Sacramento school district names Cancy McArn superintendent, but faces other leadership instability

Three cabinet positions are filled with interim staff, while at least two top officials are preparing to retire.

Published on April 30, 2026

Cancy McArn during the Sacramento City Unified School District meeting on Feb. 12, 2026. Photo by Denis Akbari.

Superintendent Cancy McArn shown during the Sacramento City Unified School District meeting on Feb. 12, 2026.

Denis Akbari

The Abridged version:

  • The Sacramento City Unified School District named a permanent superintendent, moving interim Superintendent Cancy McArn into the position officially Thursday.
  • McArn has been with the district for almost thirty years, making her a natural choice, according to the school board president.
  • Top ranks at the school district are littered with interim officials and directors on the verge of retirement. The instability in leadership coincides with a multimillion-dollar budget crisis at Sacramento City Unified.

Sacramento City Unified interim Superintendent Cancy McArn will stay in the role at the top of the school district, school board members announced Thursday.

McArn has been in the interim spot since February, when former Superintendent Lisa Allen abruptly resigned.

She comes into the job, officially, amid a multimillion-dollar budget crisis, looming school closures because of declining enrollment and as the district contends with widespread leadership instability.

Board members approved a salary of $365,000 for McArn, a $40,000 raise from her predecessor.

‘Outside hire simply cannot match’

McArn has been with Sacramento City Unified for almost 30 years, beginning as an elementary school teacher. Before becoming interim superintendent, she served as the district’s chief human resources officer and lead negotiator.

Board President Tara Jeane said she was a natural choice for the board.

“We believe that an outside hire simply cannot match her deep local experience, her long established relationships, or her profound commitment to the success of this organization and our students,” Jeane said during the meeting.

Now hiring

Two other cabinet positions, including the chief business officer, are filled with interim employees. The deputy superintendent and assistant superintendent of special education are both slated to retire at the end of the school year.

Sacramento City Unified has spent the better part of this school year trying to wrap its arms around a multimillion-dollar budget crisis, the price tag of which has yo-yoed week to week.

The school board implemented a hiring freeze last fall, but staff have appealed for certain high-level exceptions. The board Thursday is reviewing a job description for a new chief business officer, who would oversee the district’s budget process and guide spending habit reforms.

“It’s also hard when the ship is sinking and we have to figure out how to keep it moving forward while we don’t sink,” Jeane said in an interview last month. “All of it is happening at once.”

Another top budget officer, Cindy Tao, has been on leave since the start of the year, under allegations of financial mismanagement. An investigation recently found the bulk of claims to be unsubstantiated, The Sacramento Bee first reported. However, Tao remains on administrative leave, her attorney told Abridged.

Savannah Kuchar is a reporter covering education. She came to Sacramento to be a part of the Abridged team and contribute to a crucial local news source.

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