Who's in Charge in Seattle Public Schools? Part One

Who's in charge in Seattle Public Schools? I ask that question because after Tuesday's Board meeting, it does not seem clear. At all. 

The bottom line - to me - is that the process to close schools is broken. It didn't have to be if both sides had been open and honest. 

The Superintendent and staff made a good decision initially by pulling back from their ridiculous first attempt, trying to close all the K-8 schools. Other districts, like Chicago, are doing their closures slowly and I think staff decided to follow suit. So they delivered the four school version. 

But again, they made mistakes:

1) They thought that most parents whose school was not affected would breathe a sigh of relief and ignore the process. What I see happening is parents joining together across the district against closures. 

2) A very SPS mistake was to think that if they wrapped the closures up in pretty paper, with words like "well-resourced" on it,  parents would go along. Basically, by having some pain, things will be better for your child. Problem is, as always, is that they could not back it up. 

More staff in a big building? Not really. There would be a full-time librarian but in a 500+ elementary, there would be no full-time AP or nurse? As well, one of the many wonderful speakers at the meeting said, through tears, that a shiny new building does not make a community. 

Know what would have helped? "Here are challenges we see in moving students to a new building and possible solutions but we really want to hear from you on that." Did that happen in person so it would be a conversation? Nope.

3) Closing schools doesn't save that much money relative to the jam SPS is in. AND, there are many costs that TO closing schools that staff refuses to plainly state. 

3) The emperor had no clothes. Meaning, what plan? The Superintendent and staff had MONTHS - given to them by the Board - to come up with a plan. That plan needed to explain things like transportation, enrollment, Special Education, transitioning, staff transfers - NONE of that was in the plan. You cannot ask parents, who are adults, to just buy into your promises. When SPS treats parents like children, they always fail.

Which brings me to the Board. They are absolutely complicit in this mess and it is deeply troubling. When they did not hold staff's feet to the fire for details way back in May, they set the stage for what has unfolded.

At Work Sessions, the questions were few from directors and the only person who was truly firm was Director Brandon Hersey and then it was only to save his region's schools. Which did happen and how nice for him. 

I know that the Board is full of newbies but this issue was not something like renaming a school - staff wants to close schools. It is each director's job to get up to speed and do their homework. It is each director's job to ask hard questions. However, Board leadership, in the form of President Liza Rankin appears to have somewhat muzzled the other directors, probably because of the governance model SOFG. 

I believe in using SOFG the Board made this issue worse than it had to be and know what? That got proven at the Board meeting in spades. 

I read somewhere that someone said Jones was hired to be the fall guy for whatever happened when closures got brought up. Maybe but I do believe he is in over his head. Between him and Rankin, the district doesn't have good leadership. Even though I think both should step down, at this point it would only muddy the waters. 

What WOULD help is when Board leadership positions are up in early December, that the Board vote Rankin out as president and elect Director Gina Topp who seems to be next Board president.

I am more than interested in what YOU think should happen next. 

 

I will go in a linear fashion through the meeting, stopping along the way for editorial comments.

It was a nearly three hour meeting and yet little actual business got done. They had to put aside "goal setting" for the next strategic plan and Rankin said they absolutely had to have a special meeting for that. I suspect that will come before the end of the year. 

Another thing I see is that Rankin does 90% of the talking. It used to be that each director would talk about committee work (but that's gone), good news in their region's schools, and community meetings. Now most Board members say nothing.

Next up, public testimony.

Comments

Anonymous said…
1. Resume Operational, Finance and Audit meetings. They should meet monthly.

2. Create a committee to close the $100M funding gap. The committee should consist of people that are familiar with the process i.e. M. DeBell.

3. Create a School Closure committee.

4. SOFG limits the manner in which directors speak. Under SOFG "technical questions" are not permitted- even though "technical questions" appear to be subjective. Let the directors speak!

5. Rankin should resign. If not, she should NEVER be allowed back into the President's seat. The President sets the board agenda etc. Rankin could resign. I'd want Scot Pinkham back on the board- if that was at all possible.

6. Find a superintendent that is willing to grow the district.

7. Return to monthly board meetings.

8. Vote NO against the levy.

I don't believe the board is present enough, and they need to oversee the district. They would have had more information- if there were committee meetings and bimonthly board meetings.

