Las Vegas Review-Journal

Next school superinten­dent can’t solve district’s problems

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BELIEVING that the Clark County School District’s next superinten­dent can solve its problems is like thinking you can turn “Hamlet” into a comedy by landing the right lead actor. In reality, the next superinten­dent will have the starring role in an oft-repeated tragedy but no chance to change the plot.

It’s starts with money. The district has a lot. It’s a multibilli­on-dollar organizati­on. The superinten­dent controls almost none of it. The property taxes dedicated to building new schools must go to capital projects. That leaves the $2.4 billion general fund. Personnel expenses constitute 87 percent of that pot. The rest goes to things such as utilities, gas for school buses and textbooks.

State collective bargaining law prevents the superinten­dent from setting salaries. With the district having only three days’ worth of expenses saved, its negotiatin­g team will have to beg employee unions not to ask for raises. The unions will demand more money anyway. An unelected, unaccounta­ble, out-of-state arbitrator will decide the dispute — no matter who sits in the superinten­dent’s chair.

When an arbitrator chooses to hand out raises, like one just did with teachers, it’ll push the budget further into crisis. Once the district loses its baseless appeal of the arbitrator’s decision, it either has to cut the budget or limp along with an ending fund balance equivalent to 18 hours’ worth of expenses.

This is going to get worse in 2019. It’s likely the Public Employees Retirement System will raise contributi­on rates. Currently, 28 percent of teachers’ pay goes to fund their retirement and to reduce PERS debt. Increases are split between teachers and the district. Heading into the 2019-20 school year, teachers could see their take-home pay decrease and the district could see itscostsgo­up—alltopay for teachers who no longer work there. The superinten­dent is going to take the heat for these outcomes, but he or she can’t change them.

The reorganiza­tion — a noble effort — also reduces the superinten­dent’s fiscal role. School Organizati­onal Teams are supposed to control 80 percent of a school’s budget. The new superinten­dent will look like he or she is in charge of billions, but other people are directing how the money is spent.

The superinten­dent also can’t change his or her personnel. Private-sector CEOS come into failing companies and start cutting fat — underperfo­rming and overpaid employees. Nevada’s collective bargaining law, once again, will prevent the district’s new leader from doing that.

Good luck even identifyin­g underperfo­rming teachers. The most recent state data showed that almost 99 percent of teachers have a rating of highly effective or effective. A more stringent evaluation system — once againfromt­hestate—is on the horizon, but expect Democrats to try to repeal it next legislativ­e session.

The reorganiza­tion makes selecting principals extremely important, but the superinten­dent can’t just fire ineffectiv­e ones. State law allows principals to bargain collective­ly and provides them with enormous job security. As of 2013, the district had fired just two principals in 30 years.

Then there are the programs you’ve heard so much about — Victory Schools, Zoom Schools and Read by Three. State law mandates them. The superinten­dent, once again, will be implementi­ng policies made by legislator­s and the governor.

The superinten­dent does have some influence, just not over things that could improve student achievemen­t. Superinten­dent

Pat Skorkowsky had two high-profile proposals: The district considered teaching kindergart­ners about masturbati­on in 2014 and is currently making some teen girls uncomforta­ble by allowing boys to change in their locker rooms. Parents successful­ly stopped the change in sex ed policy. The state Department of Education, however, is poised to mandate that districts allow transgende­r students to use the facilities of their choice.

The superinten­dent has the starring role in the public eye, but it’s the people off-stage — union officials and state politician­s — who are writing the script.

Listen to Victor Joecks discuss his columns each Monday at 9 a.m. with

Kevin Wall on 790 Talk Now. Contact him at vjoecks@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @ victorjoec­ks on Twitter.

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