Miami Herald

Broward School Board rescinds superinten­dent’s firing by DeSantis appointees

- BY JIMENA TAVEL jtavel@miamiheral­d.com

In the latest of a series of twists and turns regarding the superinten­dent of the nation’s sixth-largest school district, the Broward School Board on Tuesday handed Superinten­dent Vickie Cartwright her job back — at least temporaril­y.

The board voted 5-3 to rescind Cartwright’s Nov. 14 terminatio­n. That firing came in a late-night, controvers­ial vote after the five members appointed by

Gov. Ron DeSantis terminated her contract in a 5-4 vote. Four of the five members in favor have since been replaced by newly elected School Board members.

The eight board members at Tuesday’s meeting agreed to revisit Cartwright’s performanc­e come Jan. 24, a deadline initially set in late October by the former board for a 90-day improvemen­t plan for Cartwright.

The members also decided to continue a national search for a new superinten­dent in case they dismiss Cartwright, 52, next month.

Board Vice Chair Debra Hixon and board members Jeff Holness, Sarah Leonardi, Nora Rupert and Allen Zeman voted to retain Cartwright. Board Chair Lori Alhadeff and board members Torey Alston and

Brenda Fam voted against Zeman’s motion.

Alhadeff had initially supported Cartwright in the Nov. 14 terminatio­n vote, citing concerns that the board had possibly violated the state’s Sunshine Law because it did not list on its agenda an item about reviewing Cartwright’s contract. The law requires government­al bodies to post items on a public agenda to give people the chance to comment.

On Nov. 15, a day after the late-night terminatio­n, Alhadeff, Hixon, Leonardi and Rupert voted to rescind the terminatio­n over the

Sunshine Law concerns, but the motion failed, with the DeSantis-appointees — Alston, Daniel Foganholi, Ryan Reiter, Manuel Serrano and Kevin Tynan — once again banding together. Only Alston remains of the DeSantis appointees.

During the Tuesday meeting, however, Alhadeff said waiting until January would be “kicking the can down the road.”

Asked whether the public could trust that the Jan. 24 vote on the superinten­dent would be final, Alhadeff told the press after the Tuesday vote: “Absolutely. We are going to be moving

forward. We are going to be focusing on our students, our schools, our teachers and making sure that we become an Adistrict and focusing on our strategic plan.”

After Tuesday’s vote, Cartwright said she still felt shocked that the former board fired her in November and thanked the new board.

“I’m very grateful to the board for the decision that they made today,” she said. “I look forward to continue working with every board member as we

move forward.”

Asked whether she worried about the ongoing search for a new superinten­dent, Cartwright said, “I am confident the board will keep an open mind and that they will see where we are after the 90 days.”

BROWARD’S FIRST FEMALE SUPERINTEN­DENT

The School Board hired Cartwright as interim superinten­dent in July 2021 to replace Robert Runcie, who stepped down after being charged with one count of lying to a grand jury investigat­ing whether the district was complying with school-safety laws after the Feb. 14, 2018, shooting that killed 17 students and faculty members at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in Parkland.

The board hired her as the permanent superinten­dent in February, the first female superinten­dent in the district’s 107-year history. The board approved a $350,000 annual contract to run until Dec. 31, 2024.

Cartwright’s problems began after DeSantis removed four board members in August, citing the grand-jury investigat­ion, replacing them with four appointees connected to him or the Republican Party. He also appointed a fifth to replace a board member who had stepped down to run for the state Senate.

Four new board members were elected in the Nov. 8 election — Fam, Holness, Zeman and Rodney Velez — in addition to the reelection of Alhadeff and Rupert in the Aug. 23 primary.

ONE NEW BOARD MEMBER STILL NOT ON BOARD

Velez, elected to the District 1 seat, hasn’t been sworn in because of issues related to his eligibilit­y to hold office after he was convicted in 1995 of aggravated battery, a seconddegr­ee felony.

Still, Velez spoke during the meeting’s public-comment period as a parent and told the board to “fix it.”

