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PALM BEACH COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD vs GUYETTE DUHART, 20-001264TTS (2020)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:West Palm Beach, Florida Mar. 05, 2020 Number: 20-001264TTS Latest Update: Jun. 05, 2024

The Issue Whether just cause exists to suspend Respondent, a teacher, for ten days without pay for putting hand sanitizer in a student’s mouth.

Findings Of Fact The Parties The Board is the constitutional entity authorized to operate, control, and supervise the District. Pursuant to Article IX, section 4(b) of the Florida Constitution, and section 1001.32, Florida Statutes, the District has the authority to discipline employees pursuant to section 1012.22(1)(f), Florida Statutes. Respondent began her employment with the District in 2007. In October 2019, she was teaching at PPMS as a science teacher. Prior to the incident involved in this case, Respondent received no discipline from the Board. Respondent is an experienced teacher who has been trained on the proper method of interacting with students, exercising best professional judgment, and following policies, rules, and directives. Respondent received training concerning ethics relative to her position with the District as a teacher. Respondent has been through the orientation process for new employees of the District three times. The Incident Giving Rise to Discipline On October 14, 2019, Respondent was teaching a science class of approximately 30 sixth and seventh grade students. In this class was sixth grade student X.S., who was being verbally disruptive. Although X.S. was not cussing, Respondent told him that he needed to have his “mouth washed out with soap.” Respondent reached behind herself to grab a bottle on her desk which was either hand soap or hand sanitizer. X.S. and Respondent walked towards each other. X.S. challenged Respondent to “Do it!” Respondent raised the bottle to X.S.’s mouth and pumped in a substance from the bottle. X.S. bent over and spit on the floor. Respondent asked X.S. what he was doing, and he stated that he got hand sanitizer in his mouth. As X.S. stood up, X.S. was observed wiping his mouth and Respondent told him not to spit on the floor. X.S. left the classroom to go to the bathroom and rinse his mouth. His fellow students immediately began talking about the incident while Respondent returned to her desk. The Investigation X.S. did not immediately report the incident because he did not want to anger his foster mother. However, on the day after the incident, October 15, 2019, three students approached PPMS Principal Aronson and Officer Michaels and reported that Respondent had squirted hand sanitizer into X.S.’s mouth. Officer Michaels spoke to the students and X.S. individually and asked them to provide written statements regarding what they observed.1 Principal Aronson and Officer Michaels questioned Respondent regarding the incident. When approached by Officer Michaels, Respondent asked, “What is this about?” He responded that, “this is about squirting hand sanitizer into a student’s mouth.” Respondent said, “It wasn’t hand sanitizer. It was soap.” Respondent did not deny squirting something into X.S.’s mouth to either Principal Aronson or Officer Michaels. Principal Aronson asked Respondent to leave campus. He accompanied her to her classroom and observed a bottle of hand sanitizer on her desk. Principal Aronson also contacted Human Resources to report the incident and spoke to Human Resources Manager Jose Fred who handled overseeing the investigation from that point forward. 1 These written statements, Exhibits 11 through 16, were admitted over Respondent’s objection that they contain impermissible hearsay and are unduly prejudicial because these students refused to attend their scheduled depositions or appear for final hearing. However, their general descriptions of the incident were corroborated by the deposition of student J.C., as well as in part by Respondent. As discussed in Florida Administrative Code Rule 28-106.213(3), hearsay evidence may be used to supplement or explain other evidence, but shall not be sufficient in itself to support a finding unless the evidence falls within an exception to the hearsay rule as found in sections 90.801-.805, Florida Statutes. On October 15, 2019, Respondent was issued the one-day stay at home letter from Mr. Aronson titled “Assignment to Your Residence with Pay for October 15, 2019.” On October 15, 2019, Respondent was also issued a letter advising her that she was assigned to her residence for October 16 and October 17, 2019. Mr. Fred, under the supervision of Vicki Evans-Paré, Director of Employee and Labor Relations, compiled written statement of six students, took a written statement of Respondent on October 17, 2019, and drafted an Investigative Report dated October 18, 2019, which substantiated violations of applicable rules and Board policies. In her statement to Mr. Perez, Respondent claims it was X.S. who put his hand on hers and pulled the bottle to his own mouth and that she did not squirt anything. However, the remainder of her statement is consistent with the students’ reports of the incident.2 Post-Investigation Due Process On October 30, 2019, Respondent was provided with a Notice of Pre- Determination Meeting, which provided her with the allegations of misconduct. Respondent was provided with a copy of the entire investigative file and time to review it with the representative of her choice. Respondent attended a Pre-Determination Meeting on November 9, 2019, to give her the opportunity to provide any additional information, dispute, and explain or elaborate on any information contained in the Investigative Report. The Employee and Labor Relations (“ELR”) Department enlists the Employee Investigatory Committee (“EIC”) which reviews all of ELR’s case 2 At final hearing, Respondent testified that the bottle was never near the student’s mouth. This is wholly inconsistent with her prior written statement to Mr. Perez, her deposition testimony, and the statements of the students. This conflict negatively impacted Respondent’s credibility. files, inclusive of all documents maintained by ELR, of anything that might lead to suspension or termination, to make a suggestion to the Superintendent, if the allegations are substantiated. Once the EIC decides that the allegations are substantiated and recommends discipline, Ms. Evans-Paré takes the entire employee investigative file, inclusive of the EIC’s recommendations, to the Superintendent who then makes the ultimate recommendation for employee discipline. On November 22, 2019, Respondent was provided with supplemental information to the investigative file and provided an opportunity to respond to the documents by December 6, 2019. On December 9, 2019, Respondent requested that her response be placed in her file. She wrote “in response to the copies of the information from the District that is being used as evidence against me …” after reviewing the case file, complained that only six of 22 students were interviewed or provided statements and it was not an ethical, random sample of the class. Respondent also alleged that the documents had been altered; however, she did not provide any evidence of such during the final hearing or within the response. On December 6, 2019, Respondent again provided a response to the student witness statements to ELR wherein she stated “I have 22 students in my class, only 6 students filled out statements? You have 3 black children submitted in reporting, of which one is not accurate. Yet, they are the minority in this class, of which, 2 out of the 6 statements were from Hispanic students. It is surprising that not a single white student in my class noticed the incident.” On January 24, 2020, Respondent was notified that the Superintendent would recommend her a ten-day suspension without pay to the Board at its February 19, 2020, meeting. On February 19, 2020, the School Board adopted the Superintendent’s recommendations to suspend Respondent without pay for ten days. Respondent’s Post-Suspension Status Respondent’s suspension by the Board was picked up by the Associated Press and reported across social media and traditional media platforms locally and nationwide. Ms. Evans-Paré testified that typically, when a teacher is alleged to have done something inappropriate with students, the District cannot have the teacher in a classroom around students, so the teacher is reassigned to another location. Respondent was reassigned to adult and community education, so she was in a no-student contact position. Respondent was then moved into Human Resources Funding 9920 status due to the press and comments from the parents received by Principal Aronson and her inability to be returned to PPMS. This allowed Principal Aronson to hire another teacher to take her place. Respondent has not been back in the classroom as a teacher for the District since October 15, 2019.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Palm Beach County School Board uphold the ten-day suspension without pay and return Respondent to the classroom. DONE AND ENTERED this 30th day of April, 2021, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. COPIES FURNISHED: S MARY LI CREASY Administrative Law Judge 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 30th day of April, 2021. V. Danielle Williams, Esquire Palm Beach County School Board Office of the General Counsel 3300 Forest Hill Boulevard, Suite C-331 West Palm Beach, Florida 33406 Nicholas Anthony Caggia, Esquire Johnson and Caggia Law Group 867 West Bloomingdale Avenue, Suite 6325 Brandon, Florida 33508 Richard Corcoran Commissioner of Education Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1514 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 Jean Marie Middleton, Esquire Palm Beach County School Board Office of the General Counsel 3300 Forest Hill Boulevard, Suite C-331 West Palm Beach, Florida 33406 Matthew Mears, General Counsel Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1244 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 Donald E. Fennoy, II, Ed.D. Superintendent Palm Beach County School Board 3300 Forest Hill Boulevard, Suite C-316 West Palm Beach, Florida 33406-5869

