



By Kristin Clouser, Monica Hutt, Rebecca Kelley, Julie Moore and Kendal Smith
As members of Governor Scott’s cabinet and senior staff, we were part of the team who interviewed candidates for our next secretary of the Agency of Education. All five of us are also moms of kids currently in, or graduated from, Vermont’s public school system.
Each of us had the chance to interview the three finalists selected by the State Board of Education and provide input to the Governor as he made his decision. And we are looking forward to the opportunity to work with incoming Secretary Zoie Saunders. More than that, we are optimistic and excited to see how she can strengthen education in Vermont, benefiting our own children and communities.
At a time when student test scores are declining and our children are still grappling with carry-on impacts of COVID-related learning loss, her experience developing innovative approaches for student achievement, increasing equity in education, creating successful partnerships, and demonstrably improving outcomes is exactly what we want for our own kids. Notably, these achievements extend to both her time working with traditional public schools and public charter schools, despite the latter currently being used to stoke fear and suspicion here in Vermont.
Years of declining enrollment and the affordability crisis facing Vermont schools, laid bare by the significant number of school budgets voted down on Town Meeting Day, means we have a real and present challenge which is putting learning and enrichment opportunities for our kids at risk. As Zoie noted during our interviews, “Parents want to send their kids to schools with the resources to support student success.” It’s imperative we find a way to ensure the sustainability of our education system.
Zoie’s strategic thinking coupled with experience working with K-12 schools across seven other states is an asset for us at this critical juncture for our public education system. Alongside this background, one of the things that impressed us most about Zoie is the clear value she places on listening to others and considering local factors, values, and priorities. We also see her as a doer, taking in all available information to get the most out of existing resources, and to make smart, and sometimes difficult, decisions that put students’ needs first.
Throughout her career, she’s been committed to building stronger communities, primarily for underserved populations, seeing education, health and safety as critical tools. This approach aligns well with the Governor’s community revitalization goals for Vermont. Specifically, she’s led projects to secure community support to turn around underperforming schools; expanded workforce development and training opportunities in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods; secured academic support and career counseling for 2,000 low-income students; and mobilized resources for students and families experiencing homelessness. While earning her Master of Education, where she focused on the intersection of education, human service delivery and community development, she also advised education stakeholders on ways to implement President Obama’s Promise Neighborhood initiative to address intergenerational poverty.
This is an important job, and as Zoie said to us herself, “education is so personal because it is about our kids.” So, all of us expect the incoming secretary to face tough questions. She should. But she should have the opportunity to answer questions before assumptions are made and calls to challenge her appointment are levied. She doesn’t even start in the job until April 15 and yet there has already been a significant rush to judgement – and a few misleading email campaigns – by legislators, their party leaders and their political supporters. We should be setting a better example for our kids, modeling how to keep an open mind and to hear from others before writing them off.
As Governor Scott has said, we believe the people of Vermont will see what we saw, which is a smart, authentic, thoughtful leader who is genuinely excited about helping Vermont kids – our kids, and her own – get the best possible education. We all look forward to seeing her prove just that.
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Kristin Clouser is the secretary of the Agency of Administration. She resides in Jericho.
Monica Hutt is the State’s chief prevention officer and liaison to the Agency of Human Services. She resides in Williston.
Rebecca Kelley is the Governor’s communications director and liaison to the Agency of Commerce & Community Development. She resides in East Montpelier.
Julie Moore is the secretary of the Agency of Natural Resources. She resides in Middlesex.
Kendal Smith is the Governor’s policy and legislative affairs director and liaison to the Agency of Education. She resides in Barre.
The authors were part of an Administration-wide interview team, which also included Deputy Secretary of Human Services Todd Daloz, Executive Director of the Office of Racial Equity Xusana Davis, and Chief of Staff Jason Gibbs. Collectively, this group has nine children who currently attend public schools and five who have graduated from public schools in Vermont.
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Categories: Commentary










Why all the drama, multiple articles, and excessive concern from the governor about people making assumptions about Zoie. The interview team included Xusana Davis, so this means that Zoie’s politics and agenda has to reflect the priorities of social justice, equity and liberation theology inclusive of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, which our governor shares. Zoie will have to work real hard to undo the damage caused by the state equity program and SEL programs in Vermont . There is a reason she left Florida. I believe the reason she left is because Florida’s governor swashed DEI, SEL and critical social theory (aka CRT) from public schools.
I have another thought on why these progressive interviewers are so concerned. This comes from a book written by George Soros. In this book he wrote, “Those who control the biases of the people controls the future.”
These ‘team members’ aren’t just moms. They are all some of the highest paid people in Vermont’s government, earning up to $168,000 annually. And, I suspect, they have gold-plated benefit packages too.
It’s a mutual admiration society.
We’ll see, soon enough, how Ms Saunders performs.
Editor sure is bending over backward to emphasize the public school connection of these administration team players. None of whom are professional educators. And very reassuring to hear them listing Saunders’s praiseworthy pedagogic activities “throughout her career.” All several months of it.
Her school closures in Broward County kicked off an impressive land rush on the part of local developers. The city manager of Pembroke Pines, for example, has plans to rebrand several shuttered schools as a charter academy. This seems to have played well with Phil Scott & Co.
Plus the state spent only $495 on a search for the new Secretary. Saved the state lots of money that way.
Just for comparison, however, Burlington & Winooski each spent $22-25,000 on national searches for superintendents recently.
I guess you get what you pay for.
the only team i had any respect for was my uncles pair of horses/// at least they could produce some thing///
Panic on the top floor of the Pavillion? Panic under the Golden Thunder Dome?
Lamenations 2:16 says “of the Babylonian occupiers of Jerusalem: All thine enemies have opened their mouth against thee: they hiss and gnash the teeth: they say, We have swallowed her up: certainly this is the day that we looked for; we have found, we have seen it.”
Matthew 13:40-42 As therefore the tares are gathered and burned in the fire; so shall it be in the end of this world. 41 The Son of man shall send forth his angels, and they shall gather out of his kingdom all things that offend, and them which do iniquity; 42 And shall cast them into a furnace of fire: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth.
Call me very skeptical on our school system…..here is the direction many think we should be going back to.
https://youtu.be/Jcz9Eune7BY?si=kFVNJxpS86NwWNWz
Let me try again…
https://youtu.be/Jcz9Eune7BY?si=oQykaeOHYjzmTDv1
Five moms wrote this and picked Zoie Sanders? More like five political hacks.