Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Top admin for Broward Schools resigns

- By Scott Travis

The longest-surviving top administra­tor from Robert Runcie’s decade as Broward schools superinten­dent is calling it quits.

Maurice Woods, the district’s chief strategy and operations officer since 2012, oversees several department­s, including transporta­tion, maintenanc­e, purchasing and minority business recruitmen­t.

In recent months, Woods, whose salary is $207,000, faced scrutiny related to his associatio­n with Tony Hunter, a former technology chief who was arrested in January on bribery and bid rigging charges after an investigat­ion by the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

Hunter first worked under Woods from 2013 to 2014 but left to take a job with Atlanta public schools. After Hunter was fired from that job, Woods persuaded the School Board to rehire Hunter in 2015 at $30,000 more than he had made during his first stint.

Woods supervised a purchasing department that oversaw $17 million worth of technology contracts that prosecutor­s say were illegally steered to a friend of Hunter’s.

Hunter’s arrest was part of a grand jury investigat­ion looking into possible mismanagem­ent and corruption in Broward and other districts. A final report is expected within the next few weeks.

Woods, who plans to leave April 2, told the Sun Sentinel his departure is unrelated to the grand jury investigat­ion.

“It has nothing to do with that at all. I don’t focus on that stuff,” Woods said.

He said he’s leaving on good terms and plans to stay in South Florida

“There’s an opportunit­y that presented itself,” Woods said. “I can’t talk a whole lot about it. There will be a press release when it happens.”

Woods is a former technology chief for Chicago Public Schools. He was the longest serving of three employees who followed Runcie, a former chief of staff in Chicago, to Broward County after Runcie accepted the superinten­dent’s job in 2011.

Former Transporta­tion Director Chester Tindall left in 2013 after turmoil in his department, while former Public Informatio­n Officer Tracy Clark stepped down in 2019 after a series of public relations blunders in the wake of the Parkland school shooting.

Woods was a fixture at School Board meetings, often criticized by board members for his attempts to explain errors and questionab­le practices. In a 2015 meet

ing, he blamed discrepanc­ies in a report on “an error in the photocopyi­ng,” annoying board member Nora Rupert.

“You can’t tell me a copy machine put in numbers by itself, because if it did, I want it at my house because I need a little more thinking there,” Rupert replied.

Throughout his tenure, Woods remained a staunch defender of Runcie, who persuaded a divided School Board to give Woods a $6,000 raise in late 2019. Woods told the Sun Sentinel that Runcie has been “an amazing superinten­dent,” and he praised him in his resignatio­n letter.

“I cannot thank you enough for all that I have learned and all the opportunit­ies you have provided me during the past nine years,” Woods wrote. “My priority is to have a smooth transition for the district’s continued success and, most importantl­y, the staff I led and served.”

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