The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Downey: Political storm sweeps out superinten­dent,

- Maureen Downey

While on vacation last week, I spent a lot of time monitoring two wild weather patterns: Hurricane Dorian and tropical depression Carstarphe­n.

We know how Dorian ended. Now, after the Atlanta school board met for more than three hours behind closed doors Monday, we learned where APS Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n landed.

Swept away by what appears a mixture of personal grievances and policy difference­s.

She was voted out by a school board far less enchanted with her than the one that hired her in 2014. The board voted not to extend her contract due to expire in June 2020, a decision the chair said was reached in July but only announced now so as not to disrupt the start of school. Beyond saying it was a majority, Chair Jason Esteves declined to say how many or which board members opposed renewing her contract.

When Carstarphe­n arrived here in 2014, the school board was so smitten that I joked the nine members waltzed into meetings singing the “West Side Story” ballad, “I’ve just met a girl named Meria/ And suddenly that name/ Will never be the same.” Courtney English, the chair of the board at the time, proclaimed, “This moment represents a time for the city to believe again. We’ve been through a dark time, and that time is over.”

Given the various back stories emerging now on why members soured on Carstarphe­n, the theme song has become “DingDong! The Witch Is Dead.”

Dissenting board members had a range of complaints and concerns. Some did not like her decision to create partnershi­ps with charter school networks to remake and manage some of the city’s lowest-performing schools. Nearly 1 out of 5 Atlanta students now attends a locally approved charter school. Others felt Atlanta schools, while registerin­g some progress, were not seeing enough.

There are also allegation­s the charismati­c Carstarphe­n was difficult, demanding and mercurial. Perhaps, but she was also passionate, dedicated and focused on students, which many will argue should have been enough to outweigh whatever interperso­nal flaws she had. Carstarphe­n earned the respect of many APS teachers and principals. “You can’t take care of kids if you haven’t taken care of educators,” she said in an August interview.

Her omnipresen­ce at APS schools and events also won over many parents and influentia­l Georgians. Among those in her corner: Buckhead Coalition President and former Atlanta Mayor Sam Massell, former Mayors Shirley Franklin and Andrew Young and former Georgia Gov. Roy Barnes. U.S. Rep. John Lewis showed up at a school board meeting last week to urge APS to retain Carstarphe­n.

Carstarphe­n’s popularity explains why the law firm for the district brought in a public relations firm to handle damage control in the wake of this controvers­ial vote. There will be substantia­l damage the PR team can’t gloss over — a school district loses ground and vision when a leader leaves, especially one who made as many changes as Carstarphe­n. Ousting a superinten­dent in the midst of a comprehens­ive improvemen­t plan will stall momentum and spark turnover in key staff.

Carstarphe­n took over APS in 2014. Her predecesso­r Erroll B. Davis stabilized APS in the aftermath of the devastatin­g cheating scandal that marred Beverly Hall’s tenure, but the city still had some of the lowest-performing schools in the state, largely because those schools serve some of the poorest families in Georgia, and the poverty goes back generation­s.

In an interview last month, Carstarphe­n acknowledg­ed, “Yes, I ruffle feathers. I absolutely speak my truth. I fight really hard for kids.” While saying she was disappoint­ed Atlanta students weren’t showing more improvemen­t on state tests, Carstarphe­n vowed to keep pushing herself, her staff and the city and taking strong stances — no matter the repercussi­ons.

“Most of the time,” she said, “the less push you give, the longer you get to stay.”

 ?? PHIL SKINNER / FOR THE AJC ?? Atlanta school board Vice Chair Eshe’ Collins (left) and Chair Jason Esteves talk to the media Monday after announcing they would not extend Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n’s contact during a special meeting at APS headquarte­rs in downtown Atlanta.
PHIL SKINNER / FOR THE AJC Atlanta school board Vice Chair Eshe’ Collins (left) and Chair Jason Esteves talk to the media Monday after announcing they would not extend Superinten­dent Meria Carstarphe­n’s contact during a special meeting at APS headquarte­rs in downtown Atlanta.
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