Back to school interim appointments

MILLBROOK — When students go back to school in Millbrook they will find new people in charge. Last week both the public Millbrook Central School District and the private Dutchess Day School announced the appointments of new interim leaders.

At the Millbrook public school board meeting Monday, Aug. 16, Superintendent Lloyd Jaeger recommended hiring Leslie Ford as interim principal of Millbrook High School while the district searches for a full-time employee to replace Christine Ackerman. Recently Ackerman assumed a new position in the district as assistant superintendent for curriculum instruction and pupil personnel services. She has also been appointed as chairperson for the Committee on Special Education, the Committee on Preschool Special Education and Title IX compliance officer for the 2010-11 school year.

Ford assumed her new duties at Millbrook High School Tuesday, Aug. 17, the day after the board meeting. She will remain as principal until the search is completed and the selected candidate is available for work.

Jaeger said that a search committee of staff, parents and administrators would be assembled to screen applicants. So far about 30 administrators have expressed interest in the job, and Jaeger expects that the new full-time principal will start working some time between November and February.

Until then Millbrook High School will be led by Ford, who most recently was superintendent of schools at the Onteora Central School District. Her daily salary of $450 is about average for a school administrator, according to Jaeger, and there will be no impact on the district’s budget.

The appointment of Nancy Hathaway on Monday, Aug. 16, as acting head of the Dutchess Day School (DDS) for 2010-11, replacing John Cissel, was more of a surprise. DDS is a private, co-ed facility for preschool age children through eighth grade, and is located on Route 343 in Millbrook. Hathaway has been associated with the school since 1989, when she moved to Dutchess County with her family. She has been involved with the school as a parent, volunteer, board member and currently as a teacher of astronomy and history.

Hathaway commented that “there is never a good time to change the head of a school,� but said the board decided to make the switch before school started. While acknowledging that “change is stressful,� Hathaway emphasized that there will be no change in the school’s direction, programs or priorities.

A search committee headed by Sue Lamprecht and John Allen has already been created, and the group expects to hire an executive recruiter to assist them in the search for a new, full-time head to expedite the hunt.

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