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PAM STEWART, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs EDWARD THOMAS, 15-000954PL (2015)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Blountstown, Florida Feb. 19, 2015 Number: 15-000954PL Latest Update: Sep. 30, 2015

The Issue The issue for determination is whether Respondent violated section 1012.795(1)(g) and (j), Florida Statutes (2012), and Florida Administrative Code Rule 6A-10.081(3)(a), and if so, what penalty should be imposed.

Findings Of Fact Based on the demeanor and credibility of the witnesses and other evidence presented at hearing, and upon the entire record of this proceeding, the following facts are found: Respondent holds Florida Educator’s Certificate 739881, covering the areas of Physical Education and Exceptional Student Education, which is valid through June 30, 2015. He has held a certification in Florida since 2005. Respondent is African- American. At all times relevant to the charges in the Administrative Complaint, Respondent has been employed as an In- School Suspension (ISS) Teacher at the CARE Program in the Calhoun County School District (District). The CARE acronym is shorthand for character, achievement, respect, and education. The CARE Program is a second-chance school for students who have been suspended for more than ten days, have been suspended for drug offenses, or who are currently in a juvenile facility. The first time a student is assigned to the CARE Program, it is for a 90-day term. If the student does well, he or she returns to their regular school. The second referral is for a period of 180 days; the third for a year. The CARE Program generally has approximately 30-40 students at a time. In November 2012, the program had approximately 31-32 students. The CARE Program is located at a facility that used to house a vocational complex, next to the adult school. Also housed in this complex is the In-School Suspension (ISS) class