Dana Eaton (left), superintendent of the Brentwood Union School District, and Jag Lathan, school board president for Antioch Unified, are running to be the superintendent of the county Office of Education. Courtesy of the candidates

As Contra Costa County school districts grapple with budget cuts, staffing shortages and declining student performance, voters will choose a new county schools superintendent in the June 2 primary election.

County Office of Education Superintendent Lynn Mackey is retiring after eight years in office. Two candidates are vying for the seat: Dana Eaton, the superintendent of Brentwood Union School District, and Jag Lathan, school board president at Antioch Unified. Whoever wins the majority of the votes cast will win.

The superintendent is essentially the CEO for the Contra Costa Office of Education, which oversees 18 districts serving 160,000 students and manages county education programs, including services for at-risk and youths in the justice system.

Lathan brings more than 25 years of experience. The Oakland native started her career as a special education teacher in Southern California, working her way up from principal to chief academic officer at the Alameda County Office of Education. She also started an education consultancy and leadership development firm, New Generation Equity, that helps train educators and leaders across the country with a goal of making schools more fair, effective, and supportive. Before being elected to the Antioch Unified School Board in 2022, Lathan was an instructor at UC Davis and a fellow at School Board Partners. 

June 2 primary election

Here’s where to find a list of ballot drop-off boxes.

Polls will be open until 8 p.m. tonight. Here’s a list of polling places.

For more info.: Visit Richmondside’s voter guide or the Contra Costa County elections page.

She says she has experience making structural changes and was the founding executive director of San Diego County Office of Education’s Equity Department in 2018. If elected, she would be the first Black county superintendent in Contra Costa County. She is endorsed by the Alameda County Superintendent of Schools, Alysee Castro, a number of school board trustees and superintendents, including three of her colleagues in Antioch, the California Democratic Party and the state superintendent of public instruction Tony Thurmond.

Eaton has 30 years of experience as a teacher, principal and superintendent in East Bay school districts. He has served 17 years as the Brentwood Unified superintendent and before that was the superintendent of Jefferson School District in Tracy, which is in San Joaquin County. He also sits on the Fiscal Crisis and Management Assistance Team (FCMAT), a governing board that is responsible for school finance and oversight, and is the president of the state’s Superintendency Council. 

He sits on a number of boards and committees, such as the Superintendent Advisory Panel for the California Collaborative for Educational Excellence, which is the state’s support provider for districts in need of academic assistance. He has Mackey’s endorsement as well endorsements from 28 other school district superintendents, dozens of teachers and more community members, as well as the East Bay Times.  

Eaton leads in campaign fundraising, according to finance filings

Richmondside reviewed campaign finance data reported by the candidates so far.  As of May 16, Eaton had raised the most, about $65,000, including $10,000 he loaned himself, according to his forms. His largest donor was Jennifer Gibb, vice president of Business Development at Van Pelt Construction Services, which contracts with districts and school sites for facility upgrades and planning. She has donated $5,000 to his campaign, and the company also donated $2,500. Mackey also contributed $2,600 to his campaign. 

Lathan has raised more than $32,000 and loaned her campaign $9,500. Unlike Eaton, she received several smaller donations between $100 and $200. The largest campaign contribution she received was from Alysee Castro, the superintendent of schools for Alameda County, who donated $1,000.  

Unlike past races for the county school board, charter schools did not appear to offer financial support. Neither candidate reported receiving charter school contributions.

In a profile of the two county superintendent of schools candidates published by Richmondside in April, education reporter Jana Kadah asked them the above questions to help readers get to know them better. Credit: Jana Kadah/Richmondside

What I cover: I write about Richmond schools and youth issues, Contra Costa College, the county Board of Education and other general topics.

My background: I made my way to the East Bay after covering city hall at San Jose Spotlight where I earned several first-place awards for my local government, business/economy and public service reporting from the California News Publishers Association. Before that, I was a reporter for Bay City News, where I wrote about issues ranging from homelessness to the environment and education.

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