73 °F Ocean City, US
May 10, 2026

Schools chief candidates narrowed

Ocean City Board of Education should make choice known in September

OCEAN CITY — The Ocean City Board of Education is “moving into the final stages of the superintendent search.”

School Board President Chris Halliday provided that update at the Aug. 24 meeting.

“We’ve had the opportunity to interview a strong pool of experienced candidates to lead our district and are narrowing it to the final candidate,” he said.

“As we move into this final stage, we will continue to maintain confidentiality so we don’t cause any unnecessary hardships for any candidates.”

Halliday said they had 60 candidates in the overall pool, then narrowed it down and conducted the first round of interviews. There were six days of interviews total between the first and second rounds.

“We’re using rubrics to evaluate each candidate in their personal interviews,” he said after the meeting. “The whole board took part so each board member had rubrics for each candidate. We went through evaluation questions so a list of questions for each interview and each person was able to score and evaluate each candidate. We tallied them up, we had a discussion, and then we moved forward to the next round. 

“We’re continuing to move forward.”

Halliday declined to disclose how many candidates are left at this point.

“We’re getting close, we’re getting close,” he said. “The goal is by the September board meeting that there will be news.”

The next meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 21.

Dr. Scott McCartney is the interim superintendent of schools. He began his tenure this summer and is contracted through the end of December. 

If the new superintendent comes on board in January 2024, the Ocean City School District will have had five different superintendents since 2021, including Dr. Kathleen Taylor, who retired that summer after 15 years with the district. 

Ocean City had interim superintendent Dr. Thomas Baruffi for the 2021-22 school year, Dr. Matthew Friedman, who was hired in a three-year contract but stayed only for the 2022-23 school year before leaving for another job, and McCartney for the first half of the 2023-24 school year.

By DAVID NAHAN/Sentinel staff

Related articles

3-cent tax rate hike proposed in Linwood budget

By CRAIG D. SCHENCK Sentinel staff LINWOOD — “This is the first budget year that the entire budget is being driven by something the state did,” Mayor Darren Matik said March 22 after City Council introduced its 2023 budget. “We started this budget process with the intention of keeping taxes flat. Unfortunately we were not […]

Blue Dog Group to open Inky’s Cantina + Taqueria on Roosevelt Blvd.

MARMORA — At some point in May, the now-empty Captain Obadiah’s building across from Yesterday’s on Roosevelt Boulevard is going to get “a whole lot more festive” with tacos and tequila. This spring will bring Inky’s Cantina + Taqueria to one of the busiest roads that links Upper Township and Ocean City. The Blue Dog […]