Vote No to Tomah Referendum

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- TOMAH, WISCONSIN

03/30/2026

The Tomah Area School District Board of Education has selected Dr. Francis Redmon to become the district’s next superintendent.

Dr. Redmon is currently completing his second year as superintendent in the Keystone Central School District in Mill Hall, Pennsylvania. Frank’s previous district-level leadership experiences include serving as superintendent for five years in the Quilcene School District in Quilcene, Washington, and the director of the Ashgabat International School in Turkmenistan for four years.

Dr. Redmon earned his Bachelor of Science degree in physics from St. Norbert College, a Masters degree in Educational Leadership from the University of Washington in Seattle, and a Masters degree and Ph.D. in Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Dr. Redmon will begin his new duties as the Tomah Area School District superintendent on July 1, 2026.

The Tomah Area School District is excited to welcome Dr. Frank Redmon as our next superintendent. Please join us in giving him a warm Tomah welcome!

04/16/2025

Nearly six months ago, we set out to shine a light on the behind-the-scenes shenanigans happening at the Tomah Area School District. And wow—what a lasting impact it's had.

In case you missed it earlier this month: both of the school board members who won the election were the very ones who stood with us. That’s not just a win—it’s a reflection of what the public truly wants.

We’re not surprised. While others were busy trying to spin the narrative, we listened. We understood the public better than anyone pushing the referendum.

What an incredible reminder of the power everyday people have when they step up, speak out, and take action.

To the newly elected board members: we wish you a successful term. Go make a giant impact—for the people, and with the people.

And with that… one final note before we close this chapter:

It’s me.
This entire time.
- Sneaky Chuck

03/04/2025
03/04/2025

“The City Can’t Rezone It Until We Own It”

The Tomah School District is moving forward with a $2 million land purchase, but the terms of the deal have changed since the school board originally approved it. Now, the district is required to buy the land before annexation and rezoning are approved.

That means if the City of Tomah rejects rezoning, taxpayers will be left owning $2 million in land that cannot be used for a school.

The school board only found out about this contract change on March 3, 2025—at the same time as the public. They have not had a chance to reconsider the decision.

This isn’t about blaming anyone. It’s about making sure that we’re making the best choices for our schools and our community.

Meanwhile, Our Schools Are Falling Apart

We have schools in serious need of repairs, and yet the district is moving forward with a land purchase that has no guarantee it can even be used for a school.
• Miller and Lemonweir Elementary Schools need millions in repairs after the district’s plan to close them failed when the $177 Million Referendum in November 2024 was rejected.
• Wyeville, Warrens, Camp Douglas, and Oakdale schools have long-standing maintenance issues that were never included in the referendum and still have no clear path forward.
• Instead of fixing the schools we already have, the district is pushing forward with a $2 million purchase.

This isn’t about stopping progress. It’s about making sure we’re prioritizing what matters most: our kids, our schools, and responsible use of taxpayer dollars.

The Board Approved This Before the Terms Changed

In December 2024, the school board voted 5-2 to approve the land purchase under very different circumstances.
• Voted in favor: Mike Gnewikow, Spencer Stephens, Ricky Murray, Susan Bloom, and James Newlun
• Voted against: Teresa Devine and Catey Rice

At the time, the board believed annexation and rezoning would be finalized BEFORE the purchase. That is no longer the case.

There’s Still Time, But We Have to Act Now

The purchase isn’t expected to be finalized until after July 15, 2025, which means there is still time for the board to reconsider—and for the community to speak up.

Two key meetings are coming up where public input is critical:
• April 3, 2025 – Planning Commission Meeting
5:30PM at the Tomah City Council Chambers
• April 15, 2025 – City Council Meeting
6:30PM at the Tomah City Council Chambers

This Impacts All of Us – Please Share This!

This isn’t just a City of Tomah issue—this affects every taxpayer in the Tomah Area School District.
• $2 million in taxpayer dollars is being spent on land that may never be used for a school.
• Meanwhile, students and teachers are stuck in buildings that desperately need repairs.
• The school board needs the time and opportunity to reconsider now that the contract has changed.

