Newport-Mesa’s principal problem concerns parents
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- With children returning to classes in less than a
month, four schools are still without principals.
Of six positions vacated this spring and summer, only two have been
filled.
Supt. Robert Barbot said he expects a seventh principal to depart
soon, but would not disclose which school would lose its top leader.
Costa Mesa and Newport Harbor high schools, Ensign Intermediate and
Mariners Elementary School remain without a principal.
The situation is one that has many parents, especially those in the
Newport Beach area, upset and distressed.
“I do not believe the only reason people leave is money,” said Graham
Tingler, a Mariners parent. “If it was, we wouldn’t have these wonderful
teachers who have been here for 20 and 30 years.”
While he did not profess to know what each principal’s incentive was
for leaving, Tingler said his business experience has taught him that if
a person is getting the respect, recognition and support that he or she
deserves, more money elsewhere will not lure them away.
Whatever reasons behind the vacancies, parents are left with yet
another worry: how those positions will be filled.
“I’m very concerned with how we’re suddenly going to find four
high-caliber principals,” Tingler said. “It’s going to be very difficult
to replace Mary Ann [Ehret, principal of Mariners] because of the
high-caliber person that she was. It’s a huge loss to the district.”
District officials said they hope to have three of the posts filled by
next week, but that any delay is because of a desire to find the best
possible candidates.
“It’s not that we don’t have candidates,” Barbot said. “It’s that we
want to make sure we have the best possible match.”
District promises that all will be well have been heard before, some
parents say.
“We’ve been hearing ‘next week’ since the end of June,” said Barbara
Yeager, a frustrated parent at Newport Harbor High.
Yeager said she has faith in Barbot, but that the parent community at
Newport Harbor is aggravated by the delays.
“We are frustrated with the district because the interviews were held
so late in spite of the fact that they knew Bob Boies was leaving,” she
said.
“The entire process has been delayed and we apparently lost good
candidates because of it.”
Barbot said there are reasons behind the delays.
Although the district could not act until their departures became
official, Barbot said it has been known for some time that Andy Hernandez
intended to step down at Costa Mesa High and Allan Mucerino planned for
some time to leave Ensign Intermediate. The district has been preparing
for their departures, Barbot said.
“We haven’t been able to move forward quickly because we knew people
were exploring other options [and] we needed to let them see that
through,” he said.
District officials hope to have principals in place at Costa Mesa,
Mariners and Newport Harbor by next week, but Ensign may have a temporary
principal while a nationwide search is conducted for a successor, said
Jaime Castellanos, assistant superintendent of secondary education.
“We’re looking to open it up to the outside, but at this time of year
we won’t get the quality applicants we’re looking for,” Castellanos said.
For that reason, district officials think the best option may be a
temporary one for now.
“We have a number of candidates who have applied over last month,”
Barbot said. “We’re reviewing their files intensely, but we may want to
let the world know we have an opening at a middle school. We will
probably want to advertise nationally so we can find the strongest
applicant.”
Unconvinced that all is well, however, several parents from Mariners
and Ensign have said they plan to approach the district about what they
think is a growing community concern.
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