On Wednesday, the St. Paul School District will be led by an interim superintendent who's been denied a license. Two government agencies, however, have indicated they are not likely to take action on the matter for at least seven weeks.
The St. Paul school board named Suzanne Kelly interim superintendent in April, a few weeks after they learned that Superintendent Meria Carstarphen would be leaving today to take a job in Texas.
But the Minnesota Board of School Administrators, which is in charge of licensing superintendents, refused to give Kelly the necessary clearance, saying she lacked proper credentials. The district appealed, and the matter is set to be decided at the board's Aug. 20 meeting.
Until then, neither the School Administrators Board nor the Minnesota Department of Education believes it can take action, they said Monday.
While the Administrators Board and the school board disagree on whether Kelly should be allowed to serve as interim schools chief, they seem to agree that Kelly shouldn't be allowed to perform some tasks.
The district has compiled a list of duties Kelly can and cannot perform because she lacks the appropriate license, said Kazoua Kong-Thao, chairman of the St. Paul school board.
"She is not licensed, so there would be a question of the legality of any legal document she signed," said Judith Lamp, executive director of the School Administrators Board.
Kelly also won't do personnel reviews of her staff, which require a licensed superintendent.