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Maria Su, head of SF Children’s Dept., picked to lead school district

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The San Francisco Board of Education moments ago announced that Maria Su has agreed to take the role of superintendent for up to two years after outgoing superintendent Matt Wayne’s resignation was accepted today by a 6-1 vote. 

The sole dissenting vote, commissioner Kevine Boggess, felt Wayne deserved to be fired rather than resigning. Mission Local is told that Wayne will receive a year’s salary, some $325,000, and health care.

Su has worked in San Francisco government for more than 18 years, with the last 15 of those coming as the head of the city’s Department of Children, Youth and their Families. She had also been serving on the school stabilization team formed by Mayor London Breed on Sept. 22. 

Her appointment — and the promotion of Dr. Karling Aguilera-Fort, presently the senior associate superintendent of education services, as her deputy — will be formally voted on at the school board’s regularly scheduled Tuesday, Oct. 22 meeting. Aguilera-Fort will serve as acting superintendent until Tuesday.

“Why am I doing this? I believe in the school district,” Su tells Mission Local. “I’ve been doing this work at DCYF and we’ve seen how when you have strong operations, strong systems, strong partnerships and deep community support you can get a lot of things done.”

Su’s contract with the SFUSD runs until June 2026: “It’s going to take a while to address the operations and systems at the school district,” she says.

The extraordinary move of tapping a veteran city department head to lead San Francisco’s troubled school district is the latest twist in the strange and terrible saga of the San Francisco Unified School District. But, says Board of Education President Matt Alexander, it’s a twist that has pleased state education officials — and renders the specter of a state takeover less likely, not more. 

Maria Su

“State officials are excited that we are going to have leadership that is really going to tackle our fiscal and operational challenges,” Alexander said. “The fact we’re bringing in a leader who’s ready to take those challenges on is making them more comfortable and less fearful.” 

“To be really, really clear,” Alexander continued, California Department of Education officials “have said we are not near a state takeover — nowhere near it.” 



Source: missionlocal.org

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