Las Vegas Review-Journal

Jesus Jara

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Age: 48

Occupation: Deputy superinten­dent of Orange County Public Schools in Orlando, Florida, since August 2012

Education: Doctorate in education, educationa­l policy, leadership and administra­tion from University of Massachuse­tts, Amherst; master’s in science education from Nova Southeaste­rn University; bachelor’s in sports medicine and exercise science from Barry University

Experience: Superinten­dent of Monroe County Public Schools in Key West, Florida; chief operations officer for Monroe County Public Schools; executive director of College Board partnershi­ps, principal, teacher

Pluses: Has experience as a superinten­dent; as deputy superinten­dent, works in a large, urban district

Minuses: Has been a finalist in at least two other searches and was not chosen

Jara possesses two qualificat­ions that could serve him well in the top job in the Clark County School District: He has experience as second in command in a large,

Jurban district and has held the top job in a much smaller district.

Jara has been the deputy superinten­dent for Orange County Public Schools, in Orlando, Florida, since July 2012. The district is the ninth-largest in the country, with 208,000 students. Prior to that, he was the superinten­dent for Monroe County Public Schools, a much smaller district encompassi­ng the Florida Keys.

“I’ve never seen him ruffled on anything. He’s a true educationa­l leader,” said Orange County board president Bill Sublette. “He fills in for the superinten­dent when she’s not here. I have nothing but great things to say about him.”

After working as the district’s chief operations officer in Monroe County, Jara was appointed to the top job by Florida Gov. Rick Scott in 2011 after the previous superinten­dent resigned amid a financial meltdown.

At the time, the job in Monroe County was an elected position, so the governor was given the power to fill the vacancy, even as the school board was moving to make the job an appointed position. Jara was tasked with cleaning up his predecesso­r’s mess, said Monroe County school board member John Dick. He had to make tough decisions — including cutting jobs and approving furlough days, moves that made him unpopular with the teacher’s union — but he retained the support of the board throughout, Dick said.

When his term ended, and after the board had done a national search to appoint a new superinten­dent, Dick was the only member who voted to keep Jara on. Dick said political pressure from the upset teacher’s union got to the rest of the board members.

A letter from the United Teachers of Monroe said that Jara couldn’t effectivel­y manage a district of that size and that he wouldn’t be able to manage district the size of Clark County. But Dick disagreed.

“You see where he’s gone. He’s up in Orlando and he’s doing a hell of a job as the No. 2 there,” Dick said. “If you’ve got financial problems, he’s very good, and if your minority students are not doing what you expect for them, he’s got some ability in improving that.”

That sentiment was echoed by Wendy Doromal, president of the Orange County Classroom Teachers Associatio­n in Orlando.

In February, the teachers union staged a week of action to shine a light on working conditions. Jara issued a memo afterward and granted teachers some of the provisions they wanted.

“I feel like he’s a person you can talk to and negotiate with, and he listens,” she said.

Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

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