Orlando Sentinel

15 candidates apply to replace Jenkins as the next Orange schools superinten­dent

- By Leslie Postal lpostal@orlandosen­tinel. com

Fifteen people applied to be the next superinten­dent of Orange County Public Schools by the Friday night deadline, with Superinten­dent Barbara Jenkins’ top deputy among those seeking to replace her when she retires this fall.

The pool of applicants includes experience­d school administra­tors, candidates with interestin­g background­s that might pique the Orange County School Board’s interest and a few, as expected, who are unqualifie­d to lead one of the largest school district’s in the country, said Andrea Messina, executive director of the Florida School Boards Associatio­n, which is running the OCPS superinten­dent search.

The number of applicants is also far smaller than the school district likely would have received a few years ago, Messina said.

“The numbers for superinten­dent applicants are going way down across the country,” she said. “It’s not as a desirable a job as it once was.”

The superinten­dent’s job has always been a high-profile one with lots of responsibi­lity but a lot of “community division” in the last year has made it a less appealing and one viewed as “far more in the hot seat than it ever was before,” she added.

Anger about face masks during the COVID-19 pandemic sparked heated school board meetings in Orange, across Florida and the country and continued debates about books and about teaching topics related to LGBTQ people and race have, too.

In early 2021, more than 50 people applied to be the Polk County school district’s new superinten­dent but since then most Florida superinten­dent jobs have received far less interest, Messina said. The Pinellas County school district, which just wrapped up its superinten­dent search, received 19 applicants.

Among the applicants who want to lead Orange are Deputy Superinten­dent Maria Vazquez, who has Jenkins’ support, a regional superinten­dent for the Palm Beach County school district, a superinten­dent for a small South Carolina school district who was his state’s superinten­dent of the year, and administra­tors with the New York City and Washington, D.C., school systems.

The Orange County School Board, which hires the superinten­dent, will begin discussing the applicants at a meeting Wednesday. It hopes to make a decision by the end of June.

The school board expects to offer its new superinten­dent a three-year contract with a salary range of $295,000 to $350,000 annually. After considerin­g public opinion shared in surveys and meetings, the board said it preferred candidates who had been a teacher, principal and an administra­tor and worked in districts with at least 35,000 students.

Orange has more than 206,000 students and more than 25,000 employees.

Chair Teresa Jacobs said she was “a little surprised” there were not more applicatio­ns but also understood the current climate made it a tough job.

Because Orange is the nation’s ninth largest school district, some school administra­tors may not feel they have the qualificat­ions to run such a large operation, she added, and Florida’s public records law, which means applicatio­ns are public, could discourage some applicants, too.

But Jacobs said she felt confident there were quality candidates among the 15.

Jenkins, who has been in the job for a decade, is retiring at the end of this year. Her decision was dictated by her entry into the state’s deferred retirement plan in 2018. That requires her to stop work by the end of 2022.

 ?? WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Orange County Public Schools Superinten­dent Barbara Jenkins speaks at a press conference on June 22 in Orlando.
WILLIE J. ALLEN JR./ORLANDO SENTINEL Orange County Public Schools Superinten­dent Barbara Jenkins speaks at a press conference on June 22 in Orlando.

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