Skip to main content

Austin Beutner Leading Contender for LAUSD Chief

Austin Beutner speaks at the Alliance For Children's Rights 25th Anniversary Celebration at The Beverly Hilton Hotel
Austin Beutner speaks at the Alliance For Children's Rights 25th Anniversary Celebration at The Beverly Hilton Hotel | Getty Images
Support Provided By

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - Former investment banker Austin Beutner, a one-time Los Angeles Times publisher, has emerged as a leading contender to run the Los Angeles Unified School District, it was reported today.

Though he does not have a background in education, Beutner in the last year has examined some of the district's intractable problems, serving as co-chair of an outside task force with the support of then-Superintendent Michelle King, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Sources told The Times that Beutner appears to have more support on the seven-member board than other finalists, and his name could come up for a vote as early as today, when he's scheduled to be interviewed by the LAUSD for the second time.

But the school board last week received documents from the district's general counsel David Holmquist, notifying them that the charity Beutner founded, Vision to Learn, could lose its contract with the L.A. Unified School District. The nonprofit, according to the documents, has fallen far short in its commitment to provide vision screenings and glasses to thousands of low-income students this school year, The Times reported.

Beutner Monday declined to comment on the superintendent search and referred questions about the nonprofit to its administrative staff, which is in charge of day-to-day operations. Vision to Learn challenged the accuracy of the district findings, The Times reported.

Superintendent Vivian Ekchian, who has been managing the district since King left on medical leave last fall, also made it to the second round, according to insiders quoted by The Times. The other two apparent finalists are more difficult to confirm, but several sources have named Indianapolis Superintendent Lewis Ferebee and former Baltimore Superintendent Andres Alonso, who teaches at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

An investment banker, Beutner, 58, joined the public sector in 2010 as first deputy mayor under Antonio Villaraigosa, overseeing business and job development. He was part of the Villaraigosa administration for about a year, also filling in as interim director of the Department of Water and Power.

Beutner vied to become mayor in 2012 when Villaraigosa termed out, but his campaign never caught fire and he dropped out early. In 2014, he became publisher and chief executive of The Times but was fired after a year over disagreements about the newspaper's direction, according to The Times.

Support Provided By
Read More
Nurse Yvonne Yaory checks on a coronavirus patient who is connected to a ventilator. | Heidi de Marco/California Healthline

No More ICU Beds at the Main Public Hospital in the Nation’s Largest County as COVID Surges

As COVID patients have flooded into LAC+USC in recent weeks, they’ve put an immense strain on its ICU capacity and staff — especially since non-COVID patients, with gunshot wounds, drug overdoses, heart attacks and strokes, also need intensive care.
Vials of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine.

Your No-Panic Guide to the COVID-19 Vaccine: Is It Safe, and When Can I Get It?

Here's what we know about the COVID-19 vaccines and how they are being distributed in L.A. County.
Nurse Michael Lowman gets the first dose of the Pfizer BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine from nurse practitioner Christie Aiello at Providence St. Joseph Hospital in Orange, CA, on Dec. 16, 2020. | Jeff Gritchen/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty

Orange County Gets First Doses of COVID-19 Vaccine

A Providence St. Joseph Hospital nurse was the first person in Orange County today to be vaccinated for COVID-19, shortly followed by other health care workers.