Florida Laws (7) 1001.321012.011012.221012.33120.569120.57120.68 Florida Administrative Code (2) 28-106.2136A-10.081 DOAH Case (2) 15-004720-1264TTS
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RALPH D. TURLINGTON, COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs. MILTON AARON WETHERINGTON, 84-002204 (1984)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Number: 84-002204 Latest Update: Jan. 22, 1985

Findings Of Fact Respondent, Milton Aaron Wetherington, holds Florida teacher's certificate number 035136 issued by the State Department of Education covering the areas of physical education, history and administration/supervision. The certificate is valid through June 30, 1991. This proceeding involves an administrative complaint filed against Wetherington by petitioner, Ralph D. Turlington, as Commissioner of Education. The complaint stems from various complaints lodged with the Volusia County School Board by several students and parents who alleged that Wetherington engaged or attempted to engage in improper relationships of a romantic nature with female high school students assigned to his classes. The filing of the administrative complaint precipitated the instant action. Wetherington, who is 57 years old, has been a teacher for some twenty seven years, the last seventeen in the Volusia County school system. From 1975 until 1984 Wetherington was a teacher at Spruce Creek School in Port Orange, Florida. Because of the pending disciplinary proceeding, he was reassigned to a non-instructional position as an assistant manager of purchasing and property for school year 1984-85. However, after the charges came to light in early 1984, Wetherington was allowed to continue as a teacher for the remainder of the school year, and was a chaperone on the senior class trip to Walt Disney World. In his twenty seven years of teaching, he has had no prior disciplinary action taken against him. In school year 1983-84 Wetherington taught a political systems course to first semester seniors. Two of his students were Lisa and Tammy, both seventeen years of age at the time, and the best of friends. Seven of the specific charges in the complaint involve respondent's relationship with Lisa, and to a lesser extent, Tammy. Lisa lived at home with her mother and step father for a part of her senior year. Because of problems with her stepfather, who beat her, she moved out at the end of January, 1984, to live with a girlfriend. She was involved with drugs, including cocaine and marijuana, and was experiencing financial problems. Lisa needed a social studies course to graduate, and transferred into Wetherington's class about two weeks after the semester started. She had not met or known Wetherington prior to that time. Wetherington immediately took a special interest in Lisa, and selected her to assist him during office hours with grading papers and the like. Lisa spotted an opportunity to take advantage of the situation, and began cultivating the relationship in an assiduous manner. Her testimony reveals she had two goals in mind: to obtain money from Wetherington and to get a good grade without studying. She also saw the opportunity to get her friend Tammy a good grade since she had access to Wetherington's grade book. The relationship was non-sexual, and all parties agree that Wetherington made no sexual advances or demands upon Lisa. One evening during the fall of 1983, Wetherington asked Lisa if she and Tammy wanted to get a pizza after a football game. Lisa agreed and Wetherington gave her $20 to purchase the food. The three met briefly in separate cars at a local Pizza Hut, but after the girls saw other students there, they all drove in Wetherington's car to the Breakers Restaurant and Lounge, an establishment in New Smyrna Beach. They arrived around 12:45 a.m. or so, and after being seated in a booth next to the stage on which a band was playing, they placed an order for pizza. Because of the lateness of the hour, the waitress informed there the kitchen had closed. They then departed the premises and returned to Daytona Beach where all went their separate ways. The two girls claimed Wetherington purchased them an alcoholic drink at the Breakers, but a member of the band, who happened to be a teaching colleague of Wetherington disputed this and observed the three had no drinks during their five to seven minute stay at the restaurant. His testimony is deemed to be more credible and it is found respondent did not "purchase alcoholic beverages for both students" as alleged in the administrative complaint. At some point in the first semester, Wetherington gave Lisa a key to his house in Holly Hill where he lives alone. According to respondent, he did so since he wanted Lisa to have a place to go in the event she suffered a beating from her stepfather. Lisa visited his house approximately five times in the company of a girlfriend when Wetherington was home, and an undisclosed number of times when he was not at home. One of Wetherington's sons lives at Bunnell, and visited his father regularly. The son kept a stash of marijuana at the house which the son used when he visited. Wetherington acknowledged that this was true, but maintained he did not know where it was hidden at the time. Indeed, he claimed he never used drugs himself, and objected to their use by other persons. Wetherington gave Lisa instructions to use the key only when she had problems with her stepfather, but Lisa ignored these instructions. While at Wetherington's home, she used both alcohol and marijuana on at least one occasion in his presence. The alcohol (wine) was taken from Wetherington's refrigerator while the marijuana was either brought onto the premises by Lisa, or came from the son's hidden stash. 1/ There is no credible evidence that Wetherington himself used "marijuana and alcohol at his residence with female students" as charged in the complaint. During the school year, Wetherington gave Lisa a friendship ring valued at $12, some $500 in cash, between $400 and $500 worth of clothes, and lent her an Amoco gasoline credit card for gasoline purchases to get her to and from the part-time job she held. Lisa charged some $120 worth of gasoline on the card as well as $247 in auto repairs. With her mother's consent, and after clearing it with the school principal, he also paid Lisa's mother $500 for the equity in Lisa's car, transferred the title to his own name, and financed it with a Miami bank. Lisa got to use the car with the understanding that she would pay him $125 a month, which was Wetherington's obligation on the bank note. Wetherington considered all this to be a "loan," and kept a book detailing the total amount advanced to Lisa. As a part of the social studies course, Wetherington required each student to prepare a term paper. Wetherington gave fourteen students, including Lisa and Tammy, copies of term papers written in the prior year with instructions to use them as a "format" or "guideline" in preparing their own. Lisa and Tammy simply changed the title page, and turned the papers back in as if they were their own. They each received a grade of 25, which was the highest grade in the class. Lisa claimed she simply did what Wetherington told her to do, and Tammy corroborated this claim. Although Wetherington was negligent in failing to detect that the papers turned in by Lisa and Tammy were identical to those previously given them to be used as a "formats" the evidence does not support a finding that Wetherington gave them the papers for the purpose of evading any academic requirements. The final charge concerning Lisa and Tammy is that Wetherington "[o]n at least one occasion kissed and hugged a female student." This charge apparently stems from Wetherington kissing Lisa on the cheek one day and giving her a paternal hug. Wetherington does not deny this, but contends it was not romantic in nature but done in a fatherly way. Wendy was a seventeen year old senior at Spruce Creek High School in school year 1983-94. She is the source of some four separate charges against respondent in the administrative complaint. Wetherington approached her at the beginning of the year and asked if she wanted to be his teacher's aide. She said yes, and he accordingly rearranged her schedule so that she worked in his office or classroom during first period as an aide, and was a student in his social studies class the following period. During the first nine weeks, Wetherington gave Wendy two rings, one for her birthday and the other to simply keep till the end of the school year. He also gave her $230 in cash over this period of time. He kept a log detailing each amount of money given to her, and considered the payments to be a loan. While working in Wetherington's classroom one day, Wendy walked by Wetherington who pulled her onto his lap and began rubbing her upper thigh. He also approached her one day in his office and put his arms around her waist and pulled her towards him. After she told him, "I don't want this," he released her. She then pulled away and claimed she immediately reported the incident to the principal. The principal could not recall such a conversation. The next day Wetherington apologized to her in his office, but he then turned off the lights in the room and began hugging her. She pushed him away and ran out of the room. Although Wendy again claimed that she immediately reported the incident to the school principal, the principal could not recall such a meeting. In any event, Wendy went to her parents, disclosed the various incidents and gave them the two rings given to her by Wetherington. The parents were understandably irate, and went to the principal demanding that Wendy be transferred out of Wetherington's class. A meeting was held by the principal, with Wetherington and the two parents in attendance. At the meeting Wetherington simply acknowledged that he admired Wendy very much, that she was a good student, and that the cash given to her ($230) was a loan for car payments and voice lessons because he trusted her. However, Wendy does not own a car, and her another paid for all voice lessons. Moreover, her father is a physician who has provided well for his family. The mother then wrote Wetherington a check for $230 to repay the "loan." Wendy was also transferred out of respondent's class. Wendy acknowledged that she "took advantage" of Wetherington, and characterized their relationship as simply a friendship. In a note written to him in a school yearbook at the end of the year, she apologized for "putting (him) through hell" and wished she "could erase it all." Wetherington denied any romantic involvement with Wendy, and acknowledged only that he had kissed her twice on the cheek, once at a football game and another time outside his house. He attributes Wendy's story to emotional problems she was experiencing that fall caused by her relationship with a married man. Wetherington portrayed himself as a teacher genuinely interested in his students. He estimated he has given financial aid in the form of loans and gifts to students over the years in excess of $10,000. Because he has raised seven children of his own, he vigorously denied having any illicit or sinister purpose in his dealings with Lisa and Wendy. Instead, he contended he was merely helping them overcome personal and financial problems so that they would be better persons after graduation.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it is RECOMMENDED that respondent be found GUILTY of violating Rules 6B- 1.06(3)(a) and (e), and Subsection 231.28(1)(c), as set out more specifically in the Conclusions of Law portion of this order. All other charges should be DISMISSED. It is further RECOMMENDED that respondent be placed on probation for three years and that he be retained by the school board during his probationary period only as a non- instructional employee. DONE and ENTERED this 22nd day of January, 1985, in Tallahassee, Florida. DONALD R. ALEXANDER Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The Oakland Building 2009 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32301 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 22nd day of January, 1985.

