GothamSchools — daily independent reporting on NYC public schools

the bright side

Joel Klein: Deputies’ departures a selling point for Cathie Black

It would be reasonable for Schools Chancellor Cathie Black to be alarmed by the rapid exodus of the Department of Education’s top deputies.

After all, when her predecessor Joel Klein handed over the reins last November, he declared, “I also am comfortable in saying I’m leaving you the best team ever assembled in education.” Mayor Bloomberg also emphasized that he was confident that Black could get past her lack of education experience by leaning on her deputies.

Now four of those deputies have left or are about to. John White, deputy chancellor for talent, labor, and innovation, is set to be named superintendent of schools in New Orleans. Santiago Taveras, deputy chancellor for community engagement, left earlier this week for the private sector. Eric Nadelstern, a top educator who had been with the department for nearly 40 years, retired abruptly n January. And Photeine Anagnastopoulos, the department’s finance guru, tendered her resignation the day after Klein’s.

But Klein said earlier this week that he is not worried about Black’s ability to recruit new talent to the department. In fact, he said, the exodus could be a boon for Black, if she sells it right. “The message is come to New York and you’ll be on your way to a superintendency,” he said.

Klein also said high-level departures are par for the course in organizations like the DOE. “You know, it just happens. It’s a tribute to the city, but it happens. And it happened to me,” he said. “And it’s very hard to say to somebody you can’t do your thing.”

In addition to White, two other one-time Klein deputies are seen as prospects to take on vacant superintendent positions in the half-dozen urban school districts with vacancies. Jean-Claude Brizard, superintendent of schools in Rochester, N.Y., and Baltimore schools chief Andres Alonson both bulked up their resumes in Klein’s cabinet and are now “being recruited in multiple venues,” Klein said.

  • Michael Fiorillo

    Yes, corporate whores, come to New York and you’ll soon be given your own urban school system to destroy, turning it over to privateers..

  • Tim

    Any improvements in the Klein era were incremental at best and cost a breathtaking amount of money to produce, but heck, would you look at how marketable and ascendant his deputies are?!!

  • Andrew Wolf

    Oops! as this was being posted, news coming over the wire that Black is toast, replaced by Dennis Walcott (God Save Us All).

  • Tim

    Yup, confirmed on NY1. Holy mackerel.

    Children first!

  • Pingback: DOE Deputy Chancellor Headed To Big Easy – NY1 | Today News 24 Headlines

  • Dsmith9019

    I believe this is a testament to her inability to govern one of the nation’s largest school districts. Not for lack of trying, but for lack of her knowledge of education. She seems to have alienated everyone in her hieracy who could have helped her transition from private industry to education. Too bad, because the ones who will suffer are the children.

  • Koozy14

    She was the wrong person for the job–period! Stop making excuses. David Steiner, Bloomberg, they were all told, but the chose hubris. There is no spin out of this–she never had what it takes, and never will.

  • Pingback: MULTIPURPOSE BLOG | Blog | DOE Deputy Chancellor Headed To Big Easy - NY1

  • Michael M. (parent still)

    If I were Klein, I’d be wishing for a Mulligan on this one.

Tips, questions, feedback?

Contact us at .

Word from Our Sponsor

From Our Jobs Board

Featured Employers
Recent Jobs

Chalk It Up

Recent Comments

29 comments so far today

Archives

June 2013
M T W T F S S
« May  
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930