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East Baton Rouge school board members announce why interim superintendent Adam Smith was not selected

Keymonte Avery
4 min read

BATON ROUGE, La. (BRPROUD) — Four members of the East Baton Rouge School Board released a statement about why they did not select Adam Smith.

EBR School Board Vice President Patrick Martin, on behalf of Mark Bellue, Nathan Rust and Emily Soulé, announced why interim superintendent Adam Smith was not selected as a finalist in the search.

“Mr. Smith had a 6-month audition for this role, so board members and the public have had
ample opportunity to see what his vision is for EBR and how he executes the job. Those of us
who voted for other candidates found Mr. Smith’s audition was lacking. In general, he did not
appear to us to be willing to make strong, bold decisions to improve our schools,” wrote Martin.

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The board members turned to Smith to fulfill the interim superintendent position as he was dedicated to the students and the school district. The statement shows Smith labeled himself as a “company man.”

Martin replied to Smith’s remark by stating,” Respecting someone’s character, conduct, and longevity is not the same thing as believing that person is the leader needed to successfully execute significant and needed change in a district of our complexity, size, and challenges. A ‘company man’ is often well-suited to serve as an interim, to keep the system functioning, but is not the right choice to bring much-needed change to the system.”

The statement comes before a school board meeting on Thursday to announce the school district’s new superintendent.

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Read the board members’ full statement below.

“We, four of five EBR School Board members who chose not to include Adam Smith among our
list of finalists for the position of Superintendent, want to share our reasoning for doing so with
the community. We have tremendous respect for Mr. Smith. He has earned the gratitude of the
four of us, and the entire community, for his dedication to the schools and students in EBR. In
his own words, he is a “company man,” and this is why we turned to him to serve as interim
superintendent.

Respecting someone’s character, conduct, and longevity is not the same thing as believing that
person is the leader needed to successfully execute significant and needed change in a district
of our complexity, size, and challenges. A “company man” is often well-suited to serve as an
interim, to keep the system functioning, but is not the right choice to bring much-needed change to the system.

Mr. Smith had a 6-month audition for this role, so board members and the public have had
ample opportunity to see what his vision is for EBR and how he executes the job. Those of us
who voted for other candidates found Mr. Smith’s audition was lacking. In general, he did not
appear to us to be willing to make strong, bold decisions to improve our schools. As interim, as
well as in his application, he did not show a comprehensive vision for the future that would
rapidly bring 10 and 20 points of improvement to our traditional neighborhood schools.

All but one of our traditional neighborhood high schools is rated D or F, meaning the average
student is not graduating on time, earning a college-going ACT score, or reading or doing math
on grade level. That’s reflected across our district at all grade levels, where fewer than 35% of
children are actually reading or doing math on grade level, a number inflated by the
performance of children in our magnet programs.

All of us, and nearly every person in this parish, want our schools to be better, stronger, fairer,
more transparent, and simply more successful at preparing a much greater number of children
for their futures. We are looking for someone not only of good character, but who also inspires
confidence through a bold plan and successful past experience dramatically improving a deeply
challenged education system.

We are not looking for a leader who makes us comfortable; we are looking for a leader who will
partner with the board to bring significant and systemic change for our children, particularly in
our traditional neighborhood schools.”

School Board members Patrick Martin, Mark Bellue, Nathan Rust and Emily Soulé

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