I went through grammar and middle school in the 1950s and I graduated from high school in the 1960s. Back then, although I didn't like some of the principals and perhaps the superintendent, I thought then and I still believe that they had the best interests of the students as their primary motivation.
Today, I don't believe that -- not about superintendents, not about principals, and not about teachers. I think today school superintendents are a lot like police chiefs -- they are, first and foremost, political animals and their highest priority is political "optics." So, rather than acknowledge that the tranny bathroom rule had led directly to a sexual assault -- the "solution" was to just shift the assailant to a different school and try to sweep the whole thing under the carpet.
Where have we seen that before? Oh, yes -- in Broward County, Florida, where the "solution" to minorities committing crimes in the schools was to downgrade the offenses so the statistics would show a reduction in crimes committed by minorities. Which is how they got Nicholas Cruz, and Parkland.