Oakland schools superintendent says farewell after her firing from OUSD

Oakland, California (Crohn)-held on Thursday of the academic year 2024-25, supervisor Kayla Johnson Tramil held a press conference before she left from the Unified County of Auckland. Johnson Tramil was the tallest OUSD supervisor in 55 years.

Its term will be officially expired on June 30, on the occasion of eight years at the head of the second school area in the San Francisco Bay area.

During the press conference, Dr. Johnson Tramil highlighted the achievements of her administration, including:

  • Paying $ 100 million in loans and came out of the state’s judicial guard after 22 years.
  • Raise the graduation rate from OSD to its highest level in decades.
  • Mobility in schools via the Covid’s pandemic.
  • Raising partnerships between the public and private sectors with eating. Learn. He plays. Foundation, Kaboom! , And confidence in the public lands to improve nearly twenty school squares.
  • Launching the bus fleet in the PV school area.
Kyla Johnson-TRAMMEll reads to the fourth grade students during a visit to Hoover Elementary in Auckland. (Photo by Medianews Group/Bay Area News via Getty Images)

After a meeting of the tense schools board of directors when the wage erupted in April, the Board of Directors voted 4-3 in favor of the launch of Johnson-TRAMMELL. The trustees offered zero interpretations about the reason they decided to get rid of the supervisor.

Johnson Tramil did not attend the April meeting. However, I have published a book Thank you, “The past eight years have brought some of the most difficult and most specific moments in the history of our region. Through all of this, Oakland showed what is possible when we remain documented in our mission, vision and work in partnership for our students.”

OUSD officials have not yet announced who will be the next supervisor. The trustees held a closed meeting on Wednesday night.

The NAACP Auckland Education Committee wrote a letter to the school’s board of directors, which raises warnings that OUSD is the summer intervention in the “Levantine Void”.

The letter stated: “We are very disturbed by the Board of Directors voting on April 23 to end the supervisor Kayla Johnson-Tarmil-a sudden and uncomfortable decision that has left a leadership vacuum in our region. The supervisor Johnson’s contributions were not only our loan. It was executed, two years before the end of its contract, without a clear succession plan and has sparked widespread anxiety throughout our society within weeks The past few.

NAACP leaders asked whether the decision of the Board of Directors was taken in the interest of students, or were affected by political agendas and “trade union maneuvering behind the scenes.”

Earlier this year, the school council voted in contrast to its entire plans to make sweeping discounts to post -school programs, pre -school, and summer programs. Defenders with young people said that the planned cuts would have penetrated expanded learning programs by up to 80 % and an impact on thousands of students who depend on academic support programs, guidance, meals, and safety. The council’s reflection came weeks after public pressure.

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