Principals Southeast District) go — a principal that has poured his heart and soul into this school district the last 14 years.

“Every parent would want him to guide and mentor their children throughout their high school curriculum,” Swope said. “To let him go is absurd. Mr. Hecht has always led by example and he’s never wavered. He is our rock.”

Swope told the school board members he had one question for them: Who’s next? He said one faculty member questioned their decision to remove Hecht and is now on their “hit list.”

Jim Urhahn addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Jim Urhahn addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Jim Urhahn addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Jim Urhahn addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)

“Kelly has an anti-bullying policy for its students, but it’s sad to know that this school board uses bullying as its business model,” Swope said. “This board is in place to do what is in the best interest of the students, the faculty and the taxpayers within this district, and I can safely say that each one of you has failed miserably. You are to be our voice. You are not on this board for self gain, your personal agenda or bias. The decisions you’ve made has forever tainted your reputation in this community. The trust and integrity that you once had in this district are gone. You failed us. You failed the kids, and you turned your back on the very man who had yours for the last 14 years.

Swope continued: “We don’t need you anymore. You think you have the power now, but through the election process, we’ll be taking that power back. We will make it where our faculty has the freedom of voicing their opinion without fear of repercussion. We will make it where our children aren’t intimidated because the viewpoints of their parents differ from that of this board. We will bring back freedom of speech, and we will bring Kelly back to where it used to be — and all of this will be done without the likes of you. This is the most pathetic board I have ever dealt with, and I am ashamed that you represent Thomas Kelly High School. But you hear me tonight: Your day is coming. This, I promise.”

Kelly graduate and former school employee Traci Bollinger followed. She said while she did make comments on Facebook regarding Hecht’s departure, she did not appreciate someone committing a federal offense by placing the February board meeting minutes and Hecht’s resignation letter in her mailbox.

Amber Scudder addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Amber Scudder addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Amber Scudder addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Amber Scudder addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)

Former Kelly school board member and parent Robby Lemonds told the board how he was recently at the mall where he was questioned about what was going on at Kelly schools.

“He said: ‘Man, I don’t know what’s going on down there, but Mr. Hecht is the reason I graduated high school. I dropped out. He called me day in and day out — me and my mom — to try and get us to come and meet with him,’” Lemonds said.

For Lemonds, he said everything comes down to common sense.

“We don’t know what you guys know,” Lemonds told the board. “We don’t know what Mr. Hecht knows. We don’t know the situation, right? So, when you sit here as a taxpayer and concerned person, you say: ‘Man, what happened?’... So we can only assume and draw conclusions that at the end of the day, if a man can finish the year out and not get fired, then why can’t he finish another year? If a man did something that deserves to be fired, why wasn’t he fired?”

Lemonds said that’s all he is asking.

“The common sense approach to me is that if whatever happened was a fireable offense, then why is he able to remain at the school? If it wasn’t a fireable offense, then why wouldn’t we reflect on the time and take advantage of the time and think we’ve got a year left or whatever the case may be. Let’s find the best person suitable for the job going forward,” he said.

As concerned voters, the community has questions, Lemonds said.

“I don’t know that we’ll get the answers we want,” he said. “I don’t think we’ll get to hear what we want to hear. We think we should get to know.”

Kelly alum and parent Nicole Buck told the board how her daughter, who is on the autism spectrum, graduated from Kelly. She praised Hecht for being “amazing” to her daughter.

“No matter how busy he was, he took the time out. If she had a meltdown, he was always there to find out why, fix the issue, calm her down and communicate with me,” Buck said.

In her opinion, Buck said, Hecht is the best principal Kelly has ever had.

“I don’t understand what’s going on,” Buck said to the board. “We want answers. … So, are we going to find out anything?”

“We will answer those questions at a later time,” Board President David Brashear told Buck.

Jim Urhahn, also a Kelly alum and parent of a recent Kelly graduate, began his comment by listing the names of eight teachers and coaches who have recently resigned from Kelly schools. He said they have one common denominator: the superintendent and the school board.

“Dan Hecht has been the man for this school for 14 years,” Urhahn said. “He went through protests. He went through deaths. A boy was killed on this campus, and his parents have told me how great Mr. Hecht was to them. He’s been through COVID. He’s been through the online school. He’s been through the six feet apart. He’s been through the masks. All that stuff, but this last year, you’re gonna send him gone. Come on. You’ve the got the power to reverse it. You’ve got it.”

Hecht was great, Urhahn said.

“There’s countless people that have notes from the man, and he encouraged these children,” Urhahn said. “If they were going to quit school, he went out and chased them down. He said: ‘No. Come back in here. Come to my office. You’re gonna graduate. I’m gonna get you through this.’

Urhahn continued: “Now, I don’t know what agenda it was. I don’t know who had the beef with him, but the things that this guy has done for this school and these other people that are leaving now because of this school is a travesty.”

But, Urhahn said, the board has the power to reverse it.

“He deserved to fill out his 15 years and retire. It was a 7-0 vote. Some of you guys I know really well,” Urhahn told the board. “I couldn’t believe you voted for it. … To think we weren’t going to have a problem with it was the wrong decision. The election is coming up.”

