East Ramapo held a trustee vote in February, the result of a federal civil rights case brought by the local NAACP. The suit asserted the district's standard voting method disenfranchised Black and brown families who send about 9,000 children to the public schools and favored the white Orthodox Jewish community that sends about 30,000 children to private yeshivas. A federal judge agreed, and a new "ward" voting system was installed that allowed voters to choose local representatives to the nine-member board, rather than the using standard "at large" voting method. Both districts are on the cusp of new leadership. East Ramapo has been led this year by interim Superintendent Raymond Giamartino, appointed after Deborah Wortham left in June after five years. The board on April 13 announced the appointment of Clarence Ellis, a New York City schools administrator, to the top post. Ellis begins in July.