Two San Antonio schools officials are following CPS CEO Pedro Martinez to Chicago to become his top two deputies in the nation’s third-largest school system, sources told the Chicago Sun-Times.
Patti Salzmann is expected to be named the district’s new chief education officer as soon as this month, and Ken Thompson is set to take the chief operating officer job next month, sources said.
Representatives of the Chicago and San Antonio districts didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment or confirm the moves.
Salzmann and Thompson’s additions to Martinez’s administration will mark the new CEO’s first major hires at CPS, as he begins to fill a leadership team packed with interim positions and vacancies ever since a slew of officials followed former schools chief Janice Jackson in leaving the district.
Jackson’s administration was lauded for its makeup — largely educators after a series of leadership teams featuring business heads with no classroom experience.
Salzmann and Thompson don’t necessarily fit the mold of Jackson’s group.
They’re part of a team of officials who report to the superintendent in the San Antonio Independent School District. Salzmann is the deputy superintendent for academics and school leadership, running a large department of administrators who manage learning at the district. Thompson is the district’s chief technology officer, leading a group of about 16 officials in the information technology department who all oversee their own teams of employees.
Salzmann is a career K-12 administrator who has worked in Martinez’s old district for three and a half years, first hired by Martinez in May 2018 as an assistant superintendent for teaching and learning, then for the past two years as the system’s chief academic officer. She spent the previous 17 years at a different San Antonio area district, her last job there being an administrator overseeing curriculum and instruction.
:no_upscale()/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/22954677/Ken.jpg)
Thompson, meanwhile, has spent the past two years spearheading SAISD’s technology response to the pandemic, primarily working to equip students with computers and internet to bridge an access gap seen in much of the country, including in Chicago. Thompson, who has two master’s degrees, has about two decades’ experience as an IT executive. He was hired by Martinez and moved to San Antonio in 2018 after leading IT at the Baltimore City Public Schools.
Thompson will become effectively third in charge at CPS, overseeing all school operations at the district’s 600-plus facilities, notably while the schools’ troubled facilities department is in the midst of transitioning to a new model overseen by a new vendor.
In San Antonio, some insiders viewed Martinez as a sort of manager-in-chief rather than an educator-in-chief. His lack of educational background often means he surrounds himself with experts in each department and lets them run their areas while checking in to oversee their work, sources said.
His decisions not to retain Maurice Swinney as chief education officer and Lindy McGuire as chief operating officer, who both have been filling those roles on an interim basis the past few months, reveal Martinez’s early preference to fill his team with aides he knows rather than necessarily those with CPS experience.
Swinney spent six years as a CPS principal before he was elevated to lead the district’s then newly created equity office in October 2018, where he oversaw budgets and policies to help address the inequitable allocation of resources. He took over as interim education chief in June when LaTanya McDade left for the top job in a Virginia district.
:no_upscale()/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/22954694/merlin_100353980.jpg)
McGuire has spent the better part of two decades either at CPS or City Hall in various administrations, from a legislative and policy analyst role with the City Council’s finance committee, to a chief of external affairs job at CPS, deputy chief of staff for former Mayor Rahm Emanuel and most recently senior advisor to ex-CPS CEO Janice Jackson. She took the interim chief operating officer role in June when Arnie Rivera left.
It isn’t clear whether Swinney or McGuire will stay at the district.
Before Swinney and McGuire, two former educators in McDade and Rivera, each with decades of experience, filled those positions.
:no_upscale()/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/22954705/merlin_100311956.jpg)
McDade, who was with the district for more than 20 years, was a longtime CPS teacher and served as Keller Elementary’s school principal, then as a network chief who oversaw principals before assuming her role as chief education officer in 2016. In that position, McDade was in charge of the teaching and learning side of the school district. She was also responsible for overseeing the transition of lessons from classrooms to computers amid the pandemic last year.
As chief operations officer, Rivera oversaw the district’s budget process and management of its buildings. Rivera was in and out of CPS starting in 2004 when he taught first grade. He later rose through CPS central office as then-CEO J.C. Brizard’s deputy chief of staff before he served stints at educational foundations and was an education liaison for Emanuel, who later appointed him to the Board of Education. Rivera helped negotiate the past three Chicago Teachers Union contracts and is married to a CPS teacher and is the father of a CPS student.