Austin Beutner


Austin Michael Beutner is an American businessman, civic leader, philanthropist, and current Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent since May 1, 2018.
He co-founded Evercore Partners and is the former publisher and CEO of the Los Angeles Times and the San Diego Union-Tribune. He was the first deputy mayor of Los Angeles in 2011 and ran for Mayor of Los Angeles in 2012, but dropped out of the race nearly a year before the election.

Early life

Beutner was born in New York and raised in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the son of immigrants from Germany who came to America in the 1920s for economic opportunity. His mother was a retired schoolteacher and his father was a retired manufacturing engineer. His mother was Jewish and his father was Roman Catholic although he did not find out that his father's family was Christian until he was an adult. He is married to Virginia Woltz Beutner; they have 4 children.
Beutner attended Dartmouth College, where he majored in economics.

Career

After graduating in 1982 he went to work at Smith Barney as a financial analyst. At the age of 29, he became partner at The Blackstone Group. In the 1990s he co-founded the investment banking group Evercore Partners, which went public in 2006.
After the fall of the Soviet Union, Beutner went to work for the U.S. State Department. The Clinton administration tapped him to lead a team into Russia and help transition them from communism to a free-market economy, including the decommission of weapons and other material.
In 1996 Beutner co-founded Evercore Partners, an American independent investment banking advisory firm, with former Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Roger Altman. When Evercore went public in 2006, the IPO reportedly made Beutner more than $100 million.

Government

In January 2010, Beutner was appointed by Antonio Villaraigosa to be the first deputy mayor of Los Angeles, with oversight of twelve city agencies, including the Port of Los Angeles, Department of Water and Power and the Housing Authority, with over 17,000 employees. As deputy mayor he focused on making the city more business-friendly and streamlining permitting processes. In 2013, with Villaraigosa's term ending, Beutner launched a campaign to run for Mayor of Los Angeles, but dropped from the race after a year having captured only 2% of likely voters. The election was a year away when Beutner suspended his efforts.
In 2013, Beutner and former U.S. Secretary of Commerce Mickey Kantor co-chaired the 2020 Commission to study and report on the financial matters in Los Angeles. One of the report's recommendations was to reform the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. In 2016 Beutner and Kantor penned an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times aimed at bringing about reform and changes to the DWP, noting that "The city deserves a public utility that is operated in the long-term best interests of its customers, employees and our environment."
Beutner has lectured on his experiences in business, government, and journalism at the University of Southern California Bedrosian Center on Governance, the UCLA Anderson School of Management as well as the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Beutner is a senior lecturer at the Harvard Business School where he teaches Relational Coordination Leadership and Corporate Accountability In 2016, Beutner gave the commencement address to the 2016 graduating class of the USC Sol Price School of Public Policy.
On May 1, 2018, Beutner was selected as the Superintendent of LAUSD by the Los Angeles Board of Education. LAUSD is the second largest school district in the U.S. and spans over 720 square miles with over 640,000 students, 900 schools, 187 public charter schools, 60,000 employees, and a $7.5 billion budget.
In 2020, as the result of COVID-19, Beutner initiated a plan to feed the more than 600,000 students a day. 10 million meals have been served since campuses closed to help slow the spread of coronavirus. Beutner was quoted “We are helping more people than any other food bank in the country,” Beutner said. “This is not a school meal program. This is a community relief effort, and we have to be mindful as the need continues to grow.” "This is a community in crisis," said Los Angeles schools Superintendent Austin Beutner. "Anyone who arrives looking for food — we're assuming needs the food — and we're going to provide it."
Beutner and Verizon partnered to provide Internet connectivity for all students who have no Internet connectivity at home. A critical component in the district’s plan for students to continue learning as campuses remain closed in response to COVID-19. “The digital divide is very real, as many as 100,000 of our students lack access to the internet at home,” Superintendent Austin Beutner said. “We must find a way for all students to continue to learn while schools are closed and this partnership with Verizon will help to do that.”
Beutner developed the Snapchat Book Club and partnered with Snap Chat along with celebrities from the entertainment, sports, music, social media and business to provide unique online summer offerings. The aim of the effort, Superintendent Austin Beutner said, is to get students hooked on learning by using innovative ways of approaching material to introduce core subjects, such as reading and science. “We have to meet them where they are, or we’ll never get better,” he said. “And there’s never been a time when it’s more important to meet them where they are.”

