Four black ministerial leaders say St. Paul Schools Superintendent Joe Gothard has failed as a community partner after the district twice failed to recently hire a black principal, leaving all seven of the city's public high schools without an African-American in charge.
"Enough is enough. We need answers," the Rev. Runney Patterson of New Hope Baptist Church said Friday on the sidewalk outside school district headquarters.
With him were Tyrone Terrill, president of the African-American Leadership Council; James Thomas, president of the St. Paul Black Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance; and the Rev. Charles Gill, senior pastor of Pilgrim Baptist Church.
Their comments came the day after learning that Christine Vang, most recently principal at Como Park Elementary School, had been named by Gothard as the new principal at Central High School. She will replace interim principal George Nolan, who came from the Stillwater schools a year ago after Principal Mary Mackbee retired. Mackbee, who is black, had led the school since 1993.
Gothard also recently named Abdirizak Abdi, an assistant principal at St. Cloud Apollo High School, as principal of Humboldt High School on the city's West Side.
The black leaders said they were upset not with Vang or Abdi but with the lack of representation for their community, and because they say qualified black candidates were bypassed.
District spokesman Kevin Burns said in an e-mailed response that the hiring process is multi-tiered and involves the community as well as administrators.
"The objective is to secure a pool of quality candidates through a recruiting and promotion process that identifies candidates who possess key leadership competencies," he wrote, in such areas as instruction, communication, equity and strategy.