- Annoyed taxpayer

Seattle is Lost said…
Unlike the Seattle Times Editorial Board, The Stranger doesn't keep up with Seattle School Board issues. They should stay out of school board endorsements because The Stranger helped deliver this mess.

~Annoyed Taxpayer
Anonymous said…
There would only have been a 0.5 librarian in the combined schools and a 0.3 nurse. Overall, across the 4 consolidations, there would have been 8.4 fewer FTEs. Also, they couldn't back up the savings they stated for things like custodial services and transportations. The numbers were pure fiction!
Watching said…
Gina Topp has made it clear that she is listening and responding in a way that other directors are not (Mizrahi also attended at least one community meeting but does not regularly hold hours like Topp does), and I give her a lot of credit for saying this is too much too fast let's given the district a better direction and start small. But not a single member of the board or district has really answered the question, what problem are we trying to solve by closing schools? Not the budget deficit, it doesn't touch that. Not declining enrollment, that's not actually happening. Not student outcomes, that has never been directly addressed in this process. What are we doing this for? And why are we wasting time on these non-plans when there is a massive budget deficit that truly needs to be addressed in a thoughtful way and now? If SOFG goes out the window with a new board President I'm all for it (financial oversight needs to be a thing!), but so far there has been very little to suggest that any of the directors understand the depth of the massive mismanagement problems. There should not be a single school closure or really any other action proposed without first defining very clearly, what problem are we trying to solve?
kellie said…
This is a simple question with a simple answer. AJ Crabill is in charge of Seattle School and nobody else.

With a paid coach for board members and senior staff, the coaches have far more influence than anyone else.
Appalled said…
Since 2018, Seattle Public Schools’ attendance has dropped 7.9%, from 55,325 to 50,968, while private school enrollment has grown. During the same period, the percentage of District students passing the State ELA test dropped by 5.7% (from 69.8% to 64.1%). In Math, the pass rate fell by 5.9% (from 61.6% to 55.2%). In Science, the decline was 0.9% (from 51.8% to 50.9%). Regular attendance plummeted from 87.5% to 74.8%. On every key metric, District leadership has failed miserably.

Between the 2019 and 2022 school years, per-student spending increased from $17,482 to $22,114—a 26.5% jump. Instructional spending rose from $11,819 to $14,092, or 19.23%. In contrast, non-instructional spending skyrocketed from $5,663 to $8,021, a 41.64% increase.

If non-instructional spending had increased at the same 19.23% rate as instructional spending, it would currently be $6,752.09 per student—$1,268.91 less than the actual $8,021 figure. Applied to 50,968 students, this difference amounts to an additional **$64.6 million annually**.

Read that number again: $64.6 million per year wasted. It’s no surprise that these figures don’t appear on the school board’s dashboard—instead they’re on the OSPI website, only reported because federal law requires it.

### Salaries: Out of Control
Now let’s examine the salary data.
- Superintendent Dr. Brent Jones’s salary increased by 50.4% between 2018 and 2022.
- Head of HR Dr. Sarah Pritchett’s pay rose by 36%.
- Head of School Closures Dr. Marni Campbell’s salary increased by 42%.
- Former Chief Academic Officer Keisha Scarlett saw a 58% raise before being promoted to Superintendent of St. Louis Public Schools.

Scarlett lasted just one year in St. Louis before being summarily fired. Why? According to reports, the St. Louis school board hired an independent investigator to examine complaints that Scarlett hired friends from Seattle Public Schools and mishandled hiring practices. Scarlett herself justified the raises that plunged St. Louis from surplus to deficit as addressing “staff compensation disparities.”

### Black Student Outcomes: A Disaster
At every school board meeting, Seattle Public Schools reviews the performance of Black students. The numbers tell the story:
- In 2018, 38% of Black students passed Math, and 27% passed ELA. By 2023, those numbers plummeted to 30% and 19%, respectively—an absolute disaster for Black families.
- In contrast, in 2018, 77% of Black students graduated; by 2023, 84% graduated—a 7% increase.

While graduation rates are rising, test scores are collapsing. This disparity shows that the district’s new grading policies, which allow students to pass without passing a single test or turning in homework, are inflating graduation rates while masking academic decline.

