Broward County School Board Member Adam Cervera will hold a press conference on Tuesday, January 13, to highlight what he describes as significant financial and oversight failures within Broward County Public Schools, as the district grapples with a near $100 million budget deficit.
The press conference comes amid a period of financial strain for the nation’s sixth-largest school district, which has implemented a hiring freeze and is weighing potential school closures to close budget gaps.
According to Cervera, the district has been entangled in a series of recent controversies that point to a broader pattern of mismanagement. Among them is a $2.6 million off-site lease for district staff, despite the existence of dozens of underutilized school campuses across Broward County. He also cited a troubled, multimillion-dollar procurement process that has raised concerns about oversight of approximately $1.2 billion in projects under the district’s SMART Bond program.
In addition, Cervera has criticized the misallocation of voter-approved teacher referendum funds, alleging that hundreds of thousands of dollars intended for classroom educators were instead diverted to high-ranking administrators.
“These problems are not isolated; they reflect a pattern of long-standing financial mismanagement while our District is cutting programs, freezing hiring, and considering closing schools,” Cervera said in a statement ahead of the event. “Our students, parents, and teachers deserve better than this. Taxpayers deserve better than this. Broward families expect transparency and accountability, not waste.”
Cervera is expected to outline his concerns in detail during Tuesday’s press conference and call for stronger financial controls and oversight within the district. District officials have not yet publicly responded to his latest claims.















