UPDATE:
On Feb. 18, the Clark County (Nevada) School District’s board of directors narrowed its superintendent search to four candidates, including Anzalone.
Las Vegas news station KSNV reported this week that teachers and community members present at the district’s special meeting Tuesday night showed “overwhelming support” for Anzalone, who served as the district’s assistant superintendent before coming to Camas.
Anzalone is expected to join the other three finalists for a series of public interviews and community forums Feb. 24-25 in Las Vegas, .
According to Anzalone, the Clark County school board will move its top two candidates through to a second, more informal, round of interviews March 10-11, and is expected to announce its new superintendent on March 13.
Three years after concluding its search for a new superintendent, the Camas School Board may need to start the process all over again.
Camas School District Superintendent John Anzalone told school district staff Thursday morning that he has been selected as one of six finalists for a superintendent job in Las Vegas.
Anzalone, who has led the Camas School District since July 2022, said a search firm working with the Clark County School District in Nevada approached him about the position about eight months ago.
“I was thankful I was being thought of and considered but had no interest in applying,” Anzalone said.
Then, in May, Anzalone’s mother died. She had moved from Las Vegas to Camas in 2022 to help Anzalone and his wife, Sarah, care for their young children.
“My mom was the only family I had up here,” Anzalone said of his move from Nevada to Washington for the Camas superintendent job. “She was so helpful, especially after we had left our families. And when she passed, that was a trigger for us, that this was what it’s like to have jobs and have kids and not have grandma around.”
Anzalone also learned his eldest son from his first marriage, a high school senior in Las Vegas, has decided to stay in Nevada for college.
“My son and I are very close … and I’ve really started missing him more than ever,” Anzalone said. “Being 1,000 miles away has been hard.”
The idea of moving back to the Las Vegas area, where Anzalone had worked for the Clark County School District for 22 years before taking the Camas superintendent position, appealed to Anzalone and his wife, who also has family in Nevada and Arizona.
“The bottom line is that this is about family,” Anzalone said. “I’ve grown to truly love it here, and the people I work with — I can’t say enough good things about them. If I do leave, they are who I will miss the most.”
Las Vegas media reported on the six superintendent finalists Monday, but Anzalone told the Camas School Board the news a week ago.
Rocky tenure
Anzalone’s time in Camas has been punctuated by budget cuts in 2023 and again in 2025 as the district attempts to stem a $13 million to $16 million revenue shortfall ahead of the 2025-26 school year.
Anzalone also led the district through a teachers’ strike during the first two weeks of the 2023-24 school year. Last week, Camas School District leaders delivered reduction in force notifications to several district administrators and plan to notify impacted teachers and classified staff later this spring.
Anzalone said Thursday that he believes the school district will be in good shape with or without him at its helm.
“This had nothing to do with the challenges we’re facing. And I feel like the district is on course for stability,” he said of his decision to apply for the Nevada position.
Teachers, board react
Camas teacher Michael Sanchez, the vice president of the Camas Education Association, the union representing around 460 Camas School District educators, said this week that union leaders have been fielding calls and emails from Camas teachers worried about what the potential loss of the district’s superintendent might mean for them and their students.
“Our members are experiencing a lot of emotions. There is a lot of fear, uncertainty and anger,” Sanchez said. “Members were already a little bit uneasy about being in contract negotiations.”
The teachers’ union and school district began bargaining Jan. 22; union leaders have met twice with the district’s negotiators since then.
Camas School Board President Tracey Malone said Thursday in a statement that board members still believe Anzalone is “a great asset” to the district.
“Camas is a small, close-knit community that values and understands the importance of family and hometown connections,” Malone said. “We would never begrudge someone the opportunity to be closer to their families or give back to a community that has served them so well in the past.
“We are grateful for his continued leadership and, no matter the outcome of this opportunity, he and his family will always be welcomed and appreciated here in Camas.”
Anzalone said the Las Vegas-based school board will consider the list of finalists Tuesday, with a superintendent announcement March 13.