Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Ex-Bridgeport schools chief could be Chicago’s next mayor

- By Richard Chumney

BRIDGEPORT — Chicago’s next mayor may be a familiar face for Bridgeport residents.

Paul Vallas, the onetime superinten­dent of Bridgeport Public Schools who was ousted in 2013 after a judge ruled he was not qualified to lead the struggling school system, emerged as the top vote-winner in the first round of voting last week.

Vallas, 69, will face Brandon Johnson, a former public school teacher and union organizer, in the April 4 runoff election. Incumbent Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot failed to advance to the final round.

Vallas, who has also helmed the school systems in Chicago and Philadelph­ia, was a controvers­ial figure during his two-year tenure in the Park City. Activists who opposed him often criticized him as rigid and arrogant.

But Vallas also inspired passionate defenders who saw him as a talented administra­tor with a proven track record of turning around resource-starved and poor-performing school districts.

Former Mayor Bill Finch, who was in office when Vallas became interim schools chief in early 2012, said he was deeply impressed by the Chicago native’s ability to balance a budget and defuse tension with the teacher’s union.

Finch, who like Vallas is a Democrat, said he has made two trips to the Windy City to help his former colleague’s mayoral campaign and plans to make another visit early next month during the last weekend before Election Day.

“Paul is a compassion­ate mechanic. He gets under the hood and he fixes things,” Finch said. “He tries to leave any ideologies aside to fix the problems. His style is fantastic and his ability to create new ways of thinking about old problems is uncanny.”

‘Our plan is to move fast’

Not everyone has fond memories of Vallas’ time in Bridgeport. Longtime city activist Clyde Nicholson said he was troubled by his support of charter schools and what he described as a domineerin­g personalit­y.

“If Vallas wins, it would be the biggest disaster for Chicago,” Nicholson said. “This guy will not listen to anything you have to say and he runs things like he’s a dictator. Chicago has a lot of problems, but they don’t need Vallas.”

Vallas had big plans when he was named interim superinten­dent of the cash-strapped district in late 2011. He was hired just a few months after the state seized control of the Bridgeport Board of Education and replaced its frequently feuding members with appointees.

Vallas was chosen in part for his reputation for boosting test scores and ushering in stability in large urban districts. After running Chicago Public Schools and the School District of Philadelph­ia, he served as superinten­dent in New Orleans, where he was tasked with rebuilding the school system in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

The Vallas campaign, which did not respond to a request for comment, has touted his experience reforming troubled school districts across the country, including in Bridgeport.

“Paul’s most recent superinten­dent assignment was the state of Connecticu­t’s takeover of its largest city’s schools, the Bridgeport Public Schools, which faced a severe financial crisis elected handpicked and were academical­ly failing,” campaign officials wrote in a biography on the candidate’s website. “In each of these positions Paul was able to significan­tly improve local schools.”

At the time of his appointmen­t, Vallas pledged to stabilize the Bridgeport school system and create new financial and academic plans that he claimed would generate improvemen­ts and move the district forward.

“I am used to taking on great challenges and going into crisis situations,” he said. “Our plan is to move fast.”

But Vallas’ long-term plans were upended when city activist and former state Superior Court Judge Carmen Lopez sued him in April 2013, claiming he had not taken the school leadership program required by the state to become a superinten­dent.

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