SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham removed the head of the state’s Public Education Department on Monday while expressing dissatisfaction with progress on sweeping reforms.
Karen Trujillo was dismissed as public education secretary about six months after being tapped by the first-year Democratic governor to overhaul the state’s lagging public education system.
“Unfortunately my expectations were not met in a number of areas,” Lujan Grisham said in a statement. “It’s absolutely imperative that we genuinely transform public education in this state.”
A district court judge last year sided with frustrated parents and school districts in ruling that the state was failing to provide an adequate education, especially to students from impoverished and minority households.
The state is in the process of deploying a nearly $500 million increase in annual spending on schools under legislation from the Democrat-led Legislature signed in April.
Reforms backed by Lujan Grisham include the replacement of the state’s performance evaluation systems for teachers and individual school ratings. She embraced the Legislature’s plan to extend learning time for students by as much as five weeks at some elementary schools.
Lujan Grisham spokesman Tripp Stelnicki said the governor realized that crucial reforms were not advancing as needed.
“If we’re going to deliver on the moonshot for education that she has called for, and that kids deserve, we had to make an immediate change,” he said.
He said Trujillo, a former dean and research director at New Mexico State University, declined an initial request to resign and then was “removed.”
The shakeup Monday did not extend to other top managers at the Public Education Department.
“Any concerns about near-term management I think are unfounded because we have really strong deputies in place,” Stelnicki said.
A nationwide search is being launched to find a successor.
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