Florida Laws (2) 1.01120.57
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TOM GALLAGHER, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs MARY GREEN, 00-004821PL (2000)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Jacksonville, Florida Dec. 04, 2000 Number: 00-004821PL Latest Update: Jun. 05, 2024
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HISHAM ABOUDAYA vs EVEREST UNIVERSITY, 11-001496 (2011)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Viera, Florida Mar. 21, 2011 Number: 11-001496 Latest Update: Jan. 25, 2012

The Issue The issues in this case are: Whether Respondent, Everest University (the "School"), discriminated against Petitioner, Hashim Aboudaya, on the basis of his place of natural origin (Middle Eastern), race (Caucasian), and/or religion (Muslim) in violation of the Florida Civil Rights Act by twice failing to promote Petitioner to the position of associate dean or director of Student Services; and Whether the School retaliated against Petitioner based on his place of natural origin, race, and/or religion by refusing to pay for his doctoral level college courses.

Findings Of Fact Petitioner is a Caucasian male, born in Lebanon and, therefore, of Middle Eastern heritage. He is a practicing Muslim. In July 2003, Petitioner began teaching as an adjunct professor at the School, teaching computer information services and teaching a few classes per year. In or around August 2007, Petitioner was promoted to senior network administrator, a non-teaching position, for the School. At all times relevant hereto, Petitioner served in that position. He currently teaches classes on an as-needed basis also. The School is a private college formerly known as Florida Metropolitan University. There are ten related campuses in the State of Florida, with one being in Melbourne, Brevard County, Florida. The Melbourne campus has two locations, one on Sarno Road and the "main" campus on U.S. Highway 1. Petitioner holds two master's degrees, one in management and one in computer resources and information management, from Webster University in Saint Louis, Missouri. He is pursuing a third master's degree, but it is "on hold" pending his completion of studies in a doctoral program. The doctoral program being sought by Petitioner is in the field of business administration with a major field of study in computer security. The degree is being pursued on-line through Capella University based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Petitioner's resume indicates that the Ph.D. will be "done in the end of 2007," but it has obviously taken longer than planned. Petitioner has applied for several vacancies listed at the School, but for purposes of this proceeding, the following are relevant: (1) The associate academic dean position advertised in January 2010; (2) The associate academic dean position advertised in April 2010; and (3) The director of Student Services position advertised in August 2009. Associate Academic Dean Positions The following qualifications were specified in the School's job description for the associate academic dean positions. The applicant must: Possess the necessary academic credentials and work related experience mandated by the Company, State accreditation agencies and any other regulatory agency that monitors compliance. Have a minimum of 2 years practical work experience in business or education. Have a minimum of 1 year teaching experience, but The years of experience may be waived at the sole discretion of the college president so long as the incumbent meets the accreditations, State and Federal requirements necessary to hold the position. There was also a job posting (as opposed to a job description) for the associate dean position on a website associated with Corinthian Colleges, Inc. ("CCI"), the School's parent company. That job posting indicated that a master's degree was required for the job and included other requirements not set out in the School's official job description. The college president, Mark Judge, could not verify the accuracy of the job posting. There is no persuasive, credible evidence that the job posting was produced by the School or intended to be used as the basis for filling the associate dean position. The first associate dean position was for the Sarno Road site which housed the School's allied health programs, e.g., medical assistant training, pharmacy technician associate degrees, medical insurance billing and coding, and healthcare administration. Besides the requirements set forth in the job description, the School was looking for someone with health- related experience as well. Terri Baker, a registered nurse, was ultimately hired to fill the associate dean position. Baker had approximately 20 years of experience with the School. During that time, Baker had taught classes in the allied health program, had served as a program director, and was an associate dean at other campuses within the CCI system. Baker does not hold a master's degree, but the job description issued by the School does not require that level of education. The job posting, which appeared in a publication issued by the School, does say that a master's degree is required, but there is no competent and substantial evidence to suggest the job posting supersedes the job description. Notwithstanding her level of schooling, it is clear Baker was a perfect fit for the job. The decision to appoint her, rather than Petitioner, to the position was based on factors other than race, national origin or religion. The second associate dean position was advertised in the Spring of 2010. The job description for that job is the same as the previous associate dean position. However, there are many different duties and expectations associated with the second position. For example, while the first position was related directly to the allied health programs at the School, the second position had a different focus. The person filling this position would be working on the main Melbourne campus, rather than the satellite campus. His or her duties would be directed toward tasks such as transfer of credit analysis, scheduling, and registering new students. The dean would also be responsible for monitoring the School's compliance with accreditation standards and internal audit standards. Betty Williams was hired to fill the second associate dean position. Williams had significant management experience in academic settings. She had served as an academic dean for one of the School's competitors and had extensive knowledge and experience with compliance accreditation standards. As compared to Petitioner, Williams was a much better fit for the position. Her experience would allow her to step into the position and begin working on problems immediately without the necessity of a period of training and acclimation. Director of Student Services Position The director of Student Services was expected to help students who were experiencing hardships in their academic progress. The director would help students who were forced to withdraw from school for financial or other personal reasons. He/she would provide support for students taking online classes and assist students trying to re-enroll into school following dismissal or withdrawal. A close working relationship with students was an important factor in this position. The School's job description listed the following requirement for the director of Student Services position: Bachelor's degree required Minimum of 3 years practical work experience or equivalent training Excellent communication and customer service skills Excellent computer skills The person who ultimately was hired for this position, Stacey Jacquot, was an outstanding employee at the School and had been selected as its Employee of the Year in two different positions. Jacquot is a Caucasian female; neither her religion, nor her place of natural origin was alluded to at final hearing. The hiring of Jacquot, as opposed to Petitioner, for this position was based on Jacquot's experience and background. She had worked in the student services department for the school as both an online coordinator and as a re-entry coordinator. Thus, her experience was directly related to the requirements of the position. Petitioner provided unsubstantiated testimony that by virtue of his teaching a number of classes over the past few years, he has some experience in counseling students concerning their issues. However, even if true, his experience did not match that of Jacquot. Request for Reimbursement for Doctoral Coursework Petitioner alleges retaliation by the School. The specific retaliatory action was the denial of his request to be reimbursed for coursework as he pursued a doctorate degree. In February 2010, Petitioner submitted a request to the School, asking that tuition expenses for his coursework be paid under the School's tuition reimbursement program. The program is set forth in policies maintained by the School and is available to "eligible employees for eligible classes." A benchmark for reimbursable tuition is that the courses being taken enable the employee to be more efficient in a current role or prepare them for a role at the next level of their employment. There are a number of written policies addressing the tuition reimbursement program. Those policies are fluid and have changed from time to time over the past few years. The policies are implemented and overseen by the director of Organizational Development for CCI, Jeanne Teeter. Teeter resides and works in California, corporate home of CCI. It is Teeter's duty to ultimately approve or deny all requests for tuition reimbursement by employees of all of CCI's colleges around the country. Teeter reviewed Petitioner's request for tuition reimbursement pursuant to a preliminary approval by the School's president, Mark Judge. It was Judge's initial decision to approve Petitioner's request, but Judge sent it to Teeter for a final decision. Teeter had never met Petitioner and did not know anything about him, except as found in his personnel file and his application for tuition reimbursement. Teeter, as was her normal procedure, considered the relevance of the degree being sought, not only to Petitioner's current role, but as to potential future roles as well. Because the course work for which reimbursement was being sought related to an advanced degree, a doctorate, Teeter was less inclined to approve it. Approval would necessitate a clear line of sight between the employee's current role to a role that would require a Ph.D. Inasmuch as Petitioner's role as senior network administrator did not require a doctorate and there was no clear line of sight between his present position and that of a professor or management employee requiring one, Teeter declined the request. At the time she made her decision, Teeter was not aware that Petitioner had made a discrimination claim against the School. Her decision, therefore, could not be retaliatory in nature. Rather, she acted in concert with the policies that address tuition reimbursement and made a decision based solely upon those policies. Petitioner appears to be an energetic and hard-working member of the School's staff. His testimony was credible, but was sometimes off the point. Although he is a well-educated person with three college degrees and is pursuing others, it is clear that English is his second language.1/ Petitioner seemed to be sincere in his belief that he was discriminated against, but did not provide persuasive evidence to support that claim.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered by the Florida Commission on Human Relations dismissing the Petition for Relief filed by Hisham Aboudaya in its entirety. DONE AND ENTERED this 21st day of November, 2011, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S R. BRUCE MCKIBBEN Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 21st day of November, 2011.

