Miami Herald

New Broward Schools leader receives $300,000 salary and a mandate to fix a ‘hot mess’

- BY JIMENA TAVEL jtavel@miamiheral­d.com Jimena Tavel: 786-442-8014, @taveljimen­a

The Broward School Board green-lit a $300,000 salary for Interim Superinten­dent Earlean Smiley on Wednesday, challengin­g her to stabilize and improve the nation’s sixth-largest school district.

Smiley, 71, started her new job immediatel­y after the board’s unanimous vote and will stay on for a year — or until the school district, which one board member referred to as a “crazy carousel of chaos,” hires a permanent superinten­dent.

“We are so elated to have you here, Dr. Smiley,” said School Board Chairwoman Lori Alhadeff during a press conference after the decision. “I know you’re going to make a huge impact and difference in our schools, in our academics, getting us to become an A school district and focusing on our strategic plan.”

Smiley will come out of retirement to replace former Superinten­dent Vickie Cartwright, who left the Broward school district amid turmoil on Feb. 7 with almost $268,000 in severance. Cartwright left her post after a rocky tenure that saw the governor suspend and replace a majority of the School Board following the release of a scathing report by that same grand jury.

The board selected Smiley the same day that CartCiting wright stepped down but appointed Associate Superinten­dent Valerie Wanza, who has worked in the school district since 1992, as “task assigned” superinten­dent while the board and Smiley negotiated her contract.

The board also unanimousl­y voted Wednesday to pay Wanza about $3,000 for her week-long service as superinten­dent and return her to her prior position.

SMILEY TAKES OVER AFTER CARTWRIGHT

Smiley started in the Broward school district in 1974 as a first-year teacher, then rose to principal and deputy superinten­dent before she left in 2010. She served as the superinten­dent of a small school district in South Carolina for three years and has since worked as a consultant.

She took the reins of the Broward school district Wednesday as it recovers from a back-and-forth shift in leadership.

The former superinten­dent, Cartwright, 52, started as interim in August 2021 and permanent superinten­dent in February 2022. Her tenure was mired in turmoil after the release of a controvers­ial grand jury report, which blasted the school district for alleged corruption, mismanagem­ent and neglect of a multimilli­on-dollar bond program funded by taxpayers for school-safety initiative­s and constructi­on projects.

that report last August, Gov. Ron DeSantis replaced four School Board members with four of his appointees who vowed change.

Those appointees, along with a fifth previous DeSantis appointee, fired Cartwright in November in an abrupt, late-night vote. Cartwright was rehired following the Nov. 8 general elections, which ushered in some new School Board members, only to agree in January to part ways.

On Wednesday, Smiley vowed to leave the district in a better state for the next superinten­dent.

“We should focus first of all on the health of the system. We need to assess, to diagnose what is functional, what is not functionin­g and to make plans to address those issues,” Smiley said during the press conference.

“At a glance, without having done any assessment, I can tell you what I will zero in on: Safety is paramount,” she said. “I want to make sure that schools are really secure. I want to make sure that teachers have what they need in terms of resources to get their jobs done, and I want to make sure that our students understand that we love them and their voices count.”

WILL SMILEY TRY TO KEEP THE JOB?

The School Board limited Smiley from applying to

keep her job on a permanent basis.

In January, the School Board retained McPherson & Jacobson, a Nebraskaba­sed search firm, for $50,000 to conduct the search for a new executive leader. That process could last about eight months, according to David Azzarito, the district’s executive director of human resources and equity.

Asked Wednesday whether she would consider staying on the job in a permanent capacity, Smiley told the media: “That is not an option.”

Reminded that Cartwright also vowed not to seek the permanent superinten­dent’s role but then did anyway, Smiley said, “The other superinten­dent was not Earlean Smiley.”

‘NITPICKING’ AND ‘CHERRY-PICKING’

The board’s chairwoman, Alhadeff, negotiated the details of the contract on behalf of the nine-member board with Smiley on Monday.

On Wednesday, before voting on it, board members

Jeff Holness and Allen Zeman initially raised concerns about some of the details. They both voted against naming Smiley as interim superinten­dent last week.

Holness questioned why Smiley would receive a 7% cash benefit if Cartwright hadn’t gotten one as interim.

Zeman called the contract “an expensive interim solution” and listed other issues with it, including the payment of membership dues for profession­al organizati­ons and reimbursed travel time.

Board member Torey Alston, one of the two remaining members appointed by DeSantis, defended Smiley and advocated for full benefits. Smiley swore Alston in as a board member in August.

“She’s a leader, an educator and a reformer,” Alston said of Smiley.

Other board members echoed Alston: Board member Brenda Fam called Zeman’s motion “cherrypick­ing,” and Alhadeff described it as “nitpicking.”

Board member Nora

Rupert praised Smiley’s experience and reminded the board the Broward school district ranked as an A-rated one under her guidance. The district currently holds a B rating and has held it for more than a decade.

“Right now, we’re a hot mess and in a crazy carousel of chaos. I want to get off; our employees want to get off and we need to onboard someone who has the chutzpah and the educationa­l chops to bring us back where we used to be,” Rupert said.

Board member Sarah Leonardi had seconded Zeman’s motion but removed it after discussion and then Zeman removed the amendment entirely.

Holness then said: “I don’t think we were nitpicking . ... I think as a board we have an obligation to discuss any item that comes before us ... and then make a decision, and I think that’s what we were doing.”

 ?? ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com ?? Interim Broward County Schools Superinten­dent Earlean Smiley claps for staff members during a School Board meeting on Wednesday in Fort Lauderdale. Asked whether she would consider staying on the job in a permanent capacity, Smiley told reporters: ‘That is not an option.’
ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com Interim Broward County Schools Superinten­dent Earlean Smiley claps for staff members during a School Board meeting on Wednesday in Fort Lauderdale. Asked whether she would consider staying on the job in a permanent capacity, Smiley told reporters: ‘That is not an option.’

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