Reach Out to Your Elected Officials

Tomah Area School Board Members
Mike Gnewikow – [email protected]
Spencer Stephens – [email protected]
Ricky Murray – [email protected]
Susan Bloom – [email protected]
Teresa Devine – [email protected]
Cathryn Rice – [email protected]
James Newlun – [email protected]

Tomah Planning Commission Members
Mayor Paul Dwyer – [email protected]
John Glynn (City Council) – [email protected]
Travis Scholze (City Council) – [email protected]
Brian Rice – 608-372-9568
Bryan Meyer – 608-372-7967
Eric Prise – [email protected]
Tina Thompson – [email protected]

Let’s Make Sure This Is the Right Decision

This isn’t about politics. It’s about doing what’s right for our schools, our kids, and our community. The school board should have the chance to fully reconsider this purchase now that the terms have changed. The public should have the chance to weigh in before it’s too late.

Please share this so more people understand what’s happening.
Show up on April 3rd.
Speak out on April 15th.
Email your elected officials.

We all want strong schools and smart decisions.
Let’s make sure this is one of them.

-Heidi Hammes

03/02/2025

Join Me at the Tomah Area School Board Academy Meeting – March 3rd

The Tomah Area School Board Academy Meeting is happening on Monday, March 3rd, at 6:30 PM at the Robert Kupper Learning Center. This meeting is open to the public to attend and listen, though public comment won’t be taken. I’ll be there, and I encourage you to join me to stay informed about the decisions shaping our schools.

$2 Million Land Purchase – What’s Next?

One of the most significant topics on the agenda is an update on the $2 million land purchase, which moved forward despite the failure of the $177 million referendum in November. The board will provide updates on:
• Soil testing at the site on March 3rd and 4th
• Annexation into Tomah city limits
• Traffic studies and property surveying

Other Key Agenda Items:
• Elementary School Maintenance Needs – Discussion on the repair and maintenance challenges at LaGrange, Lemonweir, and Miller Elementary Schools. At the previous February 3rd Board Academy meeting, the conditions of TAMS, Oakdale, Wyeville, Warrens, and Camp Douglas were discussed.
• 2025-2030 Montessori School Contract – Review and possible approval of a new contract for Tomah Area Montessori School.
• District Budget Overview – A look at the budget timeline and financial reports, outlining where tax dollars are being spent.
• Review of Meet and Confer Meetings – Updates from the February 12th discussions between district leadership and staff.

This is an opportunity to hear exactly where district priorities stand. No closed doors—just information that affects all of us.

I’ll be there, and I encourage you to join me. The more we stay engaged, the better we can advocate for our students, teachers, and the future of our schools.

-Heidi Hammes

01/23/2025

We were right.

They bought the land regardless of what happened with the referendum vote last November.

We were right.

Administration receiving pay raises while some teachers didn’t get any.

We were right.

The terrible education numbers weren’t going to be fixed with the referendum.

We were right about so much.

Yet, for some odd reason, no one believed us.

And make no mistake—they’ll try this referendum again, sooner than you may think.

12/21/2024

Today is the darkest day of the year, but from here, the light starts to return. It’s a reminder that brighter days are always ahead—even when things feel uncertain.

But today, I feel the weight of another kind of darkness. At the Annual School Board Meeting, a small group of stakeholders made decisions with far-reaching consequences—decisions that weren’t recorded for the rest of us to see. No video, no transparency, no way for parents, taxpayers, or community members to fully understand what happened that night.

As a mom, I think about how much trust we place in our schools to do right by our kids—to give them safe spaces, good teachers, and every opportunity to thrive. As taxpayers, we want to know our hard-earned money is being spent wisely and transparently. And as Americans, we believe in accountability—that decisions affecting our families should be open and accessible to all.

This isn’t about left or right; it’s about what’s right for our kids and our community. We all want safe schools, solid leadership, and a system we can trust. Transparency is the first step toward rebuilding that trust and ensuring every voice matters.

Brighter days are ahead—but only if we work together to demand accountability and transparency in the decisions that shape our kids’ future.

-Heidi Hammes

12/18/2024

So many didn’t believe it when we said no matter what, they were going to buy that land.

12/17/2024

For as long as I can remember, I have been a steadfast supporter of public education. I believe schools are the beating heart of a community—a place where every child, no matter their background, has the same opportunity to learn, grow, and succeed. I have fought for public funding, celebrated teachers, and defended districts when times were tough.

But last night, my heart broke.

The Tomah School Board voted 5-2 to spend $2 million on land, ignoring the crumbling schools, struggling kids, and real crises facing us today. This vote isn’t just a mistake—it’s a betrayal of everything public education is supposed to stand for.

