Thoughts For a Monday

A blue 3.5" Floppy Disk holding the hand of a smaller blue SD Card on a grey background.

Text under the storage devices: Build a world where your children are stronger than you ever were.

Hey Fall River,

Election Day is tomorrow, Tuesday, November 4th, and I hope that everyone who is eligible and able takes an opportunity to vote and make their voices heard in the direction that we want to see this city take in the coming years.

There are a lot of candidates who are willing to point out all the things that are wrong with the city and all the things that are wrong with the schools. And I’m not about to tell you that there aren’t things that need to be fixed. I wouldn’t be running for School Committee if I didn’t think that there weren’t changes needed.

But there are also so many things that are good about Fall River. Things that don’t get talked about enough.

Dropping off my daughters for Trick or Treating last Friday, I got to drive through the Highlands. And, at least along President Ave, the streets were PACKED with people. Small children with their parents, older kids and teenagers off in their own groups. Plenty of houses generously offering candy to inflatable dinosaurs, Disney princesses, baseball players and whatever KPop Demon Hunters are. It was an amazing thing to watch for a few minutes while I waited for traffic to clear.

There were also Trunk or Treat and other events to celebrate Halloween throughout the city, both in the schools as well as in other community locations. Countless volunteers giving their time and effort to help spread some joy to others.

Positive things are happening in the schools as well. Durfee Engineering students met with industry leaders at Gilette Stadium for part of STEM week, giving them hands-on experience in areas like Robotics and Manufacturing. Meanwhile, Construction students were getting an opportunity to experience real world applications of what they are learning when they got to participate in concrete work being done at Watson Elementary. Both of these, and similar opportunities in other educational programs offered, will serve our students well as their careers progress.

Durfee’s marching band has been making a name for themselves this competition season, winning or placing second in every show so far this season. This past weekend, they won the State Championship in their class in two different shows. These 30-some students, their dedicated staff and the support of their families show how much we can achieve when people focus their varied skills and are willing to put in time and effort to achieve common good.

I’ve said it before, probably way too many times, making a point to mention it every debate, forum and interview I’ve given this campaign season. When my family moved to Fall River, I read up on the schools. I heard all the horror stories. But our experience here has been so incredibly different than what we feared. The community has been welcoming. The cultural diversity has been amazing. To a person, every instructor we have had contact with wants nothing but the best for all their students. I have to hope that as caretakers of these students, we want the same.

I feel that the path forward for Fall River is by working together. Two of Fall River’s greatest strengths are and have always been our rich diversity and by how powerful we are when we harness our differences and work together for the common good. The School Committee, working with the rest of the government, the administration, the teachers and staff of the schools and the entire community need to work in partnership to help provide the school system that the students, and all of Fall River need and deserve.

I hope that tomorrow, I can count on your vote to be one of the six people entrusted to take the Fall River Schools where we want them to go.

Together.

Learn More About Me (And the Others, I Guess!)

Tonight (October 15th, 6:30 PM EDT) Fall River Educational Television, along with the B.M.C. Durfee High School Government will be grilling the candidates for School Committee on the topics important to them. Looking forward to answer their questions, as the students are, and should always be equal stakeholders in their education process.

This will be the second “debate” that I’ve been a part of, with the previous Candidate Forum having taken place last Tuesday, hosted by Fall River Community Media, with questions being asked from local news reporters.

Me, answering a question while gesturing wildly with both hands during the Fall River Community Media Candidate Forum on Tuesday, October 7th.

My silver and black tie was knocked askew while putting the microphone on it.
Fall River Herald News/Colin Fruze

Keith Thibault and his team at FRC Media were also kind enough to let me record a brief candidate statement and record a short interview detailing some of what I hope to bring to the Fall River Public Schools.

If we can dodge another Nor’easter this weekend, I’m also going to be out and about in Fall River on Sunday waving signs. Times and locations still TBD.

Once place where I can also be found for a meet-and-greet is not TBD though.

From 5:30pm until 7:30 on Thursday, October 23rd, I will be at the Fall River Public Library’s meeting room to meet any interested community members, answer any questions that people may have for me, play card games, color and anything else fun that I can think of between now and then. This will be open to the public. Please stop by, even if just to say hello. Anybody interested in a yard sign can also reach out to me at the event (or before) and I can make sure that you get one.

Lasty, I am always open to comments and questions, not just at public events. Please reach out to me at any time using whichever of the following is the most convenient for you:

Email: Dudek4OurSchools@outlook.com
BlueSky: Dudek4OurSchools.bsky.social
Facebook: Randy Dudek for Fall River School Committee

Let’s Talk: Gender in High School Sports

A few weeks back, as I was desperately trying to get as many signatures on my nomination papers as possible, I had a woman look willing to sign for me, but then decided she wanted to ask me some questions on where I stood on the issues. Which is always a completely fair question.

It turns out she only had one question for me. “Where do you stand on boys playing girls’ sports?”

And, sure, I may be new at running for political office, but I’m not new at dealing with people looking at me as a bearded, slightly overweight white guy, probably wearing cargo shorts at the time, and making a quick determination that I am on ‘their team.’ It’s also not my first day on Earth, so I knew very well what her actual question was about.

But, I gave her a sincere look and answered her question directly and honestly.

“Ma’am, I know that there have been boys playing traditionally girl’s sports in Massachusetts for some time, when there is no equivalent boy’s sport offered at their school. I know it happens in Field Hockey and Volleyball and has for some time.”

She took a couple of seconds to process my response and very politely (honestly!) let me know that she would be unable to sign my petition or vote for me.

This morning I actually had the opportunity to do some research on this. I did not know that Massachusetts is the only state that has legally ruled that the Equal Rights Amendment guarantees boys the right to play traditionally girls’ sports (I will be calling them “girl’s sports” moving forward here, entirely for readability’s sake) if the school lacks an equivalent boy’s team.

The Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association has released the breakdown of participants in sports for the 2024-25 school year, broken down by both sport and gender.

Last year 161 boys participated in girls’ sports. As I expected, there was Field hockey and Volleyball. There were also 10 boys who participated in Softball.

My numbers don’t count the 21 boys who competed in Gymnastics, because I don’t know enough to know if they directly compete against the girls or how that works. More learning for me to do. They also don’t include potential cases that the numbers I see can’t explain like a theoretical case where a school may not have a boy’s tennis team, but the data I have doesn’t show that.

But, we certainly had a minimum of 161 boys playing girls’ sports last year. The numbers are reasonably consistent going back too.

But my original point to the woman is that this is commonly accepted, even more so from a legal standpoint.

161 student athletes who identify as bona fide males participating in girls’ sports involving some level of face-to-face competition.

I was unable to find the numbers of transgender girls playing sports in Massachusetts, but former governor Charlie Baker, now President of the NCAA, said in late 2024 that less than 0.00196078431373% of college athletes are transgender.

If that percentage were to hold for high school athletes, that would mean that there were three transgender girls out of the 147,550 female athletes competing in Massachusetts high schools. And that’s assuming none of them played multiple sports.

I did not major in math, but I believe that three is a much smaller number than 161.

Sometimes I think this manufactured debate doesn’t really have anything to do with conservatives’ sudden interest in girls’ and women’s athletics at all.