Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Next schools chief aims to advance district projects

- THOMAS SACCENTE

FORT SMITH — Fort Smith School District Deputy Superinten­dent Terry Morawski said he felt humbled and honored to have been selected for his upcoming new job.

The Fort Smith School Board on Nov. 10 unanimousl­y approved promoting Morawski, 45, to the position of superinten­dent, effective Jan. 4, and negotiatin­g a contract. The board also voted to approve a mutual terminatio­n of the contract for the current superinten­dent, Doug Brubaker, effective Dec. 31, conditione­d upon him receiving a contract from the Texarkana, Texas, Independen­t School District.

“This district is special to me,” said Morawski, a Fort Smith resident. “It’s a great community, and so [I am] real excited to continue the work that was started by Dr. Brubaker here, and continue to move our school district into the future.”

The hiring of Morawski follows an announceme­nt that Brubaker had been named the lone finalist for the superinten­dent position in the Texarkana Independen­t School District by that district’s board of trustees. Brubaker is scheduled to begin work in his new role on Jan. 4 after being formally named superinten­dent by the board on Dec. 1 at the end of a state-mandated 21-day waiting period, according to the Texarkana Gazette.

Fort Smith School Board President Bill Hanesworth said he was thrilled with his board’s decision to have Morawski succeed Brubaker.

“It provides continuity for all the programs that are underway,” Hanesworth said in a statement. “It gives me a great deal of comfort to know that Terry is deeply entrenched here in the community and looks forward to the next phase of continuing developmen­t in our school district.”

Similarly, Brubaker said he was really excited about Morawski’s appointmen­t.

“He’s shown himself for the last three years to be a really strong leader,” Brubaker said. “He has been involved in the district’s key initiative­s from the beginning, and he is uniquely qualified to continue the work in the district on behalf of students.”

CONTINUING WORK

Morawski said that after he becomes Fort Smith’s superinten­dent, he plans to continue working and getting feedback on Vision 2023, the school district’s five-year strategic plan that the School Board approved in December 2017. He also wants to “finish strong” on the millage projects the district has underway.

These projects are being funded by a millage increase that Fort Smith and Barling residents approved in May 2018. The millage increase, which moved the school district property tax rate by 5.558 mills, from 36.5 to 42.058, will generate about $120 million and was the first of its kind in Fort Smith since 1987.

Morawski also wants to continue working with leadership to manage the ongoing covid-19 pandemic.

“Really, that’s what’s laid out for the next couple of years, I would say: to finish strong with what we’ve started and complete our strategic plan,” Morawski said. “And then, really, the next step beyond that is to go back to our community leaders and staff and students and talk about what’s next.”

In addition, Morawski said, he would like to work on continuing to evolve the school district’s succession planning and developing its Peak Innovation Center, the building for which is due to be finished in summer 2021.

Regarding his own education, Morawski emphasized that he graduated from a public high school, specifical­ly Tyler Legacy High School in Tyler, Texas. He went on to attend the University of Texas at Arlington, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in communicat­ions and a minor in business in 1997. From there, he earned a Master of Arts degree in strategic communicat­ion and leadership from Seton Hall University in South Orange, N.J., in 2009 and a Doctor of Education in educationa­l leadership from Dallas Baptist University in 2018

Morawski said he was fortunate to be hired into public education very early in his career after college. He said he has developed “a real passion for the work” over the more than 20 years that he has been involved in the field.

“To me, it’s exciting to be part of an organizati­on that’s driven by a mission,” Morawski said. “We don’t have a bottom line to work from necessaril­y. We are really working on developing students and helping them develop as people and develop their education so that they can achieve their dreams later in life.”

TEXAS BACKGROUND

Morawski said he began his career in the Mansfield Independen­t School District in Texas, working as a director and assistant superinten­dent there and seeing his role evolve into different areas of leadership during his tenure. His career in the Lone Star State continued, serving as deputy superinten­dent of the Comal Independen­t School District based in New Braunfels, Texas, before becoming the director of strategic planning for the San Antonio Independen­t School District.

It was from this last role that Morawski joined the Fort Smith School District as its chief operations officer in the summer of 2017. Morawski said he was inspired to start working in Fort Smith because “it’s a great community.”

“I did my research before I came, and earlier in my career, in Mansfield actually, I had worked with Dr. Brubaker,” Morawski said. “He was a principal, and I was a director at the time, but I knew his character and I knew his vision, and so when I’d heard that he had become superinten­dent, I thought that I might want to look at if there was an opportunit­y here.”

Morawski has served as the Fort Smith School District’s deputy superinten­dent since July 2018, according to the district. He has also been part of the leadership team for the Strategic Planning process, Citizens Millage Committee, Citizens Capital Improvemen­t Program Advisory Committee and other initiative­s in Fort Smith.

Morawski said his wife, Courtney Morawski, to whom he has been married for 21 years, is the supervisor of profession­al developmen­t for the school district. The Morawskis have two sons, Jackson and Lane, who are a senior and a sophomore, respective­ly, at the district’s Southside High School, according to the district.

COMMITMENT TO STUDENTS

Brubaker said he and Terry Morawski have had a close collaborat­ive relationsh­ip in their specific roles. To him, Morawski has demonstrat­ed a commitment to ensuring that students are prepared for life when they graduate, be it college, career, or the military, with a viable plan and an applicable skill set and body of knowledge.

“The thing I hear about Dr. Morawski is his calm demeanor, his steadiness, his thoughtful­ness. … Those are the things I think about when I reflect on the leader that he is,” Brubaker said. “And I do believe, given that the district is working through a pandemic and also some really key projects, that his thoughtful­ness, his steadiness as a leader, and his ability to forge positive working relationsh­ips with community stakeholde­rs and educators, all those things are going to contribute to his success in this new role.”

Brubaker has served as Fort Smith School District superinten­dent since January 2017, with the Fort Smith School Board selecting him for the position in December 2016, according to the district. Zena Feathersto­n Marshall, executive director of communicat­ion and community partnershi­ps for the Fort Smith School District, said Brubaker’s current yearly salary is $215,292.

Morawski said via email that his current yearly salary as deputy superinten­dent is $149,879.50. Marshall said the Fort Smith School Board has not determined what his salary will be as superinten­dent.

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