Our Most Vulnerable Kids Are Learning in Hallways

We talk about equity, about leaving no child behind, but where is that equity when Title I students—our most vulnerable learners—are forced to learn in hallways?
• Hallways are loud.
• Hallways are undignified.
• Hallways are not classrooms.

These are kids who already face barriers. They need quiet, structure, and support. Instead, they’re treated as an afterthought. How can we say we care about social justice or equal opportunity when we let kids sit on folding chairs next to hats, coats, and mittens?

Meanwhile, administrators sit in offices at the District Office. Why aren’t they stepping up to share space? Adults can handle distractions—children cannot. If kids are asked to learn in hallways, leadership should work there too.

Deferred Repairs: A Ticking Time Bomb

Our schools are crumbling around us. Roofs leak, HVAC systems fail, and classrooms deteriorate. Instead of addressing these urgent safety issues, the district kicks repairs down the road, year after year, hoping taxpayers will feel forced to bail them out with a referendum.

And make no mistake: the district needs a referendum in April 2025 or the elections in 2026 to fix its deficits and keep programs afloat. Their entire strategy appears to depend on creating a crisis so dire that we have no choice but to pay up.

Misplaced Priorities—Where Is the Leadership?

Let’s be clear: this district had $2 million to spend. That money could have:
• Given kids real classrooms instead of hallways.
• Fixed leaking roofs and broken systems.
• Funded programs that support kids who are falling through the cracks.

Instead, they spent it on “empty” land.

Land doesn’t keep a child warm in the winter.
Land doesn’t fix the leaks dripping onto a teacher’s desk.
Land doesn’t give a struggling child a quiet place to learn.

Tomah Is Failing Its Mission

I have always believed that public education is our great equalizer—the one place where a child’s zip code or income doesn’t define their future. But when leadership makes decisions like this, they are abandoning that mission.

What message are we sending to families in poverty? To families of color? To every teacher fighting to do more with less?
• That our kids don’t matter?
• That their learning conditions are “good enough”?

This isn’t how a school district lifts up all students. This isn’t leadership.

Mauston Should Be Our Warning

We don’t need to look far for a cautionary tale. Mauston, WI, ignored its problems until it was too late. Poor financial decisions, deferred repairs, and misplaced priorities sent their district into financial ruin. Programs were cut. Staff were let go. Students paid the price. They are now talking dissolution.

Tomah is on the same path, and unless we demand better, our kids will suffer the same fate.

Enough Is Enough

This isn’t about budgets or buildings—it’s about values. Public schools are supposed to be a place where we care for every child. Where we fight for equity, opportunity, and safety.

But until there is an overhaul of leadership—from administrators to the Board of Education—I can’t support another referendum. Not because I don’t believe in public education, but because I do.

A Call to Action

To teachers: You are heroes, but you deserve better.
To parents & caretakers: Your children deserve classrooms—not hallways.
To taxpayers: Demand accountability before leadership asks for more of your money.
To leadership: It’s time to stop saving for dreams and start fixing today’s problems.

$2 million could have lifted up every child in our schools. Instead, it was wasted.

I still believe in public education. I still believe in equity and opportunity for all kids. But until this district remembers its mission, I cannot trust this leadership to put students first.

Our kids deserve better. Our teachers deserve better. Tomah deserves better. Enough is enough.

-Heidi Hammes

12/16/2024

Tonight is the night for all of us—parents, stakeholders, and community members who care about the future of this town. You don’t need a title, a degree, or accolades to stand up for what’s right. What matters most is your love for this community and your courage to protect its future.

I know many of you might be afraid of retaliation for speaking up—whether it’s from the administration, the school board, or others in this town who think they know better than you. But you are not alone. They count on silence and fear to keep their decisions unchallenged. Tonight, we show them that fear won’t win.

This isn’t just about a vote—it’s about ensuring the voices of everyone in this town are heard. The school board and administration work for us, not the other way around. We cannot let a few select voices make decisions that affect all of us without accountability.

The meeting is at the Robert Kupper Learning Center at 7pm. Show up, speak up, and know this: we will stand together. I’ll be there, and so will many others who share your concerns and your hopes for this community’s future.

Be brave. Be loud. Be there—not just for your kids, but for your neighbors, your schools, and the values we hold as a community. Together, we are stronger, and together, we will make them listen. See you tonight.

-Heidi Hammes

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Tomah, WI

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