Philanthropy

In 1994 Austin Beutner founded The Beutner Family Foundation with a focus on philanthropy and education for economically disadvantaged people.
In 2012 Beutner founded Vision To Learn, a; non-profit that provides children with free eye exams and free glasses by bringing its mobile eye clinics to schools and to other neighborhood youth and community organizations. Since 2012 Vision To Learn has helped more than 100,000 school kids with free eye exams and glasses.
Beutner serves on the board of trustees and former chairman of the board of the California Institute of the Arts, chairman of the board of directors of The Broad Stage, chairman of the Governor's Council on Physical Fitness & Sports and co-chairman of the CalArts Community Arts Partnership. He is also chairman and founder of the Mammoth Mountain Community Foundation. Additionally, he serves on the boards of directors of Autism Care & Treatment Today! and Inner City Education Foundation for Public Schools. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
In March 2016, Beutner signed an amicus brief in support of The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals expansion and the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans which would provide relief for millions of immigrant families and their communities. In July 2017, Buetner created a task force for the Los Angeles Unified School District to look for solutions for declining attendance and other problems. Beutner co-chairs the task force with SEIU President Lophanza Butler. "We are here to support Michelle King, and offer suggestions," Beutner said in an interview with LA School Report. King stated that she is "excited and energized by the opportunity to collaborate with these community partners in the bold and transformative work of educating our future leaders."
On April 25, 2018, Beutner along with music mogul, producer and rapper Percy "Master P" Miller and his non-profit Team Hope NOLA, led a four-state tour to provide free eye exams and glasses to children in Atlanta; Charlotte, N.C.; Jackson, Miss.; and New Orleans. Beutner and Miller visited four schools on the trip, all of which demonstrate the need. 46% of kids at a middle school in Atlanta needed glasses and did not have them, 16% at an elementary school in Charlotte, 16% at an elementary school in New Orleans, and 21% at an elementary school in Jackson.

Media

In March 2013, a group led by Beutner and Eli Broad announced their intent to purchase the Los Angeles Times from its parent Tribune Publishing. They were unsuccessful.
In 2014, Beutner took over as publisher and CEO of the Los Angeles Times when Eddy Hartenstein left to become the non-executive chairman of the board of Tribune Publishing. When Tribune Publishing acquired the San Diego Union-Tribune in 2015, Beutner was named its CEO and publisher, as well as CEO of the newly formed California News Group.
He was fired as publisher and chief executive officer of the Los Angeles Times on September 8, 2015. He wrote on Facebook that the dismissal was not voluntary: "I am not departing by choice, nor is this some 'mutual agreement' on my part and Tribune Publishing".
In 2015, more than 50 community leaders protested Beutner's firing, including philanthropists, business leaders and two former Los Angeles mayors. Media analyst Ken Doctor called Beutner's departure "a small tragedy for American journalism." Tom Johnson, former publisher of the LA Times, wrote "To see Beutner's leadership abruptly ended by Tribune is both tragic and very sad. Reversing the dynamic momentum Beutner had ignited is reprehensible."
During Beutner's 13 months as publisher, the Times won two Pulitzer Prizes — for cultural criticism and for feature writing — along with other national journalism awards for coverage of the California drought, the plight of Mexican farm workers and other stories. The California Newspaper Publishers Association awarded the Times its 2015 general excellence award.
In 2016, Beutner was invited to speak about the role of the media in homeland security and his experiences in the media and public service at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School Center for Homeland Defense and Security. His keynote address was published in Watermark, the quarterly magazine of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School – Center for Homeland Defense and Security.
In September 2017, Beutner was the keynote speaker of the Los Angeles Fire Department Chief Officers Association and United Firefighters of Los Angeles City first Leadership Symposium.
In 2018, the Los Angeles Downtown News journal recognized Beutner "as a visionary with extensive political and business connections."

Board affiliations

Current boards:
Past board affiliations: