Rocky Mountain Voice

School Board Hopefuls Promise Accountability After Turbulent DPS Years

By Nico Brambila | The Denver Gazette

While candidates will say every election is consequential, the four seats on the ballot next month could reshape the Denver Public Schools Board of Education and chart a new course for Colorado’s largest school district.

On Tuesday, EDUCATE Denver held a candidate forum along with ChalkBeat Colorado and CBS News at Regis University.

“We think leadership at the board level impacts the education of our students,” said Nan Baumbusch, EDUCATE Denver staff director.

Formed in 2022, EDUCATE Denver is a diverse coalition of civic leaders and community organizations whose mission is to advocate for a “high-quality DPS education,” according to the group’s website.

“For this reason, voting in a board election is important whether you have a student in DPS or not,” Baumbusch said.

EDUCATE Denver does not make political endorsements.

More than 100 people registered for Tuesday’s event.

Among the first questions asked during a 45-minute debate between the two candidates running for the at-large seat being vacated by Director Scott Essermanwas to rate the job Superintendent Alex Marrero is doing.

“Overall, he’s missing it,” said Alex Magaña, who is the executive principal of Beacon Network Schools, when it comes to safety and the achievement gap.

The forum held four separate debates for each of these seats open for the election. Moderators asked the candidates similar questions about the student achievement gap, school safety, Marrero’s performance and whether his contract should have been extended early.

Thirteen candidates are vying for a seat this election.

Samari Royal Jelks Sr., who filed to run for the at-large seat held by Esserman, said he has withdrawn from the race, but remains listed as a candidate on the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office. Deborah Sims Fard, who running for the at-large seat, dropped out, according to organizers.

With four of the seven seats up for grabs, voters could do what they were unable to do two years ago: flip the board.

Although voters elected three new candidates — Directors John Youngquist, Kimberlee Sia, and Vice President Marlene De La Rosa — only two have consistently broken with the board majority on controversial issues.

Frustrations are still simmering in the community over school closures, low test scores and transparency.

The election two years ago took place just eight months after a student shot two administrators at East High School, raising safety concerns and the community’s ire.   

A Keating Research poll released a month before the 2023 election found 71% of likely Denver voters held an unfavorable opinion of the school board.  

The sentiment has only worsened with time.

In April, a Keating Research poll found that the dissatisfaction has only deepened with just 22% of voters holding a favorable opinion of the board. The survey also found 89% of respondents were concerned about access to a quality public education.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE AT THE DENVER GAZETTE

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