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Friday, October 23, 2015

Garcetti: Next LA schools superintendent should be in 'Romer mold' | 89.3 KPCC

Garcetti: Next LA schools superintendent should be in 'Romer mold' | 89.3 KPCC:

Garcetti: Next LA schools superintendent should be in 'Romer mold'






Mayor Eric Garcetti suggested the Los Angeles Unified School District look to the past as it searches for a superintendent for the future.
Asked Thursday what he would like to see in the next leader of the country's second largest school district, Garcetti said: “Somebody in the Roy Romer mold, I think, who has the gravitas.”
Romer was a three-term governor of Colorado and the general chairman of the Democratic National Committee before he arrived in Los Angeles to serve as superintendent from 2000 to 2006. During his tenure, he shepherded a massive school construction project and helped expand charter schools.
With several camps currently battling over the direction of LAUSD, Garcetti said the district’s next superintendent should have Romer’s political skills.
“I do think you need somebody with enough gravitas to bring these warring parties together, hit their heads together and say, ‘Look, the kids have to come first,” he said, speaking after a press conference on the Department of Water and Power.
Since taking office as mayor, Garcetti has rarely commented publicly on the direction of the public schools. In sharp contrast to previous mayors, Garcetti has generally refrained from voicing opinions on how the 600,000-student LAUSD should operate or how it can be improved.
His immediate predecessor, Antonio Villaraigosa, made public education a top priority of his campaign and administration. He actively sought control of the LAUSD school board through state legislation that was later ruled unconstitutional.
The teachers' union opposed his move to assert his authority over the board as did then-Superintendent Romer.
Romer’s leadership was marked by urgency and statesmanship, said LAUSD school board president Steve Zimmer.
“More important than the profile of the name is this ability to truly galvanize our disparate communities, our disparate perspectives, and bring people together in a way that has not been done recently,” Zimmer said.
But not everyone shares Zimmer's and Garcetti's positive assessment of the former superintendent. 
United Teachers Los Angeles President Alex Caputo-Pearl remembers Romer as a Garcetti: Next LA schools superintendent should be in 'Romer mold' | 89.3 KPCC: