ReportWire

Tag: Karen Molinar

  • TEA affirms Fort Worth ISD takeover after review, names conservator appointment

    [ad_1]

    State Education Commissioner Mike Morath, right, talks with State Board of Education Member Brandon Hall while touring William James Middle School on Thursday, Aug. 28, 2025, in Fort Worth.

    State Education Commissioner Mike Morath, right, talks with State Board of Education Member Brandon Hall while touring William James Middle School in Fort Worth on Aug. 28.

    amccoy@star-telegram.com

    Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath doubled down on his decision of a state takeover of the Fort Worth Independent School District on Thursday. He also named a conservator who will oversee turnaround plans for underperforming schools.

    Morath notified the Fort Worth ISD school board and Superintendent Karen Molinar of his plans to move forward with replacing the elected school board with an appointed board of managers, in addition to initiating a nationwide search for a superintendent. Molinar will be considered as a candidate for the position.

    Morath named Christopher Ruszkowski as the district’s conservator on Thursday.

    Morath reaffirmed the takeover decision after an informal review meeting took place with district representatives in Austin a week ago. The district has the option to appeal this decision to the State Office of Administrative Hearings within 15 days.

    “As you are aware, in correspondence dated October 23, 2025, I provided notice of my intent to appoint a board of managers to the Fort Worth Independent School District to exercise the powers and duties of the district’s board of trustees and of the appointment of a conservator to the district. On October 30, 2025, I conducted an informal review of the appointments at the Texas Education Agency. After careful consideration of the information submitted by the district and presented during the review and in the best interest of the students of Fort Worth ISD, I am affirming my appointment of a board of managers and a conservator to the district,” Morath said in his Thursday correspondence to the district.

    Molinar, the Fort Worth ISD superintendent, said she remains focused on serving students and intends to reapply for the superintendent position.

    “TEA will continue with the process of taking applications for interested candidates for a Board of Managers and the superintendent search as previously shared by the Commissioner. My intent remains the same to apply for the position of superintendent,” Molinar said Thursday. “The focus remains on meeting the needs of our students in FWISD. Our employees are committed to providing high quality, on-level instruction each day in every classroom across our district.”

    Fort Worth school board President Roxanne Martinez said the board “strongly disagrees with the decision.”

    “We believe our district has demonstrated meaningful progress and that local governance, supported by our community, is essential to sustained student success. We are immensely proud of the work being led by our educators, staff, and Superintendent. They continue to provide high-quality instruction to our students every day and remain steadfast in their commitment to serving this community,” she said. “The Board will consider all options, including filing a formal appeal of the Commissioner’s decision. We do so not in defiance, but in defense of our students, our community, and the principles of local governance that ensure accountability to the people we serve.”

    Ruszkowski said in a statement on Thursday that he looks forward to working with district leaders to serve the Fort Worth ISD community. He was previously appointed in March 2024 to serve as a conservator of IDEA Public Schools, a charter district that TEA had investigated for “financial and operational impropriety,” according to TEA’s notification letter at the time.

    “Throughout my three decades in education, I’ve been honored to take on unique roles during critical inflection points for schools, states and organizations. This conservator appointment is another opportunity to engage in public service of the highest calling. I look forward to working with district leadership in service of the students, teachers and community of Fort Worth,” he said.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lina Ruiz

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lina Ruiz covers early childhood education in Tarrant County and North Texas for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. A University of Florida graduate, she previously wrote about local government in South Florida for TCPalm and Treasure Coast Newspapers.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

    [ad_2]

    Lina Ruiz

    Source link

  • Fort Worth ISD board holds off on response to state takeover, evaluates Molinar

    [ad_1]

    Karen Molinar, the Superintendent of the Fort Worth Independent School District, gives a presentation on a report and update on student academics and instructional framework during a FWISD School Board Meeting at the District Administration Building in Fort Worth on Tuesday, May, 20, 2025.

    Karen Molinar, the Superintendent of the Fort Worth Independent School District, gives a presentation on a report and update on student academics and instructional framework during a FWISD School Board Meeting at the District Administration Building in Fort Worth on Tuesday, May, 20, 2025.

    ctorres@star-telegram.com

    Fort Worth ISD’s school board opted to take no action on the pending state takeover of the district and made no changes to the superintendent’s contract Tuesday night.

    The board discussed both topics in a closed session, in addition to discussing the Tarrant Appraisal District voting process for its board of directors, for about three hours.

    The board took no action on an agenda item that considered “possible action” in response to the pending state takeover of the district. It also unanimously approved a motion acknowledging its evaluation of Superintendent Karen Molinar’s performance. Board member Tobi Jackson made a statement on behalf of the board clarifying the action, or lack thereof, on both items.

    “While the specific details of the evaluation are confidential, the board was pleased to document Dr. Molinar’s exemplary leadership and dedicated service to the Fort Worth Independent School District. The board took no action regarding her salary or the term of her contract,” Jackson said.

    “In addition, the board did not take action at this time, as it awaits the commissioner’s final decision of the informal review regarding the appointment of a board of managers for the Fort Worth Independent School District. This board remains hopeful that the dialogue and presentation shared with Commissioner Morath during last week’s informal review will lead to a different outcome on behalf of our students and our community,” Jackson said.

    On Oct. 23, Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath announced his decision to take over the school district after one of its campuses, the Leadership Academy at Forest Oak Sixth Grade Center, received its fifth consecutive failing grade . The letter grades issued annually by the Texas Education Agency provide a snapshot of how campuses and districts are performing academically, which are primarily based on STAAR test scores, or the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness.

    After a campus receives five consecutive failed grades, state law requires the school be closed or the school district’s trustees be replaced with an appointed board of managers. District officials had already closed the sixth-grade campus and merged it with Forest Oak Middle School.

    District officials attended an informal review meeting in Austin last week at which they presented information to Morath about the progress the district has made. The closed meeting allowed them to submit documentation and information that they want Morath to consider during his decision-making process related to the board of managers and the appointment of a conservator to oversee the transition of the takeover. It remains to be seen what Morath’s decision will be . If he moves forward with his takeover decision, the district can appeal it to the State Office of Administrative Hearings.

    Applications are due on Nov. 21 for Fort Worth community members who wish to be considered for the board of managers. Morath is also planning to conduct a nationwide superintendent search but will consider current Superintendent Molinar as a candidate.

    Robert Rogers, president of The Reading League Texas and chairman of the Fort Worth Students First political action committee, told the board during public comment on Tuesday that he believes in the concept of local governance but implored the board to think about how well that model has historically served school children in Fort Worth. Rogers encouraged the board to embrace the takeover.

    “What are you defending based on your tenure as a trustee? Can you vigorously defend the outcomes produced by local-controlled governance?” Rogers said.

    “Fort Worth can create its own course of action through this process. We are not Houston or any other city. If all of us rally behind the students in the district and focus on educational excellence in the teaching of reading, we can make the most of this takeover, create a large urban district that could be the envy of the nation, and rapidly exit takeover status because we are achieving what is best for our students,” he said.

    Steven Poole, executive director of the United Educators Association, voiced a different sentiment during public comment. He contended that Fort Worth ISD can’t chart its own path during a state takeover, pointing to the takeover of Houston ISD as an example. The Houston Chronicle reported that four members of the appointed board of managers were unexpectedly removed in June; Morath had told the Chronicle that the replacements were “not at all” related to potential criticism of the superintendent or the district’s current path but were based on “a mix of factors.”

    “(The board of managers) are only…. held accountable and responsible to the commissioner of education, plain and simple,” Poole said. “The idea that we can chart our own way is absolutely not true. So you should, as representatives of all communities in Fort Worth, explore every option to push back on this takeover. Our communities deserve it,” Poole said.

    Superintendent receives evaluation

    The school board made no changes to Molinar’s contract after discussing her evaluation in a closed session.

    Her evaluation is partly based on district goals set by Molinar and the school board. The district’s 2025-2029 strategic plan calls for the steady improvement of state test scores over this period. One goal is to have half of the district’s third graders performing on grade level in reading and math by 2029. In the spring, 41% of third graders met grade level in reading while 34% met grade level in math.

    Molinar earns $360,000 annually, and her contract is set to expire on June 30, 2028. The school board can review and adjust Molinar’s salary at any time.

    In the instance that Molinar’s employment is terminated by way of resignation, mutual agreement or action of the board, her severance payout can’t exceed one year of her annual salary and benefits, according to the contract. It remains to be seen how her severance could be impacted if Morath chooses another candidate to serve as superintendent amid the takeover.

    Molinar is able to be reassigned from her superintendent position to another position in the district through mutual written agreement between her and the school board, according to her contract.

    The school board was required to give her an evaluation by Oct. 31 as outlined in her contract. Board members discussed her performance in a closed session at its regular meeting on Oct. 28 but didn’t take action on it until Tuesday night.

    “It may seem like the agenda item is in response to last week’s decision by TEA but it is actually standard operations for FWISD,” a district spokesperson said in a statement last week.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lina Ruiz

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lina Ruiz covers early childhood education in Tarrant County and North Texas for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. A University of Florida graduate, she previously wrote about local government in South Florida for TCPalm and Treasure Coast Newspapers.

    [ad_2]

    Lina Ruiz

    Source link