May 22, 2026
District Staffing Complexity Report: National Survey of School Leaders
District staffing complexity is no longer just about hiring. Demand for specialized staff has surged, but many districts say the challenge goes beyond filling roles—it includes coordinating multiple vendors, managing compliance and credentialing requirements, and keeping up with a growing amount of administrative work each week.
BlazerWorks commissioned a national survey of district leaders to better understand how staffing complexity is taking shape across districts today. From vendor sprawl and credentialing bottlenecks to onboarding issues and ongoing compliance work, the findings suggest that district staffing has become as much an operational challenge as a workforce one, revealing clear differences in how that burden shows up across district roles, sizes, and settings.
Key Findings: What the Survey Shows About Staffing Complexity
At a high level, the survey points to a staffing landscape shaped by more than vacancies alone. Specialist shortages remain central, but the survey suggests the bigger issue is the amount of time and coordination required to keep staffing systems running.
- Staffing strain is widespread: 90.4% of respondents said demand for specialized school staff has increased over the last three years, including 32.4% who said it has increased significantly.
- Hiring difficulty is spread across multiple specialist roles: Special education teachers (16.4%), school psychologists (15.6%), speech-language pathologist assistants (15.2%), and school nurses (14.2%) all rank near the top.
- Vendor sprawl is common: 80.2% work with three or more external staffing vendors, and 26.4% already juggle five or more.
- The administrative burden is substantial: Districts report spending an average of 15.8 hours per week on staffing-related admin, and 71.8% spend 11+ hours weekly.
- That strain appears to rise as districts get larger: Of districts with 25,000–49,999 students, 40.5% say they spend 21+ hours each week on staffing-related admin, nearly double the national rate of 22.4%.
- Staffing complexity involves multiple key challenges: Hiring qualified specialists ranks as the top challenge overall, but communication and coordination across departments and vendors, paperwork, compliance, and last-minute coverage all follow closely behind.
Together, those findings suggest districts are dealing with staffing complexity as an ongoing operational balancing act, not just a staffing shortage.
Top Operational Challenges Reported by District Leaders
| Challenge | Share of respondents |
| Hiring qualified specialists for open roles | 28.6% |
| Communication and coordination across departments and vendors | 26.0% |
| Administrative workload and paperwork | 25.4% |
| Filling last-minute vacancies or coverage gaps | 25.2% |
| Coordinating schedules and caseloads across schools | 24.6% |
| Budget constraints for staffing or contracted services | 24.4% |
| Compliance documentation and reporting requirements | 24.0% |
| Credentialing and license verification | 21.8% |
| Onboarding new staff efficiently | 21.8% |
| Managing multiple staffing vendors | 20.8% |
| Nothing in particular | 0.0% |
Most Difficult Roles to Staff Reported by District Leaders
| Role | Share of respondents |
| Special education teachers | 16.4% |
| School psychologists | 15.6% |
| Speech-language pathologist assistants | 15.2% |
| School nurses | 14.2% |
| Teachers of the visually impaired | 13.8% |
| School counselors | 13.6% |
| School audiologists | 13.6% |
| School therapists | 13.4% |
| Speech-language pathologists | 13.2% |
| Sign language interpreters | 13.2% |
| General education teachers | 13.0% |
| Behavioral specialists (BCBA, RBT, ABA) | 12.6% |
| Occupational therapist assistants | 12.2% |
| Deaf & hard of hearing specialists | 12.2% |
| Social workers | 12.2% |
| Physical therapist assistants | 12.0% |
| Paraprofessionals | 11.4% |
| Physical therapists | 11.2% |
| Occupational therapists | 10.6% |
| None in particular | 0.2% |
How Staffing Complexity Changes by Leadership Role
The survey suggests that staffing complexity is felt differently depending on where leaders sit in the district. Districtwide leadership roles tend to carry the heaviest coordination burden, while student-facing support leaders are more likely to feel the impact through specialist shortages and service gaps:
| Role | Demand increased significantly | Avg. vendors | 21+ admin hours | Most cited challenge |
| Assistant Superintendent | 25.8% | 4.8 | 41.9% | Managing multiple staffing vendors (32.3%) |
| Director of Special Education | 50.0% | 3.7 | 20.6% | Budget constraints for staffing or contracted services (38.2%) |
| Director of HR / Talent | 46.9% | 3.6 | 17.3% | Compliance documentation and reporting requirements (34.7%) |
| Chief Operating Officer (COO) | 22.7% | 3.4 | 16.7% | Coordinating schedules and caseloads across schools (40.9%) |
| CFO / Finance Director | 33.3% | 4.1 | 22.2% | Budget constraints for staffing or contracted services (27.8%) |
| Director of Student Services | 32.3% | 3.3 | 25.8% | Hiring qualified specialists for open roles (54.8%) |
| Assistant Principal | 26.7% | 3.8 | 26.7% | Hiring qualified specialists for open roles (46.7%) |
Where Complexity Appears to Rise Most: District Enrollment
One of the clearest patterns in the survey is that staffing complexity tends to grow with district size. The biggest jump appears once districts move into the 10,000-student range, where both vendor counts and administrative burden begin to rise more noticeably.
- The strongest complexity signal comes from mid-to-large districts: Districts with 25,000–49,999 students report the highest average staffing-admin load (19.3 hours/week). 91.9% use at least three vendors, and 62.2% use at least five.
