Las Vegas Review-Journal

Operations stabilized at TEACH Las Vegas

Plans outlined before charter school board

- By Julie Wootton-greener Contact Julie Woottongre­ener at jgreener@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @julieswoot­ton on X.

Operations have stabilized at TEACH Las Vegas following turmoil in October that included a temporary closure and the abrupt departure of many employees and students, state charter school officials said Friday.

The Nevada State Public Charter School Authority’s board heard an update Friday from school leaders, but didn’t take action.

There were unanticipa­ted leadership changes at TEACH Las Vegas, charter authority Executive Director Melissa Mackedon said.

“This sudden departure of leadership had a domino effect on the operations of the school, which led to an unplanned school closure earlier this school year,” she said.

Since that time, the situation has stabilized, Mackedon said.

Charter authority staff asked school leaders to appear before the board to give an update on the stabilizat­ion and outline their plans moving forward.

The charter authority plans to bring a formalized list of circumstan­ces that need to be remedied at TEACH Las Vegas to the board’s next meeting.

TEACH Las Vegas — part of a Los Angeles-based charter school network — canceled classes for a couple of days in early October after its executive director resigned. Police were also called to respond to disturbanc­es on campus.

“The abrupt mass staff abandonmen­t left the school without on-site leadership, exposed the community to chaos and created an unsafe, fractured environmen­t,” the school wrote in online meeting materials.

The school owed more than $320,000 in public employee retirement contributi­ons, prompting the state to issue a formal tax delinquenc­y complaint in October.

The school has since paid a portion of the balance.

The school — which opened in 2021 on North Rancho Drive — had more than 400 elementary and middle school students at its peak. It currently has about 240.

The school has three licensed teachers and the rest — about 11 — are substitute­s, Interim Executive Director Frank Williams said.

Williams was appointed to the job last month and came from the TEACH charter management organizati­on in Los Angeles.

It has been difficult to overcome the narrative that “we are imminently going to close” — noting that’s not going to happen — and that’s a real struggle with recruiting teachers, Williams said.

He also pointed to the “negative publicity” the school sustained.

Williams said an issue that he’s encounteri­ng, which seems to be universal in Nevada, is finding qualified staff.

He said he has been able to hire two licensed teachers and he’s interviewi­ng two next week.

“In the meantime, I’m not giving up on the staff I have,” he said.

Charter authority staff visited the school Thursday. Mackedon said she was “pleasantly surprised” during the visit and it’s clear that Williams has started establishi­ng a positive school culture.

Board Chair Trishawn Allison said she’s working on rebuilding the school board. She didn’t provide informatio­n on the current number of board members.

She said two board members were voted in within the last week, noting she’s “very hopeful” about the future.

TEACH Public Schools Chief Financial Officer Matthew Brown said a payment was made in November toward public employee retirement contributi­ons.

The current balance is roughly $115,000, he said.

 ?? Daniel Pearson Las Vegas Review-journal ?? TEACH Las Vegas Charter School experience­d a closure and exodus of employees and students in October. The state charter authority board heard an update Friday.
Daniel Pearson Las Vegas Review-journal TEACH Las Vegas Charter School experience­d a closure and exodus of employees and students in October. The state charter authority board heard an update Friday.

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