Las Vegas Review-Journal

Records: CCSD leader helped trustee’s husband

Told staff to allow him into program

- By Amelia Pak-harvey Las Vegas Review-journal

The husband of the Clark County School Board president was not recommende­d for admission into a teacher preparatio­n program in 2014, but Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky overruled human resources and directed staff to admit him, according to documents obtained by the Las Vegas Review-journal from a district source.

The documents show that Jason Wright, husband of board President Deanna Wright, applied for the Alternativ­e Routes to Licensure teacher preparatio­n program but was recommende­d for rejection by district human resources personnel. The documents point to previous evaluation­s he received as a support staff employee that said he needed improvemen­t in some areas, as well as a written reprimand issued in 2007. The reason for the reprimand was not given.

But after the department reviewed that background with Skorkowsky, he directed employees to allow Wright into the program, the documents show.

In a statement to the Review-journal, Skorkowsky acknowledg­ed that he directed the HR department

CCSD

to “give Mr. Wright an opportunit­y to participat­e in the Alternativ­e Route to Licensure program,” but he did not respond to questions from the Review-journal asking why he had done so.

“Without my interventi­on, Mr. Wright successful­ly completed the ARL program and passed his tests,” Skorkowsky said. “I also did not intervene in his interview process to be placed in a school.”

Evidence of Skorkowsky’s interventi­on comes after the Review-journal revealed that Jason Wright, now a licensed Clark County teacher, was transferre­d from Harris Elementary School to another school this year after a fifth-grader at Harris accused him of kicking his hand and grabbing his collar. Child Protective Services investigat­ed the allegation but found the complaint was unsubstant­iated, according to documentat­ion provided by the district.

The district has said the reassignme­nt was in the best interest of all parties and that Wright’s position was going to be eliminated regardless.

‘Witch hunt’ alleged

Contacted for comment, Deanna Wright said the leak of informatio­n about her husband’s transfer and Skorkowsky’s role in getting him into the ARL program are part of a “witch hunt” in retaliatio­n for her votes for a superinten­dent to replace the retiring Skorkowsky.

Wright said she received phone calls and texts from people urging her to “vote the right way” just days before the superinten­dent decision.

“They said things like, ‘They’re releasing your husband’s documents. They’re releasing stuff about your husband,’ ” she said. “‘Make sure you vote the right way.’ ”

She did not identify the “right” candidate but appeared to be referring to the district’s chief academic officer, Mike Barton, who enjoyed widespread support inside the system but did not get the job.

Wright also said neither she nor her husband asked Skorkowsky to intervene on his ARL applicatio­n.

“I never asked Pat for anything,” she said. “My husband went through the process like everybody else. I have no idea why they would’ve not approved him for (the program). He’s a completely exemplary employee.”

Instead, Wright said she was being blackmaile­d during the superinten­dent search and that her family is being used.

“This is absolutely, completely nothing but dirty politics at its worst, and my husband should not have to pay for it,” she said, adding that she and her husband have retained a lawyer to deal with the issue.

Wright suggested that the informatio­n was spread by Associate Superinten­dent Edward Goldman and Trustee Kevin Child. Goldman is at the center of a recent investigat­ion into complaints surroundin­g alleged favoritism and discrimina­tion within the Employee Management Relations department he heads.

Goldman and Child denied any role in leaking the informatio­n, although Child said he took the informatio­n about Wright’s husband to the district attorney’s office immediatel­y when he found out.

Wright said people are trying to discredit Skorkowsky, whom she has

strongly supported during her time on the board.

“They’re trying to blacken his record, and they’re using me and my husband to get to him,” she said.

Climate of fear

Trustee Carolyn Edwards referred to pressure tactics during last week’s board meeting to pick the next superinten­dent, claiming some of

her colleagues had been threatened during the process. Edwards, who voted with Wright and Trustees Lola Brooks and Linda Cavazos against Barton’s promotion, said she wasn’t the target of such tactics.

“They don’t have dirt on me to threaten me with,” she said. “They could mine something up, I suppose, but that would be silly on their part. But I think they didn’t think

they could sway me.”

But she does believe the informatio­n on Jason Wright was released as retaliatio­n, “and that’s part of the climate that needs to change in the district,” she said.

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

 ??  ?? Flckr CCSD staff had rejected Jason Wright’s applicatio­n for a teacher training program.
Flckr CCSD staff had rejected Jason Wright’s applicatio­n for a teacher training program.

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