USC (1) 42 U.S.C 2000 Florida Laws (5) 120.57120.68509.092760.01760.11
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SEMINOLE COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD vs DOUGLAS REEDER, 02-003465 (2002)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Sanford, Florida Sep. 05, 2002 Number: 02-003465 Latest Update: Aug. 19, 2003

The Issue The issue is whether the Seminole County School Board has just cause to terminate Respondent's employment or to otherwise discipline him based upon the conduct alleged in the Petition for Termination.

Findings Of Fact Based upon the testimony and evidence received at the hearing and the parties' stipulations, the following findings are made: Parties The School Board is the governing body of the local school district in and for Seminole County, Florida. Respondent is a 48-year-old male. He has been employed as an educational support employee of the School Board for approximately five years. During the 2001-02 school year, Respondent worked at Seminole High School (SHS) as a computer specialist. Collective Bargaining Agreement and SHS Handbook Respondent's employment with the School Board is governed by the collective bargaining agreement between the Seminole Educational Clerical Association, Inc., and the School Board (SECA Agreement). Article VII, Section 5 of the SECA Agreement provides in pertinent part: Regular employees who have been hired for a minimum of three (3) continuous years . . . shall not be disciplined (which shall include reprimands), suspended, or terminated except for just cause. * * * C. An employee may be suspended without pay or discharged for reasons including, but not limited to, the following providing just cause is present: Violation of School Board Policy. Violation of work rules. * * * Article VIII, Section 1 of the SECA Agreement provides in relevant part that "[e]mployees may be immediately disciplined including termination for serious violation of the following: misconduct; " Respondent's employment is also governed by the SHS Faculty Handbook (SHS Handbook). The SHS Handbook is provided to SHS employees at an orientation session prior to the beginning of each school year. Respondent acknowledged receipt of the SHS Handbook prior to the 2001-02 school year. The SHS Handbook includes a sexual harassment policy which states that the School Board "will not tolerate sexual/racial harassment activity by any of its employees." As it relates to the circumstances of this case, the policy defines sexual harassment as follows: Sexual harassment consists of unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors and other inappropriate verbal, nonverbal, graphic, written or physical conduct of a sexual nature when: * * * (c) such conduct substantially interferes with . . . [a] student’s academic performance, or creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive . . . school environment. Sexual harassment, as defined above, may include but is not limited to the following: verbal, nonverbal, graphic, and written harassment or abuse; * * * (c) repeated remarks to a person with sexual or demeaning implications; * * * In determining whether alleged conduct constitutes sexual[] harassment, the totality of the circumstances, the nature of the conduct, and the context in which the alleged conduct occurred will be investigated. . . . . The sexual harassment policy in the SHS Handbook is virtually identical to the School Board's district-wide sexual harassment policy. Thus, a violation of the policy in the SHS Handbook is a violation of School Board policy. Alleged Inappropriate Comments/Conduct by Respondent During the 2001-02 School Year Respondent had four "peer counselors" assigned to him during the 2001-02 school year, including eleventh-grader Nichole Combee. A peer counselor is a student who assists a teacher or other school staff member with designated tasks, such as filing or running errands on campus. The student provides that assistance for one class period per day. Nichole had approached Respondent at some point during the first semester of the 2001-02 school year and asked whether she could be a peer counselor for him. The record does not reflect the process by which that request was processed or approved by the administration at SHS, or even whether such approval is required. Nichole started as a peer counselor for Respondent in January 2002, which is the beginning of the second semester of the 2001-02 school year. Nichole continued in that position through May 23, 2002, when the regular school year ended. Nichole was Respondent's peer counselor during seventh period, which is the last period of the school day. Nichole's primary duty as Respondent's peer counselor was filing computer permission slips. During the time that Nichole was Respondent's peer counselor, she discussed her family troubles and school attendance problems with Respondent and his assistant, Mark Williams. Respondent tried to help Nichole with those problems. On several occasions, he talked to Nichole's mother on the phone in an attempt to help work things out between Nichole and her mother with respect to the "trouble" created at home by Nichole's academic and attendance problems. Nichole also discussed problems that she was having with male students and some male teachers at SHS looking at her large breasts rather than her eyes when they were speaking to her. She told Respondent at the time that he and Mr. Williams always looked her in the eye, and she reaffirmed that statement in her testimony at the hearing. Nichole discussed matters related to her breasts with Respondent on other occasions as well. On at least one occasion, she told Respondent that her breasts caused her back to hurt because of their size. On subsequent occasions when Nichole complained about her back hurting, Respondent replied by saying, "Well, you know why." That comment was intended by Respondent and understood by Nichole to be a reference to Nichole's prior comments that her large breasts were the cause of her back pain. Respondent never told Nichole that she should not discuss her breasts or other personal matters with him. Respondent acknowledged at the hearing that it would have been inappropriate for him to initiate a conversation with Nichole about her breasts (as a source of her back pain or otherwise), but that he did not see anything wrong with the discussions that he had with Nichole on that subject because she brought it up and because there was nothing sexual being implied. After classes had ended on the last day of the 2001-02 school year, a number of students engaged in a "water fight" using water balloons and "water bazookas." This conduct is apparently a "tradition" at SHS. The SHS administration had directed the school staff to try to prevent this conduct and/or to get the students off campus and onto their busses as quickly as possible. Respondent observed a group of students involved in a water fight near his office in the media center, and he went outside to break up the students. The group included Nichole and her friend Natalie Cotto-Caraballo, who was a tenth-grader at SHS. Nichole and Natalie were wearing white tank-top shirts that they had made for the last day of school. The shirts had gotten wet during the water fight and, as a result, the girls' bras were visible through the shirts. Respondent commented to Nichole and Natalie that he could see their bras through their shirts and that they needed to cover themselves up. He then directed the girls and the other students in the group to their buses. Nichole testified that the comment made her feel somewhat uncomfortable because "it's our bras and, you know, even though people see them, usually they don't say anything, you know." Respondent's comment regarding his ability to see the girls' bras was not inappropriate under the circumstances; it was a statement of fact and justified Respondent's direction to the girls to cover themselves up. Nichole did not immediately report the bra comment, either to her parent(s) or the SHS administration. Indeed, the comment did not even come to light until Nichole's second interview with the School Board's investigator in August 2002. Respondent gave Nichole a hug as she was leaving for her bus on the last day of school and told her to have a nice summer. Despite its close proximity in time to the bra comment, Nichole testified that the hug did not make her uncomfortable. She just considered it to be friendly "good bye" hug, which was all that was intended by Respondent. Nichole did not complain about Respondent to her parent(s) or anyone in the SHS administration during the time that she was his peer counselor. Lunch Invitations During Summer School Nichole attended the first session of summer school, which began on June 3, 2002, less than two weeks after the end of the regular school