- Smaller districts are not untouched: Even among districts with 1,000–4,999 students, 70.1% work with three or more vendors and 61.5% spend 11+ hours per week on staffing admin. Their most-cited challenges lean more toward scheduling/caseload coordination and role-specific hiring needs than sheer vendor and paperwork load.
- Challenge mix also shifts by size: Smaller districts more often emphasize scheduling/caseload coordination, while larger mid-sized districts increasingly point to compliance, budget strain, and specialist hiring.
| Enrollment | Demand increased significantly | Avg. vendors | 21+ admin hours | Most cited challenge |
| 1,000–4,999 | 32.5% | 3.4 | 15.4% | Coordinating schedules and caseloads across schools (34.2%) |
| 5,000–9,999 | 32.3% | 3.6 | 17.2% | Hiring qualified specialists for open roles (30.3%) |
| 10,000–24,999 | 32.5% | 4.1 | 31.7% | Budget constraints for staffing or contracted services (27.0%) |
| 25,000–49,999 | 37.8% | 4.8 | 40.5% | Hiring qualified specialists for open roles (32.4%) |
How Urban, Suburban, and Rural Districts Compare
While staffing complexity shows up across every community type, the pressure points are not exactly the same. Urban districts report the strongest demand pressure, while suburban and rural districts show slightly different operational friction points.
- Urban districts report the most intense demand pressure: 95.4% said demand for specialized staff has increased, versus 83.3% in suburban districts and 78.6% in rural districts.
- Staffing-related admin is consistent: Across every location type, roughly seven in ten (or more) say their district spends at least 11 hours per week on staffing-related admin: urban 70.1%, suburban 75.7%, rural 71.4%.
- The pain points vary by setting. Urban districts are most likely to cite hiring qualified specialists, administrative workload, and last-minute vacancies. Suburban districts more often point to coordination across departments and vendors. Rural districts split their top concerns between hiring, credentialing, and onboarding.
| Location | Demand increased significantly | Avg. vendors | 21+ admin hours | Most cited challenge |
| Urban | 38.2% | 3.9 | 22.7% | Hiring qualified specialists for open roles (30.9%) |
| Suburban | 25.0% | 3.6 | 22.9% | Communication and coordination across departments and vendors (29.2%) |
| Rural | 19.0% | 3.5 | 19.0% | Hiring qualified specialists for open roles (26.2%) |
How Staffing Pressure Differs by Region and State
The regional data suggests that staffing complexity is not isolated to one part of the country. Instead, it appears to be broad-based, with demand pressure, vendor complexity, and administrative strain showing up across every region.
| Region | Demand increased significantly | Avg. vendors | 11+ admin hours | Most cited challenge |
| Northeast | 33.8% | 4.0 | 73.2% | Hiring specialists (35.2%) |
| Midwest | 22.2% | 3.6 | 76.2% | Managing multiple vendors (27.0%) |
| South | 32.8% | 3.7 | 70.9% | Hiring specialists (30.2%) |
| West | 35.0% | 3.7 | 70.6% | Hiring specialists (27.1%) |
Selected State Examples
| State | Demand increased significantly | Avg. vendors | Avg. admin hours | Most cited challenge |
| California | 37.9% | 3.8 | 15.5 | Administrative workload and paperwork (26.2%) |
| Florida | 20.7% | 3.8 | 16.7 | Compliance documentation and reporting requirements (34.5%) |
| Illinois | 45.0% | 4.2 | 16.1 | Administrative workload and paperwork (35.0%) |
| New York | 50.0% | 4.0 | 16.3 | Hiring qualified specialists for open roles (44.4%) |
| Texas | 42.9% | 3.7 | 14.4 | Credentialing and license verification (42.9%) |
| Arizona | 12.5% | 4.0 | 14.9 | Hiring qualified specialists for open roles (43.8%) |
| Arkansas | 26.7% | 3.2 | 15.1 | Communication and coordination across departments and vendors (30.0%) |
| Colorado | 27.6% | 3.5 | 16.2 | Budget constraints for staffing or contracted services (34.5%) |
| Connecticut | 26.1% | 4.2 | 13.4 | Administrative workload and paperwork (39.1%) |
| Georgia | 31.6% | 3.9 | 16.8 | Credentialing and license verification (42.1%) |
Conclusion: Solving Staffing Complexity Takes More Than Headcount
The story this survey reveals is not just that districts need more specialized staff. It is that staffing itself has become harder to manage. District leaders are carrying a growing amount of operational complexity behind the scenes, and while that strain shows up differently by role, district size, and location, the overall picture is consistent. For district leaders, these findings reinforce that solving staffing challenges may require more than adding headcount alone.
Reducing complexity behind the scenes—from vendor coordination to compliance and credentialing—plays an important role in helping districts operate more efficiently. For districts looking to ease the operational burden behind staffing, BlazerWorks offers a more streamlined path forward.
As the only managed service provider built exclusively for education, BlazerWorks gives school systems one dedicated point of contact, broader access to vetted education talent, and the support needed to simplify compliance, improve efficiency, and keep critical roles filled. Explore our solutions to learn more and see how BlazerWorks can support your district.
Methodology
BlazerWorks commissioned Opinion Matters to conduct a national survey of U.S. district leaders on the operational and workforce pressures shaping district staffing today. This analysis is based on a survey of 500 U.S. school employees/district respondents fielded April 10–17, 2026. Percentages in multiple-response questions reflect the share selecting each item.