Rick's Blog

Podcast: Appointed vs. Elected Superintendent

As Escambia County prepares for what could be its seventh or eighth referendum on whether to elect or appoint its school superintendent, Walker Wilson is ready to defend the appointed system he helped establish in 2018.

Background: Wilson, who serves as DIB Executive Director and was instrumental in the 2018 referendum that changed the superintendent’s position from elected to appointed, believes the current system has proven its worth.

Better Candidate Pool

The appointed system has allowed the county to expand its candidate pool beyond local politics. “You get to kind of open up the pool of candidates that the community and the school board would get to choose from,” Wilson noted. “You certainly can have someone that’s homegrown, like we see now with Superintendent Leonard, or you can have somebody that comes from outside the area, like we had with Superintendent Dr. Tim Smith.”

Community Divided

The geographic divide from the 2018 vote remains stark. “You saw folks that lived in the city of Pensacola overwhelmingly vote for appointed,” Wilson recalled. “You saw a lot of folks on the west side… vote overwhelmingly for an appointed superintendent. And then folks at what was the time district one up towards Beulah and District 5 vote for elected.” The two school board members that opposed putting the issue back on the ballot were District 3’s David Williams and District 4’s Carissa Bergosh, whose districts cover the City of Pensacola.

Despite concerns about political partisanship in education, Wilson remains committed to the appointed system. “I always struggle with the school board being a partisan. The superintendent would be a partisan elected position,” he explained. “Most people, I think, in the community would rather have somebody that’s more in the middle one way or the other leading our school district.”

When asked if he’s ready for another campaign, Wilson was resolute: “Yeah, I guess so. Let’s buckle up and get after it.”

Exit mobile version