Benton Mayor Jim Simmons, who is also a Kelly alum, former Kelly school board member and whose children graduated from Kelly, addressed the board.

“I served on the Kelly school board for nine years and during that time, we hired Mr. Hecht. There’s no doubt in my mind that this guy was the best for this school,” Simmons said. “With that being said, I know I served over a board where one time we fired a very popular coach, and the people let us know very quickly that was the wrong decision.”

Simmons encouraged the board to “do the right thing.”

“I know the school boards are good. I have the utmost respect for anybody who puts their neck out there like you are, but, sometimes, you get it wrong,” Simmons said.

Parent Amber Scudder also praised Hecht for his caring and encouraging attitude.

“He respected Kelly schools and everybody in Kelly schools — and believe it or not, for some reason, he respected all of you,” Scudder told the board. “And some of you, yes, I do respect. Some of you, I absolutely do not, and the fact that it was a 7-0 vote, that brings the ones I do respect down just a hair.”

Scudder asked the board members to put their personal agendas aside.

Attendees listen during the public comment portion of the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board's regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Attendees listen during the public comment portion of the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board's regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Attendees listen during the public comment portion of the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board's regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Attendees listen during the public comment portion of the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board's regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)

“This school is a school for those children. Point blank. It’s not a school for the school board. It’s not a school for us parents. It’s a school for those 1,500 students that go here, and all of us in this room either have or had children that go here,” Scudder said. “We’re begging you to make that decision right for each and every one of them and each and every one of the future students that go here.”

She told the board members they could still make this right.

“There’s a whole lot of people not happy with this decision,” Scudder said. “He is a high school principal. He’s going to have people that don’t like him. He is going to have students that don’t like him. Every single principal in every single school district has had parents and students not like them, but that is part of the job. I’m asking you once again – as your job on the school board is to look over all of the issues, not your personal agendas.”

Lance Powers, who is the head football coach and PE coach for Kelly, also asked the board to reconsider Hecht’s resignation.

“I know you can go back. I know you can put it back to a vote,” Powers said. “It only takes one of you to make a motion to put it back up. Reconsider Dan Hecht’s resignation. Somebody second it, and it go from there. That’s all I ask tonight is to reconsider Dan Hecht.”

Powers, who said he’s served in the military, told the board in the last 11 years, he’s never had a leader like Hecht.

Lance Power, head football coach for Kelly High School, addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Lance Power, head football coach for Kelly High School, addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Lance Power, head football coach for Kelly High School, addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)
Lance Power, head football coach for Kelly High School, addresses the Scott County R-4 “Kelly” school board during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, March 14, 2023, in the elementary gym. (Leonna Heuring/Standard Democrat)

“The man is all about the children, looking for the good in every child and wanting all these children to succeed,” Powers said. “… When he told me in January that he was getting ready to get voted out, I was in in disbelief. How can you have a man who’s spent 14 years at Kelly school now get ready to be kicked out with one year left before he reaches retirement.”

Powers questioned how this could even happen.

“I’m disappointed in where we’re at,” Powers told the board. “I feel like we’re setting a bad precedent. As a school, it’s going to be hard for us to find quality people like Dan Hecht to come down here and work here. You might think we’re gonna find it, but I’m telling you there’s not a lot. There’s not going to be another Dan Hecht that comes in through those doors here at Kelly High School.”

Tim McGuire Sr., former assistant football coach, was the last person to make a public comment at Tuesday’s meeting. McGuire said he’s had the opportunity in his life to be associated with a lot of people in education on multiple levels.

“As a recruiter, you don’t just talk to the coach,” McGuire said. “You talk to the principal. You talk to the secretary. You talk to other people in the building so that you figure out what kind of quality kid you’re recruiting so that you know what that kid is all about.”

McGuire said he was coaching college football when he had the opportunity to come to Kelly and has since been associated with the school for some time.

“Great teachers, great student activity. I really enjoyed my time here because of the people. One of the people obviously is Dan Hecht,” McGuire said.

He said he’s sad for the Kelly students and community to lose Hecht as principal.

“You don’t get somebody with that kind of character,” McGuire said. “He (Hecht) cares about everybody. I’m just so sad that it’s come to where, now, after all this time, someone who gets to this point in his career has to be shuffled out the door.”

Following the open session, the board went into a closed session. The board did not take action to restore Hecht’s job as high school principal, according to the superintendent.

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__Board OKs SY24 calendar, accepts another resignation__

BENTON, Mo. — The Scott County R-4 “Kelly” School District’s 2023-2024 calendar was approved during Tuesday’s board of education meeting in the elementary gym.

The first day of school for the 2023-2024 school year will be Aug. 23. Spring break will be March 29-April 5, 2024. Early-release Wednesdays are also included in the calendar for next school year.

Also on Tuesday, the board approved the certified salary schedule and extra duty salary schedule for the 2023-2024 school year.

The tuition rate for the 2023-2024 school year was also approved.

The resignation of Valerie Ward, high school English teacher, was accepted.

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