Appalled said…
continued...

### COVID Policies and Post-COVID Failure
COVID compounded the chaos, but leadership’s response made things worse.
- Students weren’t required to turn on their cameras during Zoom classes, so many didn’t show up.
- All students were given A’s "in the name of equity," leading many to stop working altogether.
- Since then, the district has implemented equity-based grading, allowing students to pass even if they fail all tests and turn in no assignments.

The result? Leadership can claim higher graduation rates, but students graduate knowing far less—a disaster for families and communities.

### School Board’s Complicity
School Board President Liza Rankin’s “Student Outcome Focused Governance (SOFG)” epitomizes the board’s failure. While the board obsessively reviews Black student outcomes, it has eliminated the finance committee and other oversight mechanisms. This enabled Superintendent Jones and his team to propose closing 21 schools to fund their budgetary incompetence—including excessive raises for senior leaders and staff.

Former Senior District Leader Keisha Scarlett’s infamous comment - I had to give them all raises because of "staff compensation disparities"—sums up the dysfunction. In St. Louis, Scarlett was fired for such nonsense after just one year. In Seattle, however, the same senior leaders—including Superintendent Jones and Head of HR Sarah Pritchett have faced no such consequences. Instead, they proposed the closing of 21 schools, with planned disruptions for thousands of learning communities across the District, to backfund their own raises and those of their colleagues and staff, while giving it the absurd name of "Well Resourced Schools."
Anonymous said…
Thank you for these numbers: "Read that number again: $64.6 million per year wasted. It’s no surprise that these figures don’t appear on the school board’s dashboard—instead they’re on the OSPI website, only reported because federal law requires it." . I have been upset that contract expenditures are not easily visible to the public- unless I am missing something.
~ Sad
Amanda F. said…
Agree totally here. They've admitted publicly that it's not about cost-savings. So what IS it??? It seems to stem from some weird free-floating ideology. Maybe it's about making schools more cookie cutter? Consolidate/close schools because we want fewer small schools because all schools should be the same and therefore equal? I'm still pretty mystified.
Patrick said…
It's worth rereading the biographical sketch of Crabill from two years ago:
https://saveseattleschools.blogspot.com/2022/11/who-is-j-crabill-and-why-should-you-care.html
Anonymous said…
The information provided by Appalled is appalling but sadly true.

The community has been made so anxious and compelled to do something in order to avert situations that might harm their (and any) kids. So, Reykdal should have appropriately intervened to hold the district accountable for the disproportionate
amount of waste by administrative bloat. Instead, the communities have been kept blindsided and coaxed into calling for increased state funding and Seattle’s levy lid lifting.

To increase “Education”funding would be an easy sell just from the face value of what that should mean. “For the kids” taxpayers would have to pay more! Thanks to the lack of oversight by Seattle School Board, administrators can arbitrarily continue to allocate disproportionate funding for themselves. If the Superintendent can take a raise now from a $100 million deficit budget, what makes his minions hesitate from copying him?

Reykdal actually stands to gain if the tax burden on the public increases. In net effect, that will help power hoarding by OSPI in Olympia. It’s possible that greater financial oppression on the public by OSPI could help WA public schools enrollments as the overtaxed families come back to public schools just because they can’t afford to pay for private schools.

Outrageous
NB Mom said…
I was at the North Beach Community meeting, and after a parent stood up and angrily asked something to the effect of "who holds you accountable when you make a mistake, when your plans fail...?" to Marni Campbell and the rest of the central office staff, nobody could or would answer the question. And who was in the room at the time, standing near the stage on the sidelines, who didn't speak up? Dr. Brent Jones. It was, frankly, astounding to me that he did not take leadership in that moment.

Instead, after a lot of disatisfaction and shouts from the crowd asking Dr. Jones to be a the leader he was supposed to be, Dr. James Mercer, who was on stage apparently there to fill in for Timothy Moynihan, spoke up and tried to answer the question. I don't know that he had a particularly effective answer but he did at least try, so he earned some respect from the crowd, though it is certainly not his job to answer for the district. I always gave Dr. Jones the benefit of the doubt, but this was very dissapointing to witness, and it seems like it would be hard to respect your boss after something like that, wouldn't it?

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