Las Vegas Review-Journal

Superinten­dent search

District starts to look for new leader

- Tracey Brice Howard Las Vegas Dale Klabacha Boulder City

The Clark County School District is poised to embark upon a search for a new superinten­dent. Outside observers say that’s an increasing­ly difficult task, particular­ly for a large, urban district.

Pat Skorkowsky announced in September that he is retiring as the district CEO at the end of the school year.

The trustees are scheduled to interview four search firms on Nov. 30 before settling on a consultant to conduct the process and eventually shrink the field to a handful of finalists. The School Board will make a decision after publicly interviewi­ng those candidates.

“It’s a tough job, and so boards are constantly on the lookout for individual­s with experience,” Dan Domenech, executive director of the American Associatio­n of School Administra­tors, told the Review-journal’s Amelia Pak-harvey.

One consultant told Ms. Pak-harvey that the applicant pool for superinten­dents has gotten smaller over the years. “Particular­ly for urban districts, that’s a challenge in terms of having people who have experience in urban areas who are applying and moving to another district,” she said. “If you get 30 or 40, you feel like you’ve made headway.”

Mr. Domenech noted that many potential applicants may be reluctant to come forward if the process is conducted in public. Perhaps. But too bad. Candidates who expect complete confidenti­ality during the search might also be less likely to embrace accountabi­lity and open government once on the job. The district has an obligation to taxpayers to act transparen­tly during the search.

No doubt running the fifth-largest school district in the country is a daunting task. Clark County’s public schools have underperfo­rmed for decades, and there is increasing pressure to show results, as there should be. In addition, large, lumbering bureaucrac­ies are prone to inertia and culturally inclined to resist change and innovation. Such conditions tend to discourage many reformers and visionarie­s.

But the district does have one unique selling point. It is in the midst of a legislativ­e-mandated reorganiza­tion intended to decentrali­ze the administra­tion, increase parental participat­ion and provide principals with increased autonomy over their campuses. This offers the next superinten­dent the opportunit­y to oversee a transforma­tion that could become a model for districts across the country while helping to harness the untapped potential of thousands of local students.

School Board President Deanna Wright said she’s confident that the field will include four or five highly qualified candidates. Let’s hope that among those finalists is an experience­d leader who is comfortabl­e with reform, resistant to bureaucrac­y, committed to transparen­cy and offers a tangible plan to boost academic achievemen­t.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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But that is never going to happen in my or Mr. Root’s lifetime because it will take a constituti­onal amendment. But maybe, just maybe, it is time to start moving in that direction. Maybe we start by banning certain types of gunssuchas­assaultrif­les? In my opinion, that’s a better approach than having armed guards in church or having everyone walking around with their own gun. they have taken her to an

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