Las Vegas Review-Journal

Divided school trustees OK hirino nor two posts

New superinten­dent gets two colleagues from his former district

- By Amelia Pak-harvey Las Vegas Review-journal

The first meeting for Clark County School District Superinten­dent Jesus Jara was rife with the same underlying tension among School Board members on Thursday, as trustees split over a decision on whether to hire a new deputy superinten­dent and chief of staff with higher salaries.

Jara, who proposed hiring two colleagues from his former district of Orange County Public Schools in Florida, observed as the board members once again bickered with each other over salaries, transparen­cy and support for the new leader.

The board voted 4-3 to hire Diane Gullett, a current area superinten­dent in the Florida school district, to replace retiring Deputy Superinten­dent Kim Wooden. Her salary will be $160,692. The same vote held for hiring Jennifer Cupid-mcCoy, a principal in Florida, as chief of staff with a salary of $145,860.

In keeping with recent vote patterns, trustees Linda Young, Chris Garvey and Kevin Child voted against the measure. Trustees Deanna Wright, Carolyn Edwards, Linda Cavazos and Lola Brooks supported it.

Officials identified about $75,000 to pay for the months in which both Gullett and the Wooden — who is retiring in November — are both on the job.

Some trustees took issue with not being notified of how the district was shuffling money to pay for the positions.

“I’m having difficulty with this right now,” Garvey said. “One, our newly appointed superinten­dent having a conversati­on with our current superinten­dent and asking for additional funds to be woven into our budget.”

Jara said money for the chief of staff position was created through the eliminatio­n of three vacant positions: an associate superinten­dent, a director in the community and government relations department and a coordinato­r in the deputy superinten­dent’s office.

“For your two people coming in, the reason I have a problem with this is I wasn’t informed and I can’t inform my constituen­ts,” Young said.

Garvey also voiced concern over the salaries for both posts, which are higher than the current deputy superinten­dent’s salary and longevity pay of $152,120 — according to Wooden’s 2016-2017 contract — and the former chief of staff ’s salary of $124,560 spelled out in a 20142015 contract.

But Wright pushed back. “I unfortunat­ely think we are really underminin­g our absolutely brand new superinten­dent by telling him the first vote, the first thing he’s asking for right off the bat, is no,” she said.

Jara, who clarified that the role of the new deputy superinten­dent will be different, said his team will not get any raises until other employees do.

“I want to be very clear that if our employees, support staff, teachers, administra­tors do not get a raise, I will certainly — and my staff — will not get a raise,” he said.

Both new employees start work in Clark County on Sunday.

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

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