KIRO-TV is a television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, affiliated with CBS and Telemundo.
As the newest superintendent to take the reins in Seattle, Ben Shuldiner is outlining his priorities and how he’ll measure success in the first year.“How can you send your child to a school district if you don’t feel your child’s going to be safe?” Shuldiner asked.
KIRO 7 reporter Linzi Sheldon asked him what he plans to do to evaluate how to improve safety and security at SPS. “There’s all sorts of — what’s considered gold standard safety and security things that a school district can do,” he said. “And what I see in Seattle is that you are approaching that but not there.” In September of 2025, the SPS board voted against bringing a school engagement officer into Garfield High.“You’re talking about fencing,” he said. “You’re talking about cameras. You’re talking about security vestibules. You’re talking about metal detectors in the high schools.”“How do you respond to those concerns about metal detectors?” Sheldon asked. “What we do in Lansing is not necessarily what we’re going to do in Seattle,” Shuldiner said. “But what we did in Lansing is we talked to the families. We said, ‘What do you want?’ We talked to the kids.” Shuldiner pointed out that people pass through metal detectors at concerts and sporting events all the time. He said these could be run by school staff that students know and have relationships with. “My job is to come to Seattle and say, ‘Hey, look, here are a lot of options,’” he said. “‘We need to do something. Where are we as a community?’” Shuldiner is coming to Seattle from the Lansing School District in Michigan. SPS is about five times the size when it comes to the student population.“The cool thing and the great thing about school districts is that kids are kids, teachers are teachers, schools are schools,” he said. “And when you have the right systems and structures in place, you can really move the needle at any size.” Shuldiner does have experience in large cities: he sat on the New York City school board and served as a principal in that system, as well. He described serving as head of a leadership program at Hunter College that helped train principals and superintendents.His job also involves balancing the books. That means going through the budget line by line, job by job, looking for impact and overlap. “What I’ve seen, and again I’m not the superintendent yet, but I’ve been in a lot of meetings and I’ve looked at a lot of the budget, is– what I see is a lot of inefficiencies,” he said.“It’s not rocket science,” he said. He created what he calls graduation specialists who had relationships with every child who needed to graduate, their families, and their teachers. “Once a month, we bring all of our graduation specialists together and they meet with me and a district graduation specialist,” he said. “Literally, we will put on the screen names of children that are behind in credits and we’ll say, ‘What are you doing for that child?’” It’s something he told KIRO 7 he would consider in Seattle as well. He said the approach is similar in improving attendance rates. “What’s happening at the individual school at the individual level, maybe it’s a school bus issue,” he said.In his first three months, students can expect to see him walking their halls.In addition to the school board’s requirements, he said he’ll grade himself on attendance rates, graduation rates, and safety and security.Shuldiner said he’ll also be taking a closer look at staff and ensuring everyone is in the right place.As the newest superintendent of Seattle Public Schools, Ben Shuldiner is outlining his priorities and how he’ll measure success in the first year.Deposed Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro is set to make his first appearance Monday in an American courtroom on the narco-terrorism charges.The Mt. Bachelor Ski Resort received a significant amount of snow on Sunday, with more on the way on Monday.Prepare for I-90 lane closures starting Jan. 6 due to Bullfrog Road overpass work. Plan your route to avoid delays.WSDOT warns of delays on Chumstick Highway as US 2 repairs continue WSDOT needs to repair several sections of failing pavement along the Chumstick Highway, adding more travel time between Leavenworth and Stevens Pass.Chrystal Ortega's tireless dedication recently earned her the WSECU Community Champions Award and a $1,000 grant to further the mission.When Shawn Tibbitts opened Tibbitts FernHill, he was just trying to survive. The small Tacoma restaurant has since earned culinary awards and praise.Wilcox Family Farms is continuing its cherished holiday tradition of giving back by donating nearly one million eggs to food banks across the South Sound region this season.Matthew Ballantyne has transformed that early awareness into action, embodying the organization's mission:"No Kid Sleeps On The Floor In Our Town."Discover Kitsap County’s creative soul: Where Nordic charm meets gothic gardens and ancient traditions thrive Kitsap County is full of wonderfully weird, authentically artsy, and unexpectedly magical corners that make visitors become locals and locals never want to leave.
Sports Weather Traffic Talk And Community. Home Mynorthwest.Com
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Seahawks clinch NFC's No. 1 seed and the NFC West. Buccaneers stay alive in race for the NFC SouthThe road to the Super Bowl in the NFC goes through Seattle
Read more »
Winners and Losers from the Seahawks’ NFC West title triumph over 49ersThe road to the Super Bowl in the NFC goes through Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington.
Read more »
KIRO host warns of ACA subsidy expiry's dire consequencesListen to The Jake Skorheim and Spike O'Neill Show weekdays Noon - 3pm on KIRO Newsradio.
Read more »
Supporters of recent protests in Iran rally at a Bellevue parkTom Brock is a weekend content editor for KIRO Newsradio 97.3 FM and MyNorthwest.com.
Read more »
WSDOT warns of delays on Chumstick Highway as US 2 repairs continueNate Connors is a member of the KIRO Newsradio Traffic team.
Read more »
Harger: Seattle is ending arrests for public drug use as Katie Wilson takes overAward-winning broadcast journalist with 30+ years of experience covering stories that impact Washington — from major investigations to regional news.
Read more »
