Chicago Sun-Times

CPS CEO’S FAMILY, OLD SCHOOL TIES

The new head of public schools in Chicago, a CPS graduate, has dozens of relatives who either attend or work in the district. But some critics from San Antonio say his record as superinten­dent there doesn’t match his working-class background.

- BY NADER ISSA AND LAUREN FITZPATRIC­K Staff Reporters

When Mayor Lori Lightfoot introduced new Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez on Wednesday as a “son of Chicago,” it was hard not to draw comparison­s with his predecesso­r, Janice Jackson, praised by supporters and critics alike for her lifelong ties to CPS.

Jackson graduated from CPS, became a teacher, then a principal, and after her doctorate in education, she rose from mid-level administra­tor to CEO in a matter of years. She’s still a CPS mom of a daughter in junior high, and she still lives on the South Side.

Martinez immigrated to Chicago when he was 6 years old, and he and his 11 younger siblings all learned at CPS schools. He launched his career in public education at CPS in the 2000s and likes to say he rose up through the system.

Currently three of his sisters teach in the district, and some 28 nieces and nephews attend CPS schools. Most of Martinez’s family still lives in Chicago; his mother Manuela is in the same historical­ly Mexican Pilsen neighborho­od where he graduated from Benito Juarez High School. A father of two school-aged kids, his wife, Berenice Alejo, also has Chicago ties and worked for The Resurrecti­on Project in Pilsen and the Latino Policy Forum.

So as Martinez makes his homecoming, Martinez and Lightfoot want to impress on families and educators that he’s one of them, with skin in the game when it comes to the district’s success. Like Jackson, he views the CPS CEO post as a dream job.

Yet that’s where the similariti­es end. Martinez has taken a vastly different path to the corner office at 42 W. Madison St., revealing a different type of leader.

Homegrown — but took far different path from Janice Jackson

Martinez enters the job with no education degrees and no time spent as a classroom teacher. After majoring in accounting at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, he worked as an auditor, including for Catholic Charities.

His strongest academic education credential­s consist of a fellowship in the Public Education Leadership Project at Harvard University. And he graduated from the Broad Superinten­dents Academy, funded by Los Angeles billionair­es Eli and Edythe Broad, champions of corporate-style reforms aimed at improving education.

After his introducto­ry news conference where a dozen reporters peppered Martinez with questions and a small group of parents heckled the mayor and other city leaders, one of his sisters — not among the CPS teachers in the family — said her brother is used to the pressure of running a large urban district and will meet the demands of the job.

“He said, ‘I want to be near my family, and I know I can make a difference.’ So he really want

ed it even though we questioned him just because he was already in a really good place.”

Martinez’s training showed in his time leading the 48,000-student San Antonio Independen­t School District, where he was known for moving low-rated schools into the hands of charter operators and other private organizati­ons to improve their performanc­e.

He argued Wednesday that Texas laws gave him little choice but to use charters and privatizat­ion to manage schools that otherwise would have been forced to close. He said charter operators can have good ideas, yet he believes a district itself is best suited to support under-resourced schools.

Chicago, a 340,000-student district after years of enrollment decline, has gone through similar strategies over the past two decades. But there is now a moratorium on new charter schools, and the district is phasing out its contract with a not-for-profit organizati­on that used controvers­ial “turnaround” strategies in privately managing dozens of schools.

Alejandra Lopez, president of the employee union at Martinez’s San Antonio district, said she didn’t feel Martinez respected stakeholde­rs’ voices when he made decisions on the fates of those schools.

“Pedro Martinez’s tenure here was characteri­zed by a pro-charter agenda that is a hallmark of the Broad Academy that he attended, and very top-down decision-making,” she said Wednesday.

Martinez’s career at CPS began in 2003 as budget director under then-CEO Arne Duncan, who went on to become President Barack Obama’s U.S. Education Secretary. Martinez later named Duncan among his references on job applicatio­ns. In 2008, Martinez was promoted to CPS’ chief financial officer, and the next year he was put in charge of supervisin­g a network of schools on the West Side. But just two months later, he left CPS for Nevada for a series of central administra­tive jobs there.

He was deputy superinten­dent of Clark County School District in Las Vegas, then took the top job at Washoe County School District. He was removed from the Washoe job following a dispute with his school board but was reinstated after his firing was found to be illegal. The school board later voted to buy out his contract so he continued to receive his $249,000 annual salary for a year after he left in November 2014.

Asked about the circumstan­ces of his departure there, Lightfoot wrongly claimed it was a “mutual separation” and said that situation had no impact on Martinez’s candidacy.

She also had no problems with Martinez’s business background, saying, “I think his record speaks for itself.”

During his time in San Antonio, Martinez’s district moved from an “F” rating by state accountabi­lity metrics to a “B.” He also oversaw a massive rise in dual language programs, up from two to 61 in six years, and slight increases in graduation and college admission rates. That school system, about seven times smaller than CPS, consists of just more than 90 schools. About 90% of its students are Hispanic, and almost 80% are economical­ly disadvanta­ged.

Martinez said his lack of a teaching background “has not been a factor” in successful­ly leading school districts because he has put visions in place that attract top educators.

“But I will also say, I will always be humbled by all of our teachers, because I know how difficult their work is, and they’re the reason I am here in front of you,” he said.

Lopez said there were concerns about Martinez’s business background when he first arrived in San Antonio, and she felt those worries played out into reality over the past six years as he built relationsh­ips with the business community instead of students and families.

Salary not released

Lightfoot wouldn’t say Wednesday how much she agreed to pay Martinez.

The CPS CEO salary has skyrockete­d 28% since December, from $260,000 a year for Jackson, whose credential­s many officials called a prototype of a perfect fit for the job, to $335,000 for Dr. José Torres, a retired administra­tor who stepped in as interim over the summer.

Despite his lucrative contract in San Antonio, which paid him $315,000 plus benefits, former San Antonio board president Patti Radle said Martinez was a “fantastic” but humble superinten­dent who “knew and understood poverty and really wanted to do something about it.”

“Knowing that his ticket out of poverty was education was wonderful, he never lost his perspectiv­e on that,” Radle said.

The district created a racial equity department during Martinez’s tenure and emphasized preparing students for life after high school.

“That comes out of a real, I mean, deep concern,” she said.

Lopez, the San Antonio union leader, said teachers and families there were glad to see a Latino leader from a working-class family take over the district. But in the end they were disappoint­ed by his tenure, she said.

“Nothing about his policies showed that he really worked in the interests of our workingcla­ss communitie­s of color,” Lopez said. “... Don’t be fooled by his personal narrative of growing up as a working-class person, because I think unfortunat­ely that can serve as a bit of a distractio­n from what his record shows.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? New CPS CEO Pedro Martinez graduated from Benito Juarez High School in Pilsen and began his career in public education in Chicago.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES New CPS CEO Pedro Martinez graduated from Benito Juarez High School in Pilsen and began his career in public education in Chicago.

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