When a group of Vail parents came together a year ago with the goal of improving public education, they were met with naysayers.
βWe had people who said as parents, we would not be able to make a change,β said Stacy Winstryg, a member of the Vail Parent Networkβs steering committee.
Ten months later, the group has had a hand in helping to restore planned cuts to JTED funding and ensuring that district-run charter schools receive funding for 2016.
βTheyβre very organized and persistent,β said Sen. David Bradley of the group that is made up by 850 members on Facebook and 250 members on an email list.
Over the last year, VPN has traveled to Phoenix to talk with lawmakers face-to-face and networked with parents who they have called on when theyβve gotten wind of bills threatening public education funding.
At one point, those outreach efforts resulted in VPN parents making more than 11,000 phone calls and emails to the legislature within one week, Winstryg said.
βLegislators who are allies have told us, βyour parents are the ones who stopped funding from being cut,β β Winstryg said. βThese legislators wonβt go back to office if they donβt have the support of voters and thatβs us as parents and they know weβre paying attention now.β
Word of the groupβs success has spread beyond the legislature.
Earlier this year, VPN was called upon by the superintendent of the Benson School District who wanted to get a similar effort going in his area.
The group traveled to Benson where they shared the keys to successfully organizing, what had worked for them and what hadnβt.
Today, the Benson Parent Network has held community discussions of their own on pressing education issues.
βAll it really takes is a small group of parents who are willing to step up and take lead roles and disseminate information,β Winstryg said, adding VPN will meet with parents interested in creating networks anywhere across the state.
βProbably our biggest achievement is the sheer number of parents we have been able to talk to to inform them and educate them on the overall climate of education funding,β she said. βThe fact that weβve got people listening and engaging is our biggest accomplishment.β
βA parentβs voice is powerful,β Sen. Bradley added. βThey can speak in a way that a school cannot and I would encourage people to follow this model.β
The groupβs overall mission is to get candidates in office in November who will make education a priority, Winstryg said.
βThatβs what weβre shooting for longterm so we donβt have to keep fighting these individual battles every time new bills come forward,β she said.
Given that candidates must make it through primaries before they can advance to the general election ballot in November, VPN has launched an initiative dubbed Vail Votes that seeks to encourage parents, community members and businesses to get engaged.
βWeβve looked at the numbers and about 16 percent of eligible voters voted in the last primary two years ago,β Winstryg said. βThatβs crazy to have 16 percent of people making the decision about who could possibly be going into office.β
Over the last few months, VPN has reached well over 1,000 people, urging them to make a commitment to get informed and cast a vote later this month in the primary election.
βItβs just as important as the general election to get proper candidates through,β Winstryg said. βAnd with such a small percentage of people voting, we have a small group of people whose voices are making decisions for the other 84 percent of us and thatβs not OK.β
For more information about Vail Parent Network or the Vail Votes effort, go to vailparentnetwork.org