year. The only class that Nichole took during summer school was an English class taught by "Ms. Morris." Nichole was not Respondent's peer counselor during summer school, nor was she working on any school-related project with Respondent during that time. On June 3, 2002, while Respondent and Mr. Williams were in Ms. Morris' class fixing a computer, Respondent asked Nichole if she wanted to go to lunch with him off-campus. Nichole declined the invitation because she was "grounded" and had to pick up her brother from school. Respondent was again in Ms. Morris' class on June 5, 2002, and he again invited Nichole to lunch. Nichole again declined. Respondent did not have permission from Nichole's parent(s) or the SHS administration to take Nichole off-campus. The reason that Respondent invited Nichole to lunch was to thank her for doing a good job as his peer counselor and to congratulate her on deciding to stay in school and attend summer school, which Respondent and Mr. Williams had both counseled her to do. Respondent had taken a former male student off-campus to lunch for the same reasons in the past. Respondent and Nichole were not alone at the time of either invitation. Both invitations occurred in Ms. Morris' classroom, and Ms. Morris and other students were "milling around" in the classroom at the time. At the hearing, Nichole testified that she didn't think anything of the lunch invitations at first since she considered Respondent a "friend." However, she also testified that it "it was a little uncomfortable because he is a teacher." Nichole did not report the lunch invitations to Ms. Morris or to anyone in the SHS administration. Nichole did, however, tell her mother about Respondent's lunch invitations because "she thought she should know." On June 5, 2003, Nichole's mother called the SHS principal, Karen Coleman, and complained about the lunch invitations. Ms. Coleman told Nichole’s mother that she would look into the matter, which she did. The resulting investigation led to this proceeding. Investigation and Preliminary Disciplinary Recommendation Ms. Coleman began the investigation by speaking to Nichole on June 5, 2002. That discussion focused only on the lunch invitations. Nichole provided Ms. Colemen an unsworn written statement regarding the lunch invitations on June 5, 2002. That statement did not include any reference to the "lingerie incident" discussed below or the incidents described above involving the bra comment or the hug that Respondent gave to Nichole on the last day of school. Nichole provided Ms. Coleman another unsworn written statement on June 6, 2002. That statement referenced Respondent's comments about the source of Nichole's back pain, but it did not mention the lingerie incident or the other incidents described above. After speaking with Nichole, Ms. Coleman spoke with Respondent. Respondent admitted that he had invited Nichole to lunch off-campus. He further admitted that he did not have permission from Nichole’s parent(s) to take her off-campus and that he did not obtain permission from the SHS administration. Respondent told Ms. Coleman that he did not realize that such permission was necessary. Respondent had taken a male peer counselor to lunch off-campus in the past without receiving approval from the student's parents or the SHS. After Ms. Coleman's conversations with Nichole and Respondent, she contacted John Reichert, the School Board's director of human resources. Mr. Reichert directed John Byerly, the School Board’s internal affairs investigator, to conduct a formal investigation. Mr. Byerly interviewed Nichole on June 10, 2002, at SHS. Nichole did not mention the lingerie incident, the bra comment, or the hug to Mr. Byerly during that interview. Mr. Byerly also interviewed Respondent and Mr. Williams as part of his investigation. The results of Mr. Byerly's investigation were presented to the Executive Professional Standards Review Committee (Review Committee) on June 27, 2002. Among other functions, the Review Committee is used to make disciplinary recommendations to Mr. Reichert. The Review Committee’s recommendation was characterized at the hearing as "preliminary," and it is apparently not binding on Mr. Reichert when he formulates his recommendations to the Superintendent regarding employee disciplinary actions. The Review Committee recommended that Respondent be suspended for three days and/or be reassigned or transferred to another school. That recommendation was based only upon Respondent’s lunch invitations to Nichole and comments regarding the source of her back pain; it did not take into account the lingerie incident, the bra comment, or the hug because those incidents had not been disclosed by Nichole or Natalie at that point. Mr. Reichert and/or the Superintendent apparently did not accept the Review Committee’s recommendation because the Superintendent's July 26, 2002, letter recommended termination of Respondent's employment. At the hearing, Mr. Reichert testified that the reason for the change in the recommended discipline was the subsequent discovery of the lingerie incident, which he characterized as the "major driving factor" behind the termination recommendation. However, the preponderance of the credible evidence demonstrates that the lingerie incident was not disclosed to School Board staff until after the July 26, 2002, letter. Alleged Gift of Lingerie The lingerie incident was first disclosed by Natalie on August 2, 2002, when she was interviewed by Mr. Byerly.1 Natalie had given an unsworn written statement to Ms. Coleman on that same date, but that statement did not mention the lingerie incident. Based upon the "new information" from Natalie, Mr. Byerly interviewed Nichole again on August 15, 2002. The interview occurred at Lyman High School (LHS), where Nichole had transferred for her senior year.2 After the interview, Mr. Byerly had Nichole prepare a sworn written statement. The statement included the following account of the lingerie incident, which was consistent with Nichole's testimony at the hearing: When I was a peer counselor for Mr. Reeder, I had walked into class on[e] afternoon in 7th period and we were talking and he said ["]oh here I got something for you.["] He handed me a white plastic bag and through the bag I could see a black thing and I knew it was the langera [sic]. I then just put it on the floor and went on with my work. When the bell rang I picked up my belongings including the white plastic bag. When I got on the bus I showed Natalie it. It was a black see[-]through spagatie [sic] strap shirt and black thongs. When I got off the bus I walked home and through [sic] it away. That was the last time anything was ever said about it. Mr. Byerly interviewed Natalie again on August 16, 2002. Natalie's told Mr. Byerly that the lingerie incident occurred "a couple months before the end of the regular school year" and that Nichole showed her the lingerie on the bus. However, the sworn written statement she prepared after the interview indicated that the incident occurred "[a]bout the day before school was over" and that she learned of it "on the bus/car." Nichole told Natalie that the lingerie was from Respondent. Natalie had no independent personal knowledge that it was from him. There were some inconsistencies in Natalie's and Nichole's descriptions of the lingerie, but those inconsistencies were not material. They consistently described the lingerie as having a black see-through top and black panties. Nichole did not report the incident to the SHS administration around the time that it allegedly occurred. Nor did she tell her mother about the incident, even though she considered the lingerie gift to be more inappropriate than the lunch invitations which she did immediately tell her mother about. Nichole testified that she was somewhat embarrassed by the gift and she did not want her mother to think she "led into it." Respondent unequivocally denied that he gave Nichole any lingerie or other clothing, and Nichole's and Natalie's testimony relating to the lingerie incident was not credible. Thus, the School Board failed to prove that Respondent gave Nichole the lingerie. It is undisputed that Respondent never engaged in any type of sexual contact (e.g., kissing, inappropriate touching) with Nichole. Nichole made that point clear in both of her interviews with Mr. Byerly and in her testimony at the hearing.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Seminole County School Board issue a final order which dismisses the Petition for Termination and provides Respondent the remedial relief that he is entitled under the collective bargaining agreement. DONE AND ORDERED this 17th day of July, 2003, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S T. KENT WETHERELL, II Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 17th day of July, 2003.

