Catherine Masterson was selected on Tuesday as the next superintendent of the Merrimack Valley and Andover school districts. She will assume the leadership position in July 2026.
Catherine Masterson was selected on Tuesday as the next superintendent of the Merrimack Valley and Andover school districts. She will assume the leadership position in July 2026. Credit: CATHERINE MASTERSONโ€”Courtesy

Catherine Masterson, a Merrimack Valley High School graduate and longtime teacher and administrator in the district, will serve as its next superintendent.

โ€œIโ€™m incredibly proud to lead in this community. Itโ€™s a special place to me,โ€ย Masterson said in an interview Wednesday, the day after the SAU board that representsย the Merrimack Valley and Andover schools unanimously approved her appointment.

Masterson will succeedย in July 2026 current superintendent Randy Wormald, who announced hisย retirement earlier this month. She will maintain her position as assistant superintendent of the school administrative unit, which sheโ€™s held since 2023, through next school year.

Masterson grew up in Webster and has spent nearly her entire career working in Merrimack Valley schools,ย first as a middle school social studies teacher, then as an administrator for the past 14 years. She previously served as principal of Loudon Elementary and as the assistant principal of the middle school,ย prior to becoming assistant superintendent.

โ€œCatherine has essentially completed the longest job interview in history; serving as a student, substitute teacher, paraprofessional, teacher, assistant principal, principal, and assistant superintendent,โ€ Wormald wrote in a statement.ย โ€œIn my many years in education, she stands out as one of the very best educators Iโ€™ve had the privilege to work with.โ€

After a turbulent year that included an inadvertentย $2 million over-expenditure and votersโ€™ failure to approve the school boardโ€™s proposed budget for next year, Marrimack Valleyย in the midst of a major leadership transition. In addition to the upcomingย superintendent and assistant superintendent changes, the high schoolโ€™s principal, Sam York, will become business administrator, and the SAUโ€™s facilitiesย director, Fred Reagan, is set to retire at the end of next school year.

Amid those changes, school officials lauded Masterson as a stabilizing force capable of shepherding the SAU into its next phase.

The board moved hastily โ€“ย declining to conduct an external search โ€“ย after Wormald announced on May 7ย that he would retire at the end of next year.

While the lack of an open application process led to some pushback, Merrimack Valley school board member Tom Laliberte said Masterson received widespread support from community members over the last two weeks. Laliberte said that while he generally supports open search processes, he felt that appointing Masterson now, given the other turnover in the district, made sense.

โ€œShe has got all the skills and talents to be a successful leader in the Merrimack Valley School District forย quite a long time and her stability in her past and what I perceiveย to be the future, I think willย be good for the district,โ€ said Laliberte, who has had a professional relationship with Masterson for some two decades.

Board chair Melissa Muzzy did not respond to a request for comment. Vice-chair Katie Caron said the board would share additional information โ€œin the coming daysโ€ on why itย selected Masterson.

In an interview, Masterson reflected both on how far Merrimack Valley has come since her time as a studentย and on the goals she has going forward.

โ€œWhen I was a student here,ย I think at timesย our reputation was not as positive, especially by comparison to other school districts around us,โ€ she said.ย โ€œI canย remember that as a student and feeling as though other neighboring districts or communities sort of looked down on us.

โ€œThat stigma doesn’t exist anymore,โ€ she said.ย โ€œWeโ€™re on equal footing with all of the communities around us.โ€

She specifically cited theย fact that staff choose to stay in the district even though surrounding districts offer higher salaries.

Mastersonโ€™s focus as superintendent will revolve around student success, financial wellbeing, and community support and engagement, she said.

She acknowledged Merrimack Valleyย hasย experienced a year of challenges and said she will endeavor to strengthen relationships with those in the community who have come to distrust the district.

โ€œThe concern around trust is big,โ€ she said. โ€œWeโ€™ve heard that loud and clear and we look forward to the opportunity to show through our actions that we can be trusted. I think transparency and communication are critical in order for that to happen.โ€

But she said she also believes a โ€œtremendous amount of support within Andover and within Merrimack Valleyโ€ already exists.ย 

โ€œThatโ€™s not to say that there arenโ€™t people who have opposing viewpoints and express them, but Iโ€™m really optimistic about my ability to build positive, collaborative relationships with everyone,โ€ she said.

The leadership turnover in Merrimack Valley and Andover is part of a broader trend across the region. Concord, Hopkinton,ย Pembroke, Deerfield, and Pittsfield all have superintendents who have resigned or retired this year or will next year. The position, alwaysย challenging, has become increasingly politicized.

Masterson said that while she recognizes the obstacles she may soon face, they donโ€™t outweigh her desire to lead the community she has belonged to since childhood.

โ€œMy focus is the opportunity to continue to lead us forward on that path, and while I know thereโ€™s challenges, they arenโ€™t enough to dissuade me from wanting to tackle that goal of mine,โ€ she said.ย โ€œFor me, itโ€™s really about the community that I get to continueย to be a part of.โ€

ย 

Jeremy Margolis can be contacted at jmargolis@cmonitor.com.

Jeremy Margolis is the Monitor's education reporter. He also covers the towns of Boscawen, Salisbury, and Webster, and the courts. You can contact him at jmargolis@cmonitor.com or at 603-369-3321.