By Juan Montoya
When Esperanza Zendejas was hired by the board of trustees of the Brownsville Independent School District in 1992, she came in wielding an ax provided her by a majority on the board of the district.
Over time, these changes she instituted resulted in widespread turmoil among the staff, teacher and administrators of the district. Soon, even her staunches supporters like then-board president Peter Gilman could not convince the board majority that they should keep her until the end of her contract in 1998. Gilman was the sole trustee voting not to release her from her contract in 1995.
It's ironic that one of the reasons that Zendejas gave at the time she informed the board she was considering a job with the Indianapolis (Indiana) Pubic Schools was because she didn't think that the incoming board majority would keep her around for long.
However, during her short reign at the BISD, she performed admirably for the majority that hired her, removing principals and administrators hurly-burly as the board majority which kept her at her job wished.
Once the center didn't hold, she could see the writing on the blackboard and knew it was time to move on.
The same thing happened at Indianapolis.
When she arrived there in May 1995 with a four-year contract, it took all of one month for her to kow-tow to the wishes of that board majority. She announced that 63 of its top administrators and staff members would have to re-apply and interview for their positions because the district was "in crisis."
"The crisis deals with financial resources. It deals with accountability. And it deals with community perception."
Predictably, she ended her relationship with Indianapolis with one year left on her four-year contract amid charges that she had worked to dismantle the district, instead of improving it.
"There is a groundswell of opposition to this board, to this woman (Zendejas) who someone recently described as 'Goldsmith in a dres,'" commented one of her critics in a letter to WIBC Radio in Indianapolis.
"She has no intention of improving or expanding IPS," he wrote the station. "Her agenda was to dismantle it, piece by piece. I am here to tell you that business as usual is no longer acceptable; you'll sees results in the next school election...Zendejas will be out of here shortly, and the rest of us will have to pick up the pieces."
The Brownsville and Indianapolis experience of signing a contract, implementing aggressive polices and shaking up the staff and administration protected by the current majority, and then sensing that the district's voters would elect a new board majority that would not support her policies, and taking a payout before the ax came down, has been a Zendejas hallmark wherever she has gone.
The Indianapolis board paid her $158,100 – a year's salary and benefits – for her early departure.
It's a pattern that has followed her since.
In San Jose, California, Zendejas resigned two years before the end of her contract with the East Side Union High School District over criticism of her management style. According to Zendejas’ contract in San Jose, she made $225,000 a year. The board also paid her a portion of her salary when she left the district. She continued working for the district as a consultant until Jan. 31, 2011 and collected a monthly payment of $14,000 (about $168,000 a year) plus benefits, according to the consulting agreement
At the Alisal Union School District in Salinas, Calif., Zendejas left in 2010 but stayed on as a consultant with the district paying each administrator $168,000 a year to do the same job.
Now the BISD has her until they find another candidate.
In 1995, Herald writer Anthony Gray said Zendejas knows a thing or two about school boards. Her doctoral thesis at Stanford University was titled: "The recruitment and selection of female school board candidates for rural districts in California." That shows that she was familiar with their political workings, being how she was a board member in California, he wrote.
After she does as she is told by the current BISD board majority of Joe Rodriguez, Minerva Peña, Jose Chirinos and Cesar Lopez, will she be given the superintendent's gig until the next board is elected?
And will history repeat itself and – as the Indianapolis critic said – : "...you'll see results in the next school election...Zendejas will be out of here shortly, and the rest of us will have to pick up the pieces."
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
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14 comments:
So far most of her moves should have been done a long time ago. You are wrong she listens to no one.
The only ones hurting are the Atkinson -Powers porque se les acabó la chiche?
I was at the Budget Meeting and its not looking good for BISD Personnel. Cuts and moves are rumored to happen under Zendejas. All the Administration Mismanagement of Funds and Lawsuits will be taking a toll in teacher jobs and other positions. Supposedly, 1000+ students left BISD, but the Finance Director claimed to have hired 200 additional employees this year. Talk about mismanagement of position control and personnel. Salaries are all out of whack and as a result 30 women are suing for more money. NO BISD RAISES, just expect BISD HELL RAISING.
Is that not the life of a superintendent? You always go with the majority that hired you. Majority rules. Is not democracy great? Majority rules and the minority waits it's turn.
Supt's have long and short lives as per the whims of school boards.
She's listening to Minerva, Joe and Cesar.
Minerva told Bobby Cervantes the whole game plan and Joe made it known he was coming after Atkinson. The district is doomed with these four at the helm, it's hopeless!
The article is interesting in that nothing was said about the progress of the students. Maybe I missed it.
micro managing continues again. 3 board members telling zendejas what to do and who to remove for administrators. not good. 2016 around the corner. get rid of her now .
Zendejas has the tenacity to do what others are afraid of. Board or no Board.However, if your boss hired you, what can you do if you're asked to do this or that. You're an employee of and hired by the Board. It stands to reason, we may not agree but, that's the way it is.Nothing else to do but, deal with it as best possible.
Zendejas does not listen to others she is undoing things that should never have happened. Every few years you need a brutal house cleaning.
Hopefully she won't put up with Minerva, Cesar, Chirinos and Joe for too long like Dr. Montoya did.
With these guys the more you give them the more you want. Hear people are ready to talk, spill the beans on these 4 losers.
I hope she is doing what's right. While they are investigating Atkinson. Investigate a teacher that was recommended for termination but didn't get terminated be caused Minerva stopped it. She had Balthazar help her. Chirinos, Cesar, Otis and Dr. Montoya also backed her up. What would you call this?
I would call them corrupt and unethical individuals abusing their position. Very unfair, injust to the rest.
The Board and Zendejas as should focus on the educating the students! First of all stop expelling and suspending students! This is not helping them at all, they are only throwing out to look for trouble. Especially the elementary students why expelled a 1st grader? If the principal can't handle students than they don't belong there. Also, stop expelling students for not wearing the right color shirt or pant, how rediculous!
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