Florida Laws (3) 1012.40120.569120.57
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RICHARD CORCORAN, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs DAVID ARTHUR STRASSEL, II, 19-006168PL (2019)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Daytona Beach, Florida Nov. 20, 2019 Number: 19-006168PL Latest Update: Jun. 05, 2024
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NASSAU COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD vs EDWIN D. MACMILLAN, 91-005589 (1991)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Fernandina Beach, Florida Aug. 29, 1991 Number: 91-005589 Latest Update: Dec. 10, 1993

The Issue Whether or not Respondent is guilty of misconduct and/or immorality in office (in the nature of suggestive and degrading sexual innuendoes and remarks to several female students) pursuant to Section 231.36(6)(a) F.S. and Rules 6B- 1.001, 6B-1.006, and 6B-4.009 F.A.C. so as to be subject to dismissal by the Nassau County School Board. Although some evidence of other years was presented, the August 8, 1991 Statement of Charges herein covers only the 1990-1991 school year. Accordingly, only evidence from that school year may be considered for purposes of discipline in this proceeding.

Findings Of Fact At all times material, Respondent was a teacher at the Hilliard Middle- Senior High School and the holder of a professional services contract with Petitioner Nassau County School Board. He is certified by the State of Florida in the areas of mathematics, psychology, and broad field social studies. Respondent had been employed by Petitioner for the nine years immediately preceding his suspension for the charges involved in this case. During the whole of that time he received good job evaluations. He has had no prior disciplinary charges against him. On or about May 9, 1991, Petitioner, pursuant to the recommendation of the Nassau County Superintendent of Schools, suspended Respondent without pay. This followed the Superintendent's suspension of Respondent with pay on May 2, 1991. During his employment with Petitioner, Respondent has taught geometry, algebra II, trigonometry, one class of general math, and a class of compensatory mathematics. Respondent has had a practice of greeting his students at random as they enter the classroom each day and while they are taking their seats and settling down to work. At all times material, these greetings were offered in the presence of students of both genders. Respondent teased the boys about sports and commented on the girls' appearance. The comments made most frequently by the Respondent to the football players were that they had not done well in the immediately preceding game. The comments made most frequently by the Respondent to all the female students were, "You're looking good; you're looking fine; you're looking hot;" or, more simply, "you're fine; you're hot." None of the comments were exclusive to any particular female student. All comments were made out in the open, without any physical touching or aggression on Respondent's part. He made these comments with no intended sexual connotation, and no female student ever expressed to him directly that she objected to these greetings either because they sounded sexual in nature, were too familiar, or were made in the presence of the female students' male peers. Generally, Respondent's comments were recognized as kidding and not taken seriously or considered objectionable by the students. There is no evidence that the Respondent's comments delayed the commencement of class, caused disruptive behavior on the part of either the male or the female students who heard them, or inhibited any student learning the academic material. One female student who testified that she found the foregoing practice objectionable was Shannon Lysitt, a student of Respondent's during both the 1989-1990 and the 1990-1991 school years. Ms. Lysitt testified at formal hearing that she "took [these comments] to be sexual but not as in a sexual manner." She considered the comments embarrassing and a display of inappropriate conduct by a teacher but knew Respondent was being friendly and joking. Ms. Lysitt admittedly never told Respondent she felt embarrassed or asked him to stop making such comments. Although she was used to his comments from the previous school year, Ms. Lysitt did not request to be assigned to another class for the 1990-1991 school year. In one isolated conversation, Respondent told Ms. Lysitt that, due to her poor math grades, she would probably wind up as a secretary being chased around a desk by her boss instead of achieving her desired career of psychiatrist. The Respondent denied making that comment specifically, but testified that he had made chiding or derrogatory comments about career plans of college preparatory students to motivate them to do better on tests when they had been doing poorly. By all accounts, Ms. Lysitt was doing all right in Respondent's course but could have done better. Ms. Lysitt's testimony was credible as to what was said, but Respondent's testimony was equally credible as to why he said it. Upon the evidence as a whole, it is found that the Respondent's comment may have been temporarily embarrassing to Ms. Lysitt, and may have, as she testified, made her feel bad or stupid for a short time, but that it did not degrade or humiliate her or adversely affect her classroom performance or overall self-image. Sherry Meziere was a student in Respondent's fourth period general math II class during the 1990-1991 school year. She also was embarrassed by Respondent's compliments to her, but she never told him so. When Ms. Meziere complained to Respondent that her semester grade was a "C" rather than the "B" she wanted, he told her she could stay after school and she would get her "B". Ms. Meziere is a particularly sensitive and shy teenager, and she took offense at the Respondent's comment because she interpreted it as a sexual come-on. Respondent denied having any sexual intent behind his comment to Ms. Meziere. At formal hearing, he explained that Ms. Meziere would have been entitled to a "B" if she had turned in all her homework, as required, but she had not. Because her grade was borderline due to the missing homework, Respondent had meant by his remark to Ms. Meziere that if she would come to the classroom after school and work the homework problems in his presence, he would retroactively give her credit for doing the homework and turning it in and this would accordingly alter her semester grade to a "B". Respondent's explanation for why he took this approach is reasonable: he would not accept students bringing in the homework later from home because it might be done anew or copied from someone else. Perhaps Respondent fell short in not clearly indicating all his reasoning and purpose to Ms. Meziere, but he also had no notice from her that she had