Los Angeles Times

Superinten­dent debate: Elected or appointed?

After COVID crisis, lawmakers reignite debate over role of state schools chief.

- By Mackenzie Mays

SACRAMENTO — When California children were stuck at home in distance learning during the COVID-19 pandemic and schools reopened unevenly across the state, raising equity concerns, frustrated parents demanded action from Supt. of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond.

But unlike other states, where superinten­dents were leading the charge, it was Gov. Gavin Newsom who steered the pandemic response in California, negotiatin­g with teachers unions and setting guidelines for schools. Meanwhile, Thurmond was criticized for a lack of action.

Now, two years after the governor and legislativ­e leaders devised a multibilli­on-dollar plan to safely reopen schools, lingering COVID-19 frustratio­ns could add momentum to a decades-long debate about the role of California’s superinten­dent of public instructio­n.

Assemblyme­mber Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento) has introduced legislatio­n that would require California’s superinten­dent to be appointed by the governor instead of elected by voters, in what he called a “good government” policy that could add power and influence to an office that oversees nearly 6 million public school students.

McCarty said that Thurmond has “admirably” led the state’s schools and has been “an effective voice,” but that’s not enough, calling the role “nothing more than an education cheerleade­r.”

“The public saw crystal clear during the pandemic that what school districts and parents and educators thought the superinten­dent can do is not the reality,” McCarty said. “They’re very limited in their statutory authority.”

The success of Assembly Constituti­onal Amendment 9 — which would require vot

er approval because it would change the state Constituti­on — would add California to a list of 38 states where superinten­dents are appointed rather than elected.

Thurmond opposes the bill, and the teachers unions that endorsed him are poised to do the same.

If approved by two-thirds of the Legislatur­e and by voters on the ballot, the bill would go into effect in 2027 after Thurmond’s final term has ended. The measure would prohibit an election for superinten­dent from being held in 2026. The potential appointee would “serve at the pleasure of ” the governor, with confirmati­on required by the state Legislatur­e, according to the bill.

Thurmond, a former Democratic state lawmaker, was reelected last year with more than 60% of the vote against his GOP opponent Lance Christense­n despite controvers­y during his first term, including a staff turnover problem amid toxic workplace allegation­s. His decision to hire a friend living out of state as a top official in 2021 led to at least two resignatio­ns in the state Department of Education.

Thurmond said in a statement that ACA 9 would “take away the selection from the voters and strip away an independen­t voice for education.”

McCarty, who serves on education committees in the state Legislatur­e, said he is not interested in the role of superinten­dent himself.

Superinten­dent of public instructio­n, the only nonpartisa­n position among California’s eight statewide constituti­onal officers, has long been described as toothless and ceremonial.

The superinten­dent oversees operation of the California Department of Education, but local school officials control much of what happens in the 1,000plus school districts, and in many ways, the governor and the Legislatur­e have more power over education policy. The State Board of Education acts as a policymaki­ng body as well, adopting textbooks and academic standards.

Debate over whether the role should be an elected or appointed position has been ongoing for decades. “Once again, the issue of how the State Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n shall be chosen is making news on the political front in California,” stated a report published by the California Assembly in 1963.

Heather Hough, executive director of Policy Analysis of California Education, a nonpartisa­n research center at Stanford University, said it makes sense that the chaos of the pandemic has brought this debate back into the public domain — a time in which more scrutiny was on the office of the superinten­dent than she’s seen in her decades of policy work.

“I think the pandemic really brought it into view for the public in a way that it wasn’t before, how there isn’t a lot of positional authority in that role, which then does call the question: why do we have an elected official if that position doesn’t have the ability to lead associated with it?” she said. “The way it’s constructe­d in California now is largely an administra­tive position.”

Supporters of the superinten­dent being an appointed post say that politician­s should not seek out the position but qualified school administra­tors.

Being appointed by the administra­tion could create a better guarantee of “widescale change,” said Megan Bacigalupi, executive director of California Parent Power, a statewide advocacy organizati­on focused on transparen­cy in schools.

“Now, there’s a disconnect between the two offices, and that’s a disservice to California students,” she said.

Malia Vella, deputy superinten­dent for the California Department of Education, said Thurmond has been a productive superinten­dent, pointing to legislatio­n he has sponsored on issues such as universal preschool and additional school counselors. Vella said he played a key role in supporting schools during the pandemic, including fighting for access to COVID-19 tests.

That work would be “curtailed,” she said, if future superinten­dents are appointed rather than elected.

“I think the legislativ­e and budget process works best when you have an independen­tly elected official whose sole focus is on education,” Vella said.

California Teachers Assn. spokespers­on Claudia Briggs said the union has not formed an official position on the bill yet but noted that it has opposed similar attempts in the past, “not wanting to take that choice away from parents and voters.”

California Federation of Teachers President Jeff Freitas said, “We support democracy in our public education system.”

ACA 9 would allow the governor to choose how long a superinten­dent serves; currently, the position is limited to two four-year terms.

Connie Leyva, a former Democratic Assembly member, has expressed interest in running for state superinten­dent in 2026. Now executive director of KVCR, an NPR station in the Inland Empire, Leyva is staunchly opposed to McCarty’s bill.

“In a time when we need more civic engagement and need to strengthen democracy, why would we take an elected position away and make it appointed? It makes no sense to me,” she said. “I always feel that appointmen­ts lend themselves to be rife with political favoritism.”

Delaine Eastin, a Democrat who served as state superinten­dent from 1995 to 2003, said ACA 9 would diminish an independen­t role in a state where education commandeer­s at least 40% of the budget each year. The superinten­dent should act as a stronger advocate for public school students, not a soldier for the governor, she said.

“If any constituti­onal officer should be elected other than the governor, it should be the [superinten­dent of public instructio­n],” she said. “I really do believe that the superinten­dent needs to be somebody who is a voice for the children and their education and not just going along to get along with the governor.”

 ?? Denis Poroy Asssociate­d Press ?? STATE SUPT. of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond is serving a second term after being reelected last fall.
Denis Poroy Asssociate­d Press STATE SUPT. of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond is serving a second term after being reelected last fall.

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