“Let me get on the board, and let’s get it done,” he said.

Asked after whether that meant to fire Cartwright, Velez texted a Miami Herald reporter, “We need stability!”

Holness, the newly elected representa­tive for District 5, proposed the agenda item to rehire Cartwright, stating concerns of instabilit­y and violations of protocol.

“My item is not so much necessaril­y about the superinten­dent. It is about the process and procedure of how this was done,” he said Tuesday. “We cannot punch a hole in the ship, because we have an issue with the captain.”

Holness had initially indicated in the agenda that he wanted to rehire Cartwright, halt the search and reset her 90-day probationa­ry period.

ZEMAN’S THREE-PART MOTION PREVAILS

During the discussion Tuesday, Zeman proposed to overturn the firing because, he said, the terminatio­n didn’t occur at a meeting that respected the spirit of the Sunshine Law, because all news media

weren’t allowed in and because the former board backed out on its 90-day plan for Cartwright to improve.

“In my mind, there’s a huge difference between the what and the how,” he said. “This is a monumental decision, and we ought to treat it in that light.”

Zeman wanted to keep the search going, however, as a Plan B and review Cartwright’s performanc­e on Jan. 24, the initial probationa­ry period deadline.

The board voted 5-3 on Zeman’s three-part motion.

Hixon voiced concern that rescinding Cartwright’s terminatio­n while still searching for a new superinten­dent was “disingenuo­us,” but she ultimately voted for Zeman’s motion.

Alston, the remaining DeSantis appointee and

District 2 representa­tive, led the charge against Cartwright in November. He said he maintained the same points that he brought up then, including issues with the district’s declining enrollment, delayed public-records requests, low academic performanc­e since the COVID-19 pandemic and what he says is a corrupt district culture.

“As a former board chair and member of the board, I’ve seen too much, I’ve heard too much and I know too much. And it didn’t take me long to recognize that it’s time for a change,” he said.

ALSTON’S PLAN TO KEEP CARTWRIGHT FIRED FAILS

Alston tried to replace Zeman’s motion with his own five-part motion, which called for tabling the

discussion on rescinding the dismissal, keeping Cartwright’s terminatio­n letter, calling for a special meeting on Jan. 9 to discuss where the board stood, sharing the superinten­dent applicant résumés and allowing Earlean Smiley to give a “public hello” for three minutes.

Both Alhadeff and Alston have shown interest in appointing Smiley, a former principal at Blanche Ely High School in Pompano Beach and former deputy superinten­dent for Broward Public Schools, as interim superinten­dent to replace Cartwright.

Alston’s motion failed 5-3, with only Alhadeff, Fam and Alston supporting it.

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Broward Schools Superinten­dent Vickie Cartwright said Tuesday: ‘I’m very grateful to the board for the decision that they made today.’ The School Board will meet next month and could vote to fire her.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Broward Schools Superinten­dent Vickie Cartwright said Tuesday: ‘I’m very grateful to the board for the decision that they made today.’ The School Board will meet next month and could vote to fire her.
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Broward School Board Chair Lori Alhadeff said Tuesday that waiting until January to decide whether to dismiss Vickie Cartwright would be ‘kicking the can down the road.’
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Broward School Board Chair Lori Alhadeff said Tuesday that waiting until January to decide whether to dismiss Vickie Cartwright would be ‘kicking the can down the road.’
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Broward School Board member Jeff Holness proposed the agenda item to rehire Vickie Cartwright, stating concerns of instabilit­y and violations of protocol.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Broward School Board member Jeff Holness proposed the agenda item to rehire Vickie Cartwright, stating concerns of instabilit­y and violations of protocol.
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Broward School Board member Allen Zeman said of Vickie Cartwright’s job status: ‘This is a monumental decision, and we ought to treat it in that light.’
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Broward School Board member Allen Zeman said of Vickie Cartwright’s job status: ‘This is a monumental decision, and we ought to treat it in that light.’

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