After days of turmoil–will he or won’t he?–the Los Angeles Times reports that Deasy and the board are negotiating the terms of his resignation.
Maybe.
If it happens, it will be a very soft landing.
Stay tuned.
After days of turmoil–will he or won’t he?–the Los Angeles Times reports that Deasy and the board are negotiating the terms of his resignation.
Maybe.
If it happens, it will be a very soft landing.
Stay tuned.

Oh my! Deasy wants a golden parachute when instead he should be fired.
LikeLike
Please read Steve Lopez’s column about how we need Deasy, and school him on why we might be better off without him, Diane!
LikeLike
Divisive leadership is flawed
LikeLike
This is what trainees from the Broad Superintendents Academy do. They last only a few years and then get huge buyouts after creating maximum “churn” to advance their corporate education reform agenda. In Philadelphia , Superintendent Arlene Ackerman, who was on the board of The Broad Foundation while she was Superintendent (2008-2011), received a $1 million buyout after creating the disaster we now live with in Philadelphia. The buyout is part of the churn.
LikeLike
Deasy stays. Contract renewed thru 2016.
LikeLike
Disaster, deasy’s contract extended. Sold out by the board. They are complicit in all the bad decisions. The war begins and the taxpayers get screwed again
LikeLike
I posted just now on your last blog.
I was there almost alone. Where were all the folks who blog at this site?
LikeLike
When Deasy bankrupts LAUSD, everyone will lose their retirement and health care. That is the name of this game.
There should have been a huge contingent of anti Deasy folks there to counter the Parent Revolution and United Way organizers who did an amazing job in a few days. I spoke with endless of the young and older people who were under their auspices and will put is in my longer report later in the six hours I was there.
I ended by cornering a KNX reporter and she interviewed me but none of it ran on the evening news. She said she could not find any pro Deasy people to interview. Three reporters told me the same thing. There should have been an endless well of anti Deasy folks there to counter the Broadies…there weren’t.
LikeLike
I do want to thank Kim and even George for speaking to truth, even if our voices did not get heard giving testimony to the Board.
LikeLike
Teachers, students, and the public have lost this round. But I don’t think the war is over.
LikeLike
I’m having a hard time getting my head around the concept of “offering” to resign “at full salary”. My employer would be happy to accept my offer to resign, but the full salary part would have them hooting for weeks. How have we gotten to the point where people who screw up that badly are “entitled” to full salary just to get rid of them?
LikeLike