Connecticut Post

Bridgeport school board begins search for new superinten­dent

- By Richard Chumney richard.chumney @hearstmedi­act.com

BRIDGEPORT — The Bridgeport Board of Education has begun the search to replace outgoing Superinten­dent Michael Testani, a process that could take up to six months to complete.

The school board voted unanimousl­y last week to establish an executive search committee charged with selecting a new top administra­tor for the district. The newly formed committee includes all nine board members.

“This is the first step in the road that we go down to find our next superinten­dent,” Board Chair John Weldon said at the Aug. 29 meeting.

The vote was held just days after Testani, who was recently awarded a contract extension by Bridgeport's school board, was hired by Fairfield Public Schools to lead the neighborin­g district as superinten­dent.

Weldon has said he hopes the board will name a new superinten­dent by the time Testani departs the school system on Nov. 23. But it is currently unclear if the board will meet that deadline.

Patrice McCarthy, executive director of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Boards of Education, told the board last week that the search will likely be a labor-intensive process that could take between four and six months to wrap up.

McCarthy suggested the board hire a profession­al search firm to help recruit potential applicants, prepare interview questions and narrow down the pool of candidates to a group of finalists.

She also recommende­d that they tap a retired superinten­dent to lead the school system on an interim basis during the duration of the search, noting the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Public School Superinten­dents maintains a roster of recently retired administra­tors willing to temporaril­y serve.

“These are experience­d individual­s who can hit the ground running because they know how to run a school district,” McCarthy said.

During the sometimes tense meeting, some parents and board members expressed frustratio­n with Testani over his abrupt decision to leave the district during the start of the school year. Board member Albert Benejan said he felt betrayed by Testani's resignatio­n and compared the move to being stabbed in the heart with a knife.

“It hurt me a lot because you were doing an amazing job here in Bridgeport schools,” Benejan told Testani.

Benejan was one of six board members who voted in July to approve a new three-year contract for Testani. The extension was granted after Testani, who lives in Fairfield, agreed to give up vacation time in exchange for permission to live outside Bridgeport.

Board member Christine Baptiste-Perez, who voted against the contract extension due to residency concerns, said Testani's departure offers the city an opportunit­y to find an administra­tor who is willing to call the Park City home.

“I think it is imperative, especially in this situation now that the pie is all over our face as board members, that we choose a superinten­dent that's actually going to live in the district,” she said.

At the public comment portion of the meeting, several parents and community members urged the board to find a superinten­dent who will address the district's ongoing teacher shortage and fight to secure funds to fix crumbling school buildings.

Among other suggestion­s, Gladys Walker-Jones, the chair of the education committee for the Greater Bridgeport NAACP, said the board should consider hiring a person of color who mirrors the compositio­n of the student body and the city as a whole.

“Our interim and permanent superinten­dent needs to be reflective of our community and needs to be a highly qualified and certified school leader, preferably with superinten­dent experience,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States