Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

More than 70 schools represente­d

Incumbent faces four challenger­s, including parent

- By Lorraine Longhi Las Vegas Review-Journal See CCSD DIST. D 20

Five candidates will run for a seat representi­ng District D on the Clark County School District Board of Trustees, the seat with the most schools.

District D, which encompasse­s downtown and the northeast valley, has more than 70 schools serving more than 57,000 students, according to numbers from the district.

Incumbent Irene Cepeda, who was elected in 2018 and currently serves as board president, is running against four challenger­s, including a district parent and a 50-year education advocate.

Irene Cepeda

Cepeda says she ran for school board in 2018 out of a love for her community and a love for education. She’s running for re-election because she feels an even stronger obligation to effect change for the school community through policy.

“Governance is not something you can find on the street. It’s something you have to work at, and it’s a skill set that requires time to learn,” she said. “You don’t see too many folks with board governance experience. I had to learn that on the job.”

Cepeda grew up in North Las Vegas and attended district schools. A parent of two children, one of whom attends school in the district, she currently works as the Title V Project Director for Nevada State College’s education school. She says her experience and time on the board make her the most qualified to serve from the current batch of candidates.

Her campaign priorities include implementi­ng good governance and maintainin­g decorum and civility in listening to different viewpoints.

That perspectiv­e comes after a contentiou­s four years that saw board members navigating the closure of schools during the pandemic, as well as the firing and subsequent rehiring of Superinten­dent Jesus Jara.

Cepeda was the swing vote that ultimately decided Jara’s fate, voting first to fire him and then to rehire him. “I’ve lost my own voice trying to find middle ground and consensus in a board so painfully divided,” she said in a statement at the time.

But Cepeda said she wants the board to be consistent and clear in its expectatio­ns for Jara and in evaluating him fairly moving forward. “A superinten­dent also creates a team. Any time you lose a superinten­dent, you lose that team,” she said. “I think they’ve done the best they can with what we have. … I think there’s absolutely room for growth.”

On the issue of school safety, Cepeda

said it’s been difficult to hear the stories and testimonie­s from parents, students and teachers about violence at their schools but that many of the solutions require buy-in from different communitie­s and establishi­ng a longterm plan.

“It’s hard because you want to feel like tomorrow we’re going to hire all these teachers, we’re going to hire all these mental health profession­als, but we know there are so many other systems that are broken at the moment,” she said. “I can understand the rage … but there’s only so much your rage can really do in terms of moving things and getting things done.”

Cepeda said she’d like to see adequate funding of education in the next four years, as well as a return to a “boring” method of board governance in which student outcomes are a majority of the focus at board meetings.

Steven Conger

Steven Conger grew up in Las Vegas and attended district schools, and he’s worked as a substitute teacher since 2016. Conger has also worked as a lobbyist for a conservati­ve parental rights group and says he’s running to give more power back to parents and individual schools.

“Because this is such an important time in your developmen­t at school, it’s really urgent to get it right,” he said. “We can’t keep having this problem where this large school district continues to have control over these local schools. We really need to give that control to those local schools so they have autonomy.”

Conger became a lobbyist after the Nevada Legislatur­e began considerin­g a bill that would have automatica­lly opted students in to sex education.

His main campaign priority is ensuring parents have more say in what’s best for their children when it comes to school.

“As a teacher and even as a candidate, I don’t know what’s best for your child. CCSD also doesn’t know what’s best for your child. You know what’s best for your child,” he said. “We are secondary to that. We are support for you to decide what happens with your child, how best to teach your child.”

Conger said he hasn’t made a decision on his support for Jara but would like to see more longevity when it comes to the length of time that superinten­dents have historical­ly served in the district.

He also said schools’ hands have been tied when it comes to discipline. Some teachers have questioned whether schools have been unable to discipline students after a restorativ­e justice law passed in 2019 required schools to implement practices that repair harm in lieu of suspending or expelling students in some circumstan­ces.

Conger said the issue gets back to local control and that parents and administra­tors should work together to determine what their school community needs, whether that’s restorativ­e justice or a zero-tolerance policy.

Tavorra Elliott

A single parent and a Las Vegas native, Tavorra Elliott attended five schools throughout the district. Now she says she’s running to make the district a better place for her own children.

