Chattanooga Times Free Press

Board names five finalists for school chief,

- BY EMMETT GIENAPP STAFF WRITER

And then there were five. The Hamilton County Board of Education on Thursday narrowed its list of eight candidates for superinten­dent, trimming three prospectiv­e applicants from the final pool.

Among the final five is Interim Superinten­dent Kirk Kelly, who narrowly made the cut for the final spot following a runoff vote against Jack Elsey Jr. He is joined by Bryan Johnson, Timothy Gadson III, Stuart Greenberg and Arthur Wayne Johnson.

During Thursday’s brief meeting, the school board members were asked to each list individual­ly their top five candidates. Each nod from a school board member was worth a single point, and the five candidates who received the most points proceeded to the next round.

Bryan Johnson was the only candidate listed by all nine board members, while Gadson, Greenberg and Wayne Johnson received eight, six and six votes, respective­ly.

Kelly and Elsey both received five votes, forcing another round in which the board members voted between the two for the fifth slot. Kelly triumphed in a 5-4 vote with board members Tiffanie Robinson, Joe Smith, Joe Wingate and Rhonda Thurman throwing their support behind Elsey.

The remaining candidates will each visit Chattanoog­a from June 5-9 for in-person interviews and school visits. The finalists will have another interview with the full board and also have the opportunit­y to talk one-on-one with board members.

It has been 14 months since the district’s previous

superinten­dent, Rick Smith, stepped down, but the board hopes to name his successor at its June 15 meeting after conducting final interviews.

Following Thursday’s vote, the board launched into a short work session to discuss how to organize the candidates’ time in Chattanoog­a around the interviews and meeting educators, elected officials and community leaders.

Robinson expressed worries that the board may not have allotted itself enough time to interact with the candidates and said she would even be willing to pick candidates up from the airport to discuss with them.

“I’m just concerned that this is going to be too much to pack into three days,” Robinson said. “I will make time in my schedule on those three days if it’s on their itinerary.”

The board also agreed to submit questions they may ask the candidates in order to better organize the interview process.

Board members have until noon on June 1 to submit questions and, although not all of them may end up being asked, the list will serve as a base to guide conversati­on. School board Chairman Steve Highlander said there will likely be community input on those questions, given what interest he’s already seen in his own district.

“I’ve already had people calling me and texting me with things they want to know,” he said.

“I’ve already had people calling me and texting me with things they want to know.” – STEVE HIGHLANDER, SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER

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