Las Vegas Review-Journal

First-day filers top 100 mark

Main Event has ballot peer in busy-day-one department

- By Ramona Giwargis and Colton Lochhead Las Vegas Review-journal

Candidate filing opened with a flurry of activity Monday by more than 100 political hopefuls, setting the stage for contentiou­s primaries in a crucial election year.

U.S. Rep. Jacky Rosen, D-nev., made her announced U.S. Senate run official, and a Republican primary is set in Nevada’s 2nd Congressio­nal District with filings by incumbent U.S. Rep. Mark Amodei and former Assemblywo­man Sharron Angle.

In what’s expected to be a crowded race, former Rep. Cresent Hardy filed late Monday to run for his old seat in Nevada’s 4th Congressio­nal District. Rep. Ruben Kihuen is not seeking re-election after he was accused of sexual misconduct. Hardy, a Republican, won the seat in 2014 and held it for one term before losing to Kihuen in 2016.

In a move that irked Clark County Commission­er Steve Sisolak, North Las Vegas Constable Robert Eliason filed for re-election despite an ongoing fight over whether he is qualified to hold the office.

Eliason, whose employees carry out evictions, serve court papers and can make arrests, has served since 2015 without meeting the require

CANDIDATES

percent of 1,172 respondent­s identified themselves as female.

But in the Clark County School District, women still hold 64 percent of all administra­tive positions, including the district’s second-in-command, Deputy Superinten­dent Kim Wooden.

There’s also an interestin­g historical exception to the rule: Before the Clark County School District was consolidat­ed in 1956, a woman — Maude Frazier — served as head of what was then known as the Las Vegas Union School District.

Andre Long, the district’s chief human resources officer, said his department is mindful of the status quo and emphasizes diversity in hiring.

“We’re really looking at ensuring that we have diversity, whether it’s gender and whether it’s ethnicity and age,” he said.

For administra­tive hires in the central office, the department assembles a diverse panel of employees to interview applicants, Long said. The department also asks other employees for input on the panel makeup, asking them to consider diversity.

In hires the department doesn’t directly control, it still tries to make sure there’s a diverse pool of candidates to choose from, Long said. Overall, it is looking for the best candidate with diversity still in mind.

Picture improving

Research suggests that females have made strides in landing superinten­dent posts — from just 1.2 per-

cent in 1971 to 13.2 percent in 2000, according to one 2003 paper.

It’s an improvemen­t that Margaret Grogan, dean of the Attallah College of Educationa­l Studies at Chapman University, has seen as she’s studied the topic for over 20 years.

She said women were not considered qualified for the superinten­dency for a long time because they came through the instructio­nal ranks, and not through positions such as head of personnel or the budget.

“Traditiona­lly, when school boards were looking for superinten­dents, they wanted people who had those kind of experience­s,” Grogan said.

But the No Child Left Behind Act in 2002, which put new emphasis on improving educationa­l outcomes, helped change the equation, she said. Districts began looking for superinten­dents who knew the instructio­nal side of the industry more than the business end.

Aside from increasing opportunit­y, encouragem­ent and mentorship also are key, according to women who have made the leap to the top office.

Raquel Reedy, superinten­dent of Albuquerqu­e Public Schools in New Mexico, started in the district as a special education teacher in 1977. She attributes much of her success to having a mentor who encouraged her to take administra­tive classes.

“Back then, elementary school principals were almost all male,” she said. “But there was a principal who saw something in me and really encouraged me and felt that I could do well with that kind of challenge.”

Cindy Stevenson, former superinten­dent for Jefferson County Public Schools in Colorado, also credited wonderful mentors who helped move her into leadership roles.

“It was not something I had planned on,” said Stevenson, now interim superinten­dent of the Boulder Valley School District. “When the board met with me and asked me to take the job, I kept thinking, ‘There must be somebody standing behind me.’”

CCSD superinten­dent search

Gary Ray of Ray and Associates, the firm conducting Clark County’s superinten­dent search, said it has placed many females in top school district spots. The firm just helped Nebraska’s Omaha Public Schools select Cheryl Logan as the next superinten­dent.

The applicants for any given job can vary, depending on the location and challenges, he said. The firm is still focused on bringing the best candidates forward.

“Will there probably be some female and minorities in there? My guess would probably be yes,” he said of Clark County’s potential candidate pool.

In the future, Trustee Linda Cavazos suggests better mentoring and training for female candidates.

“I don’t think that we’re mentoring our females to want to aspire to the superinten­dency. … It’s like we’re not grooming a pool of women candidates to choose from,” she said.

Contact Amelia Pak-harvey at apak-harvey@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4630. Follow @ Ameliapakh­arvey on Twitter.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Paloma Castrejon, a resident at Las Haciendas Apartments, sits with her dog Princesa outside her boarded-up apartment Monday. Twenty-five families were evicted from their apartments. At left, a notice posted...
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Paloma Castrejon, a resident at Las Haciendas Apartments, sits with her dog Princesa outside her boarded-up apartment Monday. Twenty-five families were evicted from their apartments. At left, a notice posted...
 ?? K.M. Cannon ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Republican Cresent Hardy takes the oath Monday while filing to run for his old U.S. House seat. Administer­ing the oath is Irene Jimenez-muir of the secretary of state’s office.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal Republican Cresent Hardy takes the oath Monday while filing to run for his old U.S. House seat. Administer­ing the oath is Irene Jimenez-muir of the secretary of state’s office.
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