Miami Herald (Sunday)

‘He’ll be able to pick up where we left off.’ Why José Dotres is favored for superinten­dent

- BY SOMMER BRUGAL sbrugal@miamiheral­d.com

Past and present colleagues describe José Dotres as good-hearted and passionate. They’ll say he’s someone with a proven skill set to improve students’ and employees’ lives.

For those who’ve worked with him in his more than three decades as an educator, they’ll say he’s a good listener. A relationsh­ip builder, a teacher at heart.

Dotres is one of three finalists vying to be the next superinten­dent of Miami-Dade County Public Schools.

Dotres, 59, and the two other finalists — Rafaela Espina, 51, a longtime educator from New York City, and Jacob Oliva, 47, senior chancellor of the Division of Public Schools for the Florida Department of Education — are expected to be interviewe­d Monday by the School Board in a 2 p.m. public meeting. The board is then expected to vote on one of the three candidates to replace Alberto Carvalho as the next school superinten­dent.

Dotres is the deputy superinten­dent of Collier County School District, a position he’s held for about one year. He left Miami-Dade schools last February after more than 30 years in the district.

Some have called him the inside candidate. As the district’s chief of staff and former HR director, he developed relationsh­ips with key School Board members, including Chairperso­n Perla

Tabares Hantman, who has been on the board 25 years.

Dotres declined to comment for this article.

EDUCATION CAREER SPANS MORE THAN THREE DECADES

Dotres grew up in Miami and attended public school from kindergart­en through 12th grade. (The school district did not confirm his alma mater.)

After attending Miami Dade College — he was inducted into MDC’s 2013 alumni Hall of Fame, a class that included former Major League Baseball All-Star Mike Piazza — he graduated from Florida Internatio­nal University with a degree in public administra­tion in 1985.

STARTED AS A TEACHER

In 1988, he got his start with Miami-Dade Public Schools as a teacher and reading coach at Frederick Douglass Elementary School in Overtown and South Pointe Elementary in South Beach. There, he taught intermedia­te grades and students in English for speakers of other languages, according to his resume, and also served as the Title I coordinato­r for parental outreach and support.

He moved on to become an assistant principal at M.A. Milam K-8 Center in Hialeah and later, a principal at Hialeah Gardens Elementary. At both campuses, he implemente­d foreign language and gifted programs for students and at Hialeah Gardens, he worked with students on the autism spectrum.

“When I was a principal at Hialeah Gardens, we had a large population of students with autism. And that group of kids is very important to me. This experience at Hialeah Gardens made me a more sensitive individual, a more confident administra­tor in the sense of understand­ing the incredible potential that children hold,” Dotres said in a video of the MDC Hall of Fame inductees.

By the mid-aughts, nearly two decades after beginning his career, he was tapped to be the administra­tive director of leadership developmen­t for the district, administer­ing a budget of $5 million, and then the regional administra­tive director of curriculum.

In 2009, he became the north regional center superinten­dent, overseeing all educationa­l aspects for 91 schools, more than 91,000 students and nearly 300 principals and assistant principals, according to his resume.

For one year, in 2013, Dotres moved to Broward County Public Schools to be the chief academic officer, before returning to Miami in 2014 as the district’s chief of staff. In his final role in Miami, he served from 2014-2021 as the chief human capital officer, where he oversaw teacher and leader developmen­t, recruitmen­t and labor relations, among other duties.

He received a master’s degree from Barry University in 1988 and a doctoral in leadership and innovation from St. Thomas University in 2020, according to his resume.

‘SKILL SET THAT ANY DISTRICT NEEDS’

Dotres’ many layers of experience­s are exactly what makes him the right candidate for Miami-Dade, said Kamela Patton, Collier County schools superinten­dent, and it’s why she tried to poach him twice before he finally agreed to move to the west coast last year.

“We tried several times to get him to come to Collier County because he has a skill set that any district needs,” she said. “I know his work focused on school improvemen­t, leadership developmen­t and academics.” Patton previously worked alongside Dotres in the Miami-Dade school district.

That’s why, she said, the question shouldn’t be why did he apply to become superinten­dent, but why would he not apply?

Entering education with a focus on students with disabiliti­es and Englishlan­guage learners — plus his years working in human resources — is alone enough to make Dotres a contender, she said. Even after just nearly one year in Collier County, Patton said, Dotres would be able to go back to Miami with new ideas to lead.

HAS UNION SUPPORT

When Phyllis Leflore became president of the Miami-Dade American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees union (AFSCME) in 2018, which represents district employees such as bus drivers, nurses and cafeteria staff, she received a call from Dotres’ office inviting her for a meeting. At the time, he was head of human resources.

“Our [working] relationsh­ip started with [Dotres] giving me his personal cell phone number,” she said. “They invited me in and he said his door was always open.”

Almost immediatel­y, she said, Dotres began advocating for changes she asked for. And when the COVID-19 pandemic hit in March 2020, Dotres reassured Leflore her members would be taken care of — a promise he saw through, she said. Dotres and his team “built programs for [our members] to go online, complete courses and get certificat­es and continue to be paid, all while schools were closed because of COVID,” she said.

Vicki Hall, AFSCME Council 79 president and former Miami-Dade AFSCME union president, echoed Leflore’s sentiments. She felt confident walking away from a meeting with just a handshake because Dotres “always kept his word.”

Moreover, she said, Dotres always ensured the unsung heroes in the district receive recognitio­n.

“[Dotres] has always been a labor-friendly administra­tor,” said Karla Hernandez-Mats, president of United Teachers of Dade, the teachers’ union. “I think it’s because he is a teacher at heart.”

He understand­s the work employees do and the importance of providing adequate working conditions and troublesho­oting any issues that arise, she said. And Dotres always was open to hearing from employees about new ideas and considerin­g what’s best for the community, she said.

Asked about how he would replace Carvalho, Hernandez-Mats said Dotres will lead the district in a different way.

“Everyone is aware that no one will be quite like Carvalho, but Dotres will do it in his own way, with empathy,” she said. “His personalit­y has been more backstage, but that’s because his roles called for that at a time. He’ll be able to pick up where we left off.”

THE FAVORED CHOICE?

Whispers that Dotres would be the top choice have made rounds both in and outside of the district throughout the search process. At a December board meeting, even before the board met to determine how it would go about finding a replacemen­t for Carvalho, membersack­nowledged that his name was already being floated as a top contender.

On Tuesday, School Board Vice Chair Dr. Steve Gallon III nominated Dotres to be the next superinten­dent, though he later withdrew his nomination after other members criticized him for sidesteppi­ng their decision to nominate three candidates and bring them in for a public interview, a process Gallon opposed.

Still, Gallon said, he remains committed to Dotres, whom he says has a track record in the district, knows the difference between the district’s regions and can connect with the community.

For her part, Leflore was reassured to hear at least one board member support Dotres.

“Everyone has a right to be heard and a right to be interviewe­d” before a final decision is made, she said. “But I really think he can move this district forward.”

Sommer Brugal: @smbrugal

Some have called Dotres the inside candidate.

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Jose Dotres
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Via Twitter

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