Perille faces pushback from rights groups
Newly-announced Interim Boston Public Schools Superintendent Laura Perille aims to delve into the difficult issues facing the district: the $1 billion BuildBPS plan that after three years remains short on details, the as-yet undefined high school redesign plan and the reworking of school start times that last year sparked a wave of parent outrage.
Perille, who is president and chief executive officer of the Boston nonprofit EdVestors, also plans to work to foster better relations between school leaders and the department’s central office, maintain better transparency and communication with parents and community members and ensure a smooth school opening in September. She replaces Tommy Chang, who stepped down in June three years into a five-year contract.
Building trust with these stakeholder groups may prove to be Perille’s greatest challenge.
Sworn in to the position by the Boston School Committee Monday, Perille has had no experience as a teacher or administrator and will need to receive a provisional superintendent license within 90 days of beginning the job. She takes the reins following a series of controversies and stalled initiatives that have drawn fire from parents, students and teachers.
Add Walsh’s appointment of Perille,
without input from parents or community groups, to the list of
controversies. On Sunday, the NAACP Boston Branch, the Lawyers’
Committee for Civil Rights and Economic Justice and other groups fired
off an angry letter blasting Walsh for the appointment.
“The
selection of the interim superintendent, coupled with the scant details
related to the ouster of Dr. Tommy Chang, highlight the lack of
process, transparency, and community engagement that takes place in a
district whose school committee is appointed — and [whose] priorities
are directed — by the mayor,” the letter reads. “This, by design,
silences the voice of residents.”
Perille
told the Banner she is committed to receiving community input on BPS
initiatives and said that the district cannot resolve any one of its
challenges without grappling with the others.
“It’s
really hard to pull on one lever without affecting the others,” she
said. “All of these questions need to be on the table.”
Boston Teachers Union President Jessica Tang said Perille could build trust by sharing more information with stakeholders.
“We
would want to see a clear vision and a clear plan of where our district
is heading,” Tang said. “We have to have a much clearer understanding
of the processes by which stakeholders have a say in that vision and
planning moving forward.”
Compounding
the community pushback on various plans advanced by BPS officials and
the Walsh administration over the last three years are persistent
complaints by parents and community members that they are not given
adequate opportunity to weigh in before they’re rolled out.
In
May, the district announced it would create a Community Advisory
Council to better engage students, parents and community members in the
decisions facing the superintendent and school committee. The district
tapped several community groups to provide representatives to the
council.
Before the
group’s first meeting, scheduled for June 18, the parent group Start
Smart BPS was told it could not attend. Another parent group, Quality
Education for Every Student, declined to join the council when its
members learned the meetings were closed to the public. The meeting was
postponed.
Tang, whose union has six representatives in the group, said keeping the meetings closed to the public would be a mistake.
“The
more of us are at the table, the more perspectives at the table, the
stronger the plan will be moving forward,” she said. “The district
doesn’t have to do it alone. There are plenty of us willing to work
together to develop the more thoughtful plans possible.”
The
apparent tension around the school department’s Community Advisory
Council underscores the rocky relations between parents and BPS
officials. If, as some parents assert, the lack of transparency in the
community process originates with the mayor’s office, Perille’s
appointment seems to bear out that theory. Although the Boston School
Committee has the final power to approve the hire of a superintendent,
permanent or interim, Walsh announced Perille’s appointment on June 28
without first informing committee members.
On
Thursday, June 29, Perille, Walsh and School Committee Chairman Michael
Loconto went for an interview before the editorial board of the Boston
Globe.
On Friday, she
gave interviews to other media, including the Banner. These meetings and
interviews occurred days before the Monday meeting during which the
School Committee voted on her hire, giving the appointment the air of a
fait accompli.
While
some in the news media have suggested Walsh may be leaning toward
appointing Perille as the permanent superintendent, the civil rights
groups called on the school committee to conduct an open, transparent
search process for a superintendent.
“The
School Committee should immediately release a timeline for the
permanent superintendent search, and move expeditiously to begin the
recruitment and selection process,” the letter reads.
“Democracy
demands no less, and we will judge this process, as well as the
performance of both the interim and permanent superintendents, on the
basis of accountability, transparent engagement, and the priorities we
have listed.”
Since
the elected school committee was replaced with an appointed body after a
voter referendum in 1989, the city’s mayor has effectively been at the
helm of the system. Although the school committee is responsible for the
selection of the superintendent, the mayor is widely seen as the one
who drives the process.
The
same goes for the educational policies in the city. In his first four
years in office, Walsh has weighed in repeatedly on subjects ranging
from school closures and consolidation to start times, with Chang forced
to justify often unpopular decisions.
Walsh
himself expressed a desire for sweeping changes at the school
department, telling the Boston Globe, “We changed everything in City
Hall in how we operate, but the school department, to some degree, is
operating as if it’s in the 1950s or 1960s.”
Without buy-in from parents, teachers and students, Walsh’s push for changes may continue to meet with stiff headwinds.
“We
want to be a collaborative partner,” Tang said. “We want to see changes
happen. But we want them to be made with us. Not to us.”