Chicago Sun-Times

NEW CPS CEO CALLS IG WHO OUSTED CLAYPOOL ‘ HONEST PERSON’

New CEO calls Schuler ‘ honest person’

- BY LAUREN FITZPATRIC­K Education Reporter Email: lfitzpatri­ck@suntimes.com Twitter: @ bylaurenfi­tz

The new homegrown CEO of the Chicago Public Schools said Thursday that the sprawling school system she just inherited needs an independen­t inspector general, calling the one whose probes ousted two of her predecesso­rs “an honest person.”

Janice Jackson — a former teacher and principal with children enrolled in the country’s third- largest district that educated her — ascended to CEO after last month’s resignatio­n of Forrest Claypool, who replaced the currently imprisoned Barbara Byrd- Bennett. She is Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s fifth appointed CEO since he took office in 2011 and the eighth schools leader CPS high- schoolers have known since starting kindergart­en. Her role as acting CEO is expected to become permanent pending school board approval this month.

As she works to rebuild trust and instill stability in the troubled school system, Jackson said she met “early on” with Nicholas Schuler, the independen­t watchdog who caught Claypool lying repeatedly during an ethics probe sparked by the Chicago Sun- Times. He also is credited with handling the day- to- day investigat­ion of Byrd- Bennett.

“I think it’s critically important,” she said from her newly occupied corner office overlookin­g State and Madison. “My personal opinion is that the office of the inspector general has to exist. Again, if we want people to trust the district, they have to know there is a place where they can trust what’s happening in the district.”

“I see us having a good relationsh­ip so that he can do his job and I can do mine,” she said.

The relationsh­ip between Claypool and Schuler was rocky at best, and at times openly hostile. Claypool hired an outside attorney to stonewall Schuler’s probe into CPS’ top attorney and Claypool friend, Ronald Marmer. That prompted Schuler to take the rare step of appearing at a public meeting of the school board to complain about the stalling. Claypool also launched an unpreceden­ted internal investigat­ion to defend a high school principal Schuler said should be fired for falsifying attendance numbers. And he ignored IG recommenda­tions condemning as unfair residency waivers for a top Claypool financial aide.

Claypool also bulked up the internal auditing department, multiplyin­g its staff and budget under a longtime aide in an effort, critics said, to quietly head off the IG whose findings must be publicized each year by Jan. 1. It’s not yet clear what’ll happen to that department under Jackson.

Schuler’s most recent report covering the 2016- 17 school year revealed thefts of gift cards by some CPS principals and staff.

Asked whether she believed his findings, Jackson called Schuler “an honest person.”

“What I want people to know is that this is a large district,” Jackson said. “I’m not making any excuses but I want to be judged on how we act, when there are bad actors in our district and when things are brought to our attention, how do we hold individual­s accountabl­e, but also how do we ensure that we have the right policies and systems or conditions in place so these things don’t continue to happen?”

Schuler confirmed the meeting, saying, “I thought we had a really good first meeting.”

“I came away encouraged. I think we’re going to have a better working relationsh­ip than we did with the past administra­tion.”

 ??  ?? Janice Jackson
Janice Jackson
 ?? | MAX HERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? CPS CEO Janice Jackson
| MAX HERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES CPS CEO Janice Jackson
 ?? JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Chicago Public Schools Inspector General Nicholas Schuler
|
JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Chicago Public Schools Inspector General Nicholas Schuler |

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