Las Vegas Review-Journal

Orlando finalist receives CCSD nod

Local candidate loses board vote

- By Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

The people spoke, but the Clark County School Board went its own way.

At the end of a contentiou­s, 4½-hour meeting on Wednesday that featured a vocal campaign for one of the district’s own, the divided trustees picked an outsider to succeed retiring Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky as head of the nation’s fifth-largest school district.

The selection of Jesus Jara, deputy superinten­dent of

Orange County Public Schools in Orlando, Florida, came by a 4-2 vote.

Voting for Jara, 48, were Trustees Carolyn Edwards, Lola Brooks, Linda Cavazos and Kevin Child. Trustees Deanna Wright and Chris Garvey voted “no,” and Trustee Linda Young abstained after her preferred candidate was not chosen.

The vote for Jara came after trustees rejected Mike Barton, the district’ chief academic officer, by a 4-3 vote despite an avalanche of praise and support from district employees and community members.

No votes were held on the four other candidates — Don Haddad, Shonda Huery Hardman, Jesse Welsh and Eva White — who participat­ed with Jara and Barton in the interview process last week.

“Education changed my life; it gave me opportunit­y,” Jara said in a statement Wednesday night. “Ensuring that every single student gets that same opportunit­y

CCSD

is why I first became a teacher and what drives my work every day. I could not be more eager to get to work alongside CCSD’S incredible teachers, principals, and staff to build on and accelerate the district’s progress, and I look forward to starting by listening to the entire Clark County community about what has been working and where we can continue to improve.”

A Clark County School District spokeswoma­n said that contract talks will begin shortly. The trustees hope to have him in place by early next month, and he can overlap with Skorkowsky for a few weeks.

Board deliberati­ons

Barton, the district’s chief academic officer, appeared to have all of the momentum after the public comment portion of the meeting, in which nearly every speaker sang his praises. But the vote to offer him the job failed, with Child, Garvey and Young voting in favor and Brooks, Cavazos, Edwards and Wright in opposition.

“I love Dr. Barton, I think he is amazing. But I will not support him for superinten­dent,” Edwards said during the debate.

Barton’s backers on the board said they were heeding the wishes of their constituen­cies, but other trustees questioned the show of support and indicated they had heard from people who felt pressured or even threatened to support Barton. The trustees said they didn’t think Barton was involved in the campaign, but it colored their ability to support him.

“We can’t blame the candidates for the tactics,” Child countered.

Barton’s lack of experience in contract negotiatio­ns also was raised by Brooks and Wright.

“I would call Mike Barton and his wife a friend,” Wright said. “But does that mean that I vote for him to be superinten­dent because he is my friend or do I look at all the things that I need done in this district that maybe he has not quite gotten the experience to do?”

Young strongly backed Barton, and some of her comments, including one in which she said a vote against Barton was a vote against the district’s children, drew the ire of other trustees. Young also said Barton was the only candidate who got the support of the largely black and Hispanic community she represents.

“I want to state, just for the record, my decision on the last vote was not about race, it’s about our entire student population and what I believe will be best for student achievemen­t, for climate and culture,” Edwards said after the vote.

Barton told the Review-journal afterward that he was appreciati­ve of all those who turned out to support him and said he did not direct anyone to pressure anyone on his behalf.

“I just think sometimes people who supported me, passion may have blurred the line with pressure,” he said.

Barton said he is going to stay loyal to the organizati­on and hopes to work closely with Jara.

“I want to make sure Dr. Jara is supported and welcomed into the community. I feel we have a lot of work to do together,” he said.

New superinten­dent

Jara’s experience as a superinten­dent in Monroe County Public Schools, which includes the Florida Keys, coupled with current duties as deputy superinten­dent in the large, urban Orange County district earned him support.

But Garvey, in particular, expressed concerns about Jara’s involvemen­t in certain educationa­l groups, including the nonprofit Chiefs for Change, charging that they promote charter schools and hurt traditiona­l public schools.

Jara is a member of the group’s Future Chiefs program, which is aimed at building a pipeline of state and district leaders. The organizati­on describes itself as a nonprofit, bipartisan network that champions policies that make a difference for students.

After Jara’s selection, state Superinten­dent Steve Canavero said he was looking forward to working with him.

“I look forward to partnering with him to ensure all students receive a world-class education and gain access to the college and career opportunit­ies they deserve,” he said in a statement.

Other were hoping that Jara would dive straight into work. The Clark County Education Associatio­n urged him to quickly address what it said was an all-time low in the relationsh­ip between the district and the union.

“CCSD has lost two straight arbitratio­ns with CCEA with a third scheduled for June 11-13, 2018. Jara will inherit this problem. Accordingl­y, we expect Jara to make it a priority to improve labor relations the moment he begins his new job,” spokeswoma­n Christina Cober said.

Contact Meghin Delaney at 702-383-0281 or mdelaney@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Meghindela­ney on Twitter.

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Jesus Jara

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