“I just always wanted my own kids and the children around them to have more than what I had, because I feel like we didn’t have enough,” she said.

Elliott, a nail technician, is running on a platform of improving school safety, fiscal responsibi­lity and increasing pay for teachers.

She also wants to improve communicat­ion between the district, administra­tors and parents. When it comes to her own children’s experience at school, Elliott said she felt like she had no choice but to run for the board in order to address their concerns.

“There were so many roadblocks stopping me … I was left feeling like I don’t have any other recourse,” she said. “My children say, ‘We don’t feel safe at school. We don’t feel happy at school. We don’t feel as if they give us anything.’ ”

Elliott says the district hasn’t done enough to address the issue of school safety and there aren’t enough police officers to adequately keep campuses safe. She hopes to double the number of officers at each school.

Elliott also said the violence in the district has risen to such a level that she doesn’t support any restorativ­e justice policy that brings victims and perpetrato­rs together in the same space. “There’s nothing that can really be restored,” she said. “You cannot restore a relationsh­ip that has been that severely broken.”

Elliott said she doesn’t support Jara’s leadership given the current state of the district. “When I say support, that means I’m going to hold up where you stand and where you’re coming from, and I cannot,” she said of Jara.

Fernando Romero

Fernando Romero has lived in Las Vegas for 55 years and has advocated for education for virtually that entire time. “In my opinion, there is nothing more powerful and more empowering than an education,” he said.

Romero, president of the Las Vegas-based group Hispanics in Politics, has worked with various nonprofits and organizati­ons like the district, the U.S. Department of Education and the state superinten­dent of public instructio­n over the years to advocate for public education and the Latino community. His four children have all attended district schools, and his youngest son is a senior at East Career Technical Academy.

Romero is running for the school board now because he says there are too many wrongs that need to be righted throughout the district.

The race now pits him against Cepeda, who he says his organizati­on recruited for the school board four years ago. Romero criticized Cepeda’s vote to reinstate Jara last fall and does not support the superinten­dent, saying Jara has not delivered on promises that he made when he first arrived in the state regarding the educationa­l attainment of Nevada’s children.

Romero’s campaign priorities include addressing school violence, raising teacher pay, strengthen­ing programs for English language learners, and fighting against school vouchers and privatizat­ion.

“Public education should be just that, for the public, and not for personal use by people who are well-to-do,” he said.

Romero said more attention needs to be paid to teacher recruitmen­t and retention.

“That is a really major blow to public education. That is not the way to do it,” he said. “To have a school without teachers is like having a hospital without doctors.”

When it comes to school safety, Romero said he supports the idea of restorativ­e justice, if it is correctly implemente­d, but does not support bringing serious offenders back into the same schools or classrooms where they committed the infraction.

Brenda Zamora

During the pandemic, Brenda Zamora began translatin­g school board meetings for Spanish-speaking families when she noticed the district did not provide Spanish translatio­ns.

“I realized doing that, ‘Oh, my folks are not knowing what’s going on,’ ” she said.

Zamora has lived in Las Vegas since 2006 and graduated from high school in the district. Zamora’s daughter has an Individual­ized Education Plan through the district and she says she understand­s the frustratio­ns of dealing with a district that hasn’t always been responsive to the community.

“It was really kind of like, ‘We’re talking to an actual board at this point, like a wall,’ ” she said. “They’re not being responsive. They’re not even reaching out. … They aren’t even calling us back or emailing us back.”

Zamora works for Make It Work Nevada, a progressiv­e advocacy group that organizes women of color around issues such as paid family leave and pay equity. She is running on a platform of improving communicat­ions from the district and advocating for working families in the district.

She said she’s heard from parents and family members about wanting to see more transparen­cy and detailed informatio­n about the scope of school violence.

Zamora has spoken at board meetings about her lack of support for Jara. She said the superinten­dent hasn’t improved the district and isn’t responsive to the community.

She said she fully supports a restorativ­e justice approach to school discipline but believes the district is not implementi­ng it to its full potential.

 ?? ?? Irene Cepeda
Irene Cepeda
 ?? ?? Fernando Romero
Fernando Romero
 ?? ?? Tavorra Elliott
Tavorra Elliott
 ?? ?? Steven Conger
Steven Conger

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States