misunderstood his offer. On balance, Ms. Meziere's explanation of why she took Respondent's neutral remark sexually is weak. She testified, A: I took it sexually. I don't know. Q: Why did you take it sexually? What is it about it that made you think that because you would agree, wouldn't you, that that could also be nonsexual the way you stated it, correct? A: Yes. Q: So what was it about the way he said it that made you think that it was sexual? A: I don't know. I just didn't feel comfortable with it. Q: But he didn't say anything explicit-- A: No. Q: --about sex or anything like that? A: No. (Exhibit P-2, page 10) Ms. Meziere considered Respondent a good teacher, not really strict, and pretty friendly. She felt he was giving her and one of her girl friends many more compliments of the nature described above in Finding of Fact 5 than he was giving other female students in their particular class. Respondent conceded that perhaps he had complimented Ms. Meziere more than some other female students in her class because he had tried to build up Ms. Meziere's self-esteem while the class was going to and from the cafeteria during the lunch recess which occurred in the middle of that class period, so that she would eat and not diet excessively. When she felt "uncomfortable" about Respondent's offering to see her after school, Ms. Meziere was not aware that Respondent frequently tutored students after school. Shanna Higginbotham, another one of Respondent's female students, confirmed that she had been tutored by him after school on several occasions, without any sexual innuendoes or overtures. Although what Respondent did not do with Ms. Higginbotham is not corroborative of Respondent's testimony that he did not intend his remark to Ms. Meziere to be sexual, it is supportive of his testimony that he was in the habit of having one or more students in his classroom after school. It also supports a reasonable inference that the Respondent's classroom was hardly the place for a private rendezvous. Respondent was approached during an inactive period in one of his classes by a senior mathematics student named Monica Adamczewski, who was simultaneously taking a college-level psychology class in child development at Florida Community College, Jacksonville, Florida. Ms. Adamczewski, knowing of Respondent's background in psychology, addressed a question to Respondent involving Freudian theory and child psychology on the issue of whether or not little children have sexual feelings, as hypothesized by Freud. Respondent responded by describing how he had handled an incident involving his own four year child's masturbation. Although the conversation was conducted in low tones with Ms. Adamczewski and Respondent in their respective desks, another student, Darlene Kelly, came up to Respondent's desk in the course of the conversation and heard only part of the conversation. Ms. Kelly was not aware of the context in which the subject arose, did not approve of certain language Respondent employed in discussing his child's activity, and felt it was an inappropriate conversation for the classroom, but Ms. Kelly also testified that the conversation did not embarrass her. There is conflicting evidence as to whether the foregoing incident occurred during the period covered by the Statement of Charges in this case. It is found that it did not occur during the period of time covered by the charges and accordingly that it cannot constitute grounds for disciplining Respondent in this proceeding. Jessica Smith testified to three incidents that allegedly occurred during the 1989-1990 school year. Because the Statement of Charges against the Respondent is silent as to any allegations of misconduct or immorality that occurred other than during the 1990-1991 school year, these incidents may not be used to discipline Respondent in this proceeding. 1/ Tammy McClamma graduated from Hilliard Middle-Senior High School in May 1990. She was not one of Respondent's students in either her junior or senior year, but she knew him from being around school. The events she described also could not have occurred during the time frame set out in the Statement of Charges and therefore cannot be used to discipline the Respondent in this proceeding. 2/ Respondent acknowledged that he may have been careless and used poor judgment in some of the statements he made to his female students. However, he never intended to harm or embarrass any of them and was simply guilty of allowing himself to get too close to the students as friends rather than maintaining the appropriate distance required of the student-teacher relationship. All the student witnesses, including those who were offended by isolated remarks they regarded as inappropriate, agreed that Respondent has a friendly and jocular manner in and out of the classroom. Respondent's classroom clearly has a "laid back" style. Overall, his students seem to appreciate and enjoy his familiar manner and to learn well in his classes. The consistent testimony of the students was that he is generally well-regarded and "everybody's favorite teacher." Superintendent Marshall opined as a professional educator that the Respondent's effectiveness as an educator had been undermined and eliminated by a continuing pattern of serious misconduct. However, no evidence of lost effectiveness beyond the temporary embarrassment and self-doubt experienced by Ms. Lysitt appears of record, and Mr. Marshall's opinion as rendered at formal hearing was based in part upon incidents outside the dates alleged in the Statement of Charges and also based in part upon the total investigation of this case, which investigation clearly included material not in evidence here.

Recommendation Upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is recommended that the School Board of Nassau County enter a final order dismissing the charges against Respondent and returning him to full duty with all back pay and benefits retroactive to May 9, 1991. RECOMMENDED this 5th day of March, 1992, at Tallahassee, Florida. ELLA JANE P. DAVIS, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 5th day of March, 1992.

Florida Laws (1) 120.57 Florida Administrative Code (3) 6B-1.0016B-1.0066B-4.009
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PUTNAM COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD vs MICHAEL DORSEY, 98-004472 (1998)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Palatka, Florida Oct. 07, 1998 Number: 98-004472 Latest Update: Jun. 28, 1999

The Issue Should Respondent be terminated from his employment as a member of Petitioner's instructional staff for his alleged relationship with Kristie Lynn Smith, who at the time of the alleged misconduct was a minor student and member of Respondent's household? In particular, Petitioner accuses Respondent of a romantic involvement with Ms. Smith, to include sexual intercourse.

