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District Newsletter: 08/21/2025

Image is of a dark blue and gray round icon that says Culture

Bexley Schools Are Officially ‘No Place for Hate’

Because of the work students did last school year, each Bexley building is officially designated a “No Place for Hate” school!

No Place for Hate is a student-led initiative that gives schools a framework to create and maintain a school culture and climate that are inclusive and welcoming of everyone. The program is sponsored by the Anti-Defamation League and is school-specific with students helping to drive activities during the school year.

Image is of a large video screen displaying a video that says Cassingham is no place for hate

Cassingham Elementary kicked off its No Place for Hate program on Tuesday afternoon during its first all-school Cub Gathering of the year. The school faculty and staff all wore their No Place for Hate t-shirts – everyone who works in the district is receiving one – to help celebrate their official designation and model the message for students.

As part of the assembly, students watched a short video in relation to the No Place for Hate program portraying how to identify unkind comments and how to overcome them and help support their classmates’ sense of belonging in the school.

They also learned Cassingham’s No Place for Hate Pledge:

I will try my best to be kind to all people no matter who they are.

I promise to stop, support, and report when I see something going wrong.

I promise to include others and be mindful of their space and feelings,

by making Cassingham a school that’s NO PLACE FOR HATE.

Cassingham Elementary also is beginning a No Place for Hate Club, led by school counselor Sarah Marrone and paraprofessional Akilah Wilson

Like last year, teams of Bexley students and their building advisors will develop at least three initiatives to be implemented throughout this school year. The program challenges students to think critically; instill a sense of empathy; empower students to act as allies for one another; and create a sustainable school culture of belonging for everyone.

Our other schools will hold their first No Place for Hate activities of the school year soon.

Image is of 2 men with drumsticks in their hand playing makeshift bucket drums on stage

Image is of a group of young elementary students dancing in a school theater

Image is of 5 young elementary students on the left with 2 in the middle holding up their hands and 2 female teachers on stage on the right

Image is of a large group of teachers posing on the steps of their school with each wearing tshirts that say No Place for Hate

Two Longtime Bexley Leaders Announce Retirements

Two longtime Bexley leaders recently announced their pending retirements from Bexley Schools.

Dr. Harley Williams, Director of Facilities & Operations, submitted his retirement notice, effective Aug. 1, 2026. He will leave Bexley Schools next summer after serving 26 years in Bexley. Dr. Williams began in 2000 as principal of Bexley Middle School, was named Principal of Secondary Schools in 2010, and was named principal of Bexley High School in 2017. He started in his current administrative position in 2019.

Image is a head and shoulders photo of Dr. Harley Williams

Dr. Harley Williams

Image is a head and shoulders photo of Eli Goldberger

Eli Goldberger

“I am incredibly grateful for Harley’s leadership on both the Strategic Plan and our Facilities Plan, and for all he has done to support our students over his career,” said Dr. Jason Fine, superintendent.

In addition, Athletic Director Eli Goldberger announced he will retire at the conclusion of the 2025-2026 school year, which is also the end of his employment contract. He has directed Bexley’s athletic department for the past 10 years.

“Eli has made countless contributions to our athletic programs, for which we are grateful,” Dr. Fine said. “We wish Eli the best in his retirement.”

The search for a new Director of Facilities & Operations and a new athletic director will begin later this school year, likely in early 2026.

 

Sustainability: 

Food Services Staff Work Hard to Minimize Waste

For many years, Bexley Schools’ Food Services staff have worked hard to integrate sustainability into its operations, while supporting local initiatives along the way.

When Food Services Director Julianna Carvi began in Bexley Schools in August 2013, one of the first things she did was change the focus of the operation. She said the district became an “offering district,” rather than a “serving district”  ̶  rather than serving students a whole plate of food, they offer students food options and allow them to take what they will eat.

An extension of this approach is the daily salad bar option. “If students don’t want mushy peas, they can go to the salad bar and get carrot sticks instead,” she explained. The Cassingham Complex operation also offers students a “share table,” where students may put whatever food item is unopened on the share table for another student to take.

The department also moved away from Styrofoam products a few years ago in favor of using biodegradable pressed-fiber food trays for middle and high school students. Elementary students’ meals are served on washable 5-compartment trays. Those trays were purchased about nine years ago after the Bexley Education Foundation awarded a grant to the Food Services Department to help it move into sustainable practices. The 5-compartment trays are lightweight and designed to stack in a dishwasher two by two, thus taking half the water to wash.

Two local efforts also benefit from the Food Services’ commitment to sustainability.

For years, the district has donated leftover food to Columbus Food Rescue. Each day in the Cassingham kitchen whatever leftover food that is edible but not sellable is packaged and frozen. Then every Friday Spike Tyler, a local volunteer who works with Columbus Food Rescue, picks up the frozen leftovers and helps deliver them to homeless shelters or others who are food insecure. The organization is a program of the Local Matters partnership whose mission is to fight food waste and food inequity by redistributing food to those in need. In addition to cafeterias like Bexley’s, restaurants and other food-serving organizations take part.

Secondly, “chicken buckets” are a big component of the staff’s sustainability efforts. Each day, members of the Cassingham kitchen staff cut, slice, and dice vegetables for the popular lunchtime salad bar, peel potatoes when they’re on the menu, and chop vegetables for use in many scratch-made lunch items. Food scraps, like romaine cores or other vegetable scraps, are put into 5-gallon buckets and stored in their walk-in cooler. Once a week, former Bexley High School science teacher Josh Butcher picks up all of the scraps – typically at least eight buckets – and drops off clean buckets for the next week. He uses the scraps to feed chickens. He also does outreach with Cassingham Elementary, sharing information about farming and his connection to the district’s Food Service program. 

Ms. Carvi said they regularly remediate 40-50 gallons of food waste via the chicken buckets, keeping all of that waste from landfills and directing it to animal feed, which, she said, is the second best use of food, better than composting. 

Most of these sustainability efforts are central to the Cassingham Complex Food Services operation, because of volume served and capacity. At Maryland and Montrose, Ms. Carvi explained, students preorder their meals each morning, so staff make the amount needed with only one or two servings extra for the times when a student accidentally drops their food. 

In considering the sum of everything they do to work toward sustainability, Ms. Carvi said, “I think we’re doing a pretty good job of keeping food waste out of landfills. And we would happily do more if the opportunity arises.”

Image is of a woman on the left standing next to a large cafeteria grill sauteing vegetables

Image is of 6 large white buckets stacked in a walk-in cafeteria cooler

Image is of a woman on the left filling vegetable containers

Image is of a cart filled with containers of vegetables in a cafeteria cooler

Important Dates

TONIGHT! Aug. 21 (Thurs.) – College Info Night for Seniors & Families, 6-8 p.m., Schottenstein Theatre

Aug. 22 (Fri.) – Cassingham PTO Meeting, 8:30 a.m.; Check in at School Office

Aug. 22 (Fri.) – High School Play Crew Interviews, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Schottenstein Theatre

Aug. 22 (Fri.) – Kona Ice with Montrose PTO, 3:30-4:30 p.m., Havenswood Park

Aug. 22 (Fri.) – Popsicle Social, Diverse Learning PTO, 6-8 p.m., Memorial Shelter House at Jeffrey Park

Aug. 24 (Sun.) – BMPA Back-to-School Block Party, 5-7 p.m., Corner of South Cassingham Road & Astor Avenue

Aug. 25-26 (Mon.-Tues.) – Middle School Play Auditions, 3:45 p.m., Cassingham Theatre

Aug. 26 (Tues.) Welcome Back Ice Cream Social hosted by Montrose PTO, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Montrose Playground

Aug. 27 (Wed.) – High School Curriculum Night, 6-8 p.m., Bexley High School

Aug. 28 (Thurs.) – Elementary Curriculum Night at Each Elementary School; See Each School’s Calendar or Communications for Times & Details

Sept. 1 (Mon.) – Labor Day; District Closed

Sept. 3 (Wed.) – Middle School Play Auditions, 3:30-6:30 p.m., Cassingham Theatre

Sept. 4 (Thurs.) – Middle School Curriculum Night, 6-8 p.m.

Sept. 5 (Fri.) – Middle School Crew Interviews, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Schottenstein Theatre