accessibility tools
Post Type

Richmondside: WCCUSD appoints Kim Moses as interim superintendent

October 1, 2024—Richmondside reporter Natalie Hanson spoke with Public Advocates’ Staff Attorney Karissa Provenza regarding the recent resignation of West Contra Costa Unified School District’s superintendent. Kim Moses, West Contra Costa Unified School District’s associate superintendent of business services, will take over (as the district’s interim superintendent) in December from Superintendent Chris Hurst, who announced his resignation Monday.

Amidst that, the district was hit by a civil rights lawsuit filed in July on behalf of parents and students at several school sites, including Stege Elementary and Kennedy High School in Richmond and Helms Middle School in San Pablo.

The lead attorney representing parents in the lawsuit, Karissa Provenza, said of Hurst’s resignation: “The district has consistently failed to meet its obligations to provide permanent and qualified teachers, maintain safe and healthy school facilities, and engage parents authentically in the LCAP process. The sudden departure of the superintendent halfway through the school year is highly concerning. There are currently too many ineffective or neglected practices and too little accountability surrounding significant issues within this district.”

Read the full story.

Related Posts

EdSource: California judge rejects injunction to halt distributing billions to repair school facilities

For 25+ years, property-wealthy districts have gotten more than double the per-student funding to fix their schools. A judge just said low-wealth families challenging that formula have "some reasonable probability" of winning at trial. Read more.

Read more

Lassen County Times: Court declines to pause school facility funds; constitutional challenge to California’s discriminatory system moves forward to trial

"You can't look in the eyes of these kids and make an argument that the facilities that so many of them are being educated in are appropriate."—Governor Newsom A state court just declined to freeze $3 billion in school modernization funds — letting California keep funding a construction formula a judge says raises "serious questions" about its constitutionality. In Lynwood, 60 classrooms leaked last year. In Parlier, the district found $90M in needs but secured just $14M. Trial could come as soon as March 2027. Until then, the inequity keeps compounding

Read more

Press Release: Court Declines to Pause School Facility Funds; Constitutional Challenge to California’s Discriminatory System Moves Forward to Trial

"You can't look in the eyes of these kids and make an argument that the facilities that so many of them are being educated in are appropriate." — Governor Newsom A state court just declined to freeze $3 billion in school modernization funds — letting California keep funding a construction formula a judge says raises "serious questions" about its constitutionality. In Lynwood, 60 classrooms leaked last year. In Parlier, the district found $90M in needs but secured just $14M. Trial could come as soon as March 2027. Until then, the inequity keeps compounding.

Read more