Findings Of Fact At times relevant to the inquiry Respondent has been employed as a classroom teacher, part of instructional staff with the Putnam County School Board. His employment has been at Interlachen High School in Interlachen, Putnam County, Florida. Respondent has taught Driver Education and Health and Life Management Skills. Respondent has also served as coach for the girls' varsity basketball team. Kristie Lynn Smith was born November 24, 1980. At the times relevant to the inquiry she was a student in the Putnam County School District. Ms. Smith met Respondent as a student in Respondent's Health and Life Management Skills class, in the second semester of her ninth grade year. In January 1997, Ms. Smith was placed in foster care in the custody of Respondent and his wife, Teresa Dorsey. Ms. Smith lived with the Dorseys in their home from January 1997 through August 1997. Other children residing in the Dorsey home were Respondent's children Mikey, Jeanny, and Raymond. Another foster child, K.W., lived in the home during Ms. Smith's residency. The expectation of foster parenting for the benefit of Ms. Smith and K.W. was that Respondent and his wife would exercise parental authority over the foster children. After Ms. Smith was placed with the Dorseys for foster care, she began to ride to her school with Respondent in his automobile. On these occasions Respondent and Ms. Smith would engage in conversation that was not unexpected. In latter May 1997, Respondent began to discuss his marital problems with Ms. Smith. In these discussions Respondent confided that Respondent's marriage with his wife, Teresa, was over and that Respondent was contemplating the formal dissolution of his marriage. Respondent's discussions with Ms. Smith extended to expressing Respondent's feelings towards Ms. Smith by telling her he cared for her. This was followed by Respondent's statement to Ms. Smith that he was in love with her. Ms. Smith replied that she had similar feelings for Respondent. Respondent and Ms. Smith in their discussions talked about having sexual relations with each other. Expression was given to their affection by flirting, hugging, and kissing each other with open mouths. The relationship between Respondent and Ms. Smith progressed to the point where Ms. Smith agreed to have sexual intercourse with Respondent. Within a few days beyond reaching the agreement to have sexual intercourse, Respondent, in their home, took Ms. Smith from the room she shared with K.W. into the bedroom shared by Mikey and Jeanny, placed a mattress on the floor, removed his and Ms. Smith's clothing and engaged in sexual intercourse with Ms. Smith. This same activity took place three or four more times in the home in the month of May 1997. While on a vacation in West Virginia that began the last week of May 1997, Ms. Smith confided in K.W. that Ms. Smith and Respondent had an ongoing romantic relationship. K.W. observed some of the contacts between Respondent and Ms. Smith that involved hand holding, hugging, and what K.W. described as "French kissing," meaning that the tongues of Respondent and Ms. Smith were in each other's mouth. Upon the return from West Virginia, in the first part of June 1997, Respondent and Ms. Smith continued their liaison, to include sexual intercourse that took place on numerous occasions either in Jeanny and Mikey's bedroom, Ms. Smith's bedroom, or Respondent's bedroom. The sexual encounters that have been described took place at night when other persons had retired to sleep. The numerous occasions of sexual relations between Respondent and Ms. Smith took place over the period from the end of May 1997 into August 1997. Those encounters were such that in June 1997, Ms. Smith believed that she had become pregnant by Respondent. To confirm her suspicion Ms. Smith went with a friend, Lisa Comeau, and purchased a pregnancy test kit. At that time Ms. Comeau was also a student at Interlachen High School. Ms. Comeau was mindful of the relationship between Ms. Smith and Respondent to the extent that Ms. Comeau had been told by Ms. Smith that Respondent and Ms. Smith were having sexual relations. Respondent had taught Ms. Comeau as a Driver's Education and Health class teacher. The results of the pregnancy test as administered at Ms. Comeau's home revealed that Ms. Smith was not pregnant. In June 1997, Ms. Smith enrolled in a Driver's Education Course that was being taught at Palatka High School, part of the Putnam County School District. Respondent taught Ms. Smith in that class and was responsible for assigning Ms. Smith's final grade. During this time period Respondent and Ms. Smith were having sexual relations. During the period May 1997 through August 1997, Respondent and Ms. Smith exchanged letters describing their affection. Those letters were passed directly from Respondent to Ms. Smith and from Ms. Smith to Respondent or on other occasions letters were being indirectly transmitted through K.W. Respondent would also leave letters for Ms. Smith in a dresser drawer in the home. The letters were being written and exchanged sometime between May 1997 and August 1997. K.W. and Lisa Comeau were aware of the contents of some of this correspondence. Through the letters which Respondent wrote to Ms. Smith he expressed his love and devotion, the anticipation of having children with Ms. Smith, the desire to be Ms. Smith's husband, and the specific statement of wanting to make love to Ms. Smith and to hold her in his arms and to lay there for hours. The contents of some of the letters are more completely described in the Petitioner's Exhibits numbered 4-13. Although Respondent expressed some reservation in testimony concerning their relationship, about first receiving letters from Ms. Smith which expressed her feelings towards Respondent, his manner of addressing his concerns was to begin writing letters back to Ms. Smith of the nature that has been described previously. While Respondent in his testimony concerning the relationship with Ms. Smith has denied the finding made here that he had engaged in sexual relations with Ms. Smith, he does not deny discussion of their intention to have sexual relations at a time in the future. Neither does Respondent deny having written the letters that have been discussed which describe lovemaking and fathering Ms. Smith's children. The July 24, 1998, edition of the Palatka Daily News reported some of the contents of correspondence from Respondent to Ms. Smith that have been described, in particular, the reference "I want to make love to you . . . and hold you in my arms and lay there for hours." The article also referred to Respondent's admission that he loved Ms. Smith at the time of their relationship and hoped the two of them would be married and have a family. As reported in the newspaper article Respondent had testified in the trial that he had "fallen" for Ms. Smith. The account of Respondent's statement that he loved Ms. Smith, as found in the newspaper was consistent with his trial testimony. Respondent's trial testimony constituted testimony for the present proceeding. Mr. David Buckles, District School Superintendent for Putnam County School District, testified concerning his opinion on Respondent's loss of effectiveness as a teacher. Before offering that testimony Mr. Buckles had been accepted as an expert to provide opinion testimony concerning loss of effectiveness in the community to teach. Upon reviewing the contents of correspondence from Respondent to Ms. Smith, Mr. Buckles opined that the authorship of that item, Petitioner's Exhibit numbered 4 and its delivery to Ms. Smith, then a 16-year- old student, followed by public admission of such contact between Respondent and Ms. Smith would cause Respondent to be less than effective in teaching. Respondent in his testimony at trial, had acknowledged writing the correspondence found in Petitioner's Exhibit numbered 4. Additionally, Mr. Buckles offered the opinion that a teacher would lose effectiveness in the instance where the teacher stated a desire to father a child by one of his students, as published in the community. Respondent in his trial testimony acknowledged that in one of the letters written to Ms. Smith, he had stated that he wanted to father Ms. Smith's children. Moreover, Mr. Buckles offered the opinion that a teacher would lose effectiveness in the community to serve as a teacher if the teacher admitted in a public forum that the teacher was in love with a 16-year-old student. Respondent in his trial testimony acknowledged that he loved Ms. Smith at the time of their relationship. Respondent in his trial testimony also acknowledged writing letters to Ms. Smith which expressed his love for her. Mr. Buckles expressed the opinion that a teacher, who in a public forum acknowledges having discussed having sexual intercourse with a student on a future date, had lost effectiveness. In the trial testimony Respondent indicated that he had talked with Ms. Smith about having sex after they were going to be married, and that it was something Respondent and Ms. Smith knew would take place as part of the marriage. Additionally, Mr. Buckles' opinion countenances the previously mentioned discussion in correspondence from Respondent to Ms. Smith, reported in the newspaper and testified about in hearing, in which Respondent acknowledged authoring the correspondence which includes the phrase "I want to make love to you . . . and hold you in my arms and lay there for hours." Eventually, the relationship between Respondent and Ms. Smith was found out. Although Ms. Smith denied their relationship initially, upon its discovery, out of fear of losing her attachment to Respondent and getting in trouble, eventually, Ms. Smith admitted to the relationship. Ms. Smith and K.W. were removed from Respondent's home. Respondent did not carry forward his stated intentions to divorce his wife and marry Ms. Smith. Respondent continues to be married to Teresa Dorsey.

Recommendation Upon consideration of the findings of fact and conclusions of law reached, it is RECOMMENDED: That a final order be entered by the Putnam County School Board dismissing Respondent from his employment with the Putnam County School District. DONE AND ENTERED this 7th day of May, 1999, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. CHARLES C. ADAMS Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 7th day of May, 1999.

Florida Laws (2) 120.569120.57 Florida Administrative Code (3) 6B-1.0016B-1.0066B-4.009
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CHARLIE CRIST, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs DANIEL W. GARDINER, 02-002998PL (2002)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Gainesville, Florida Jul. 29, 2002 Number: 02-002998PL Latest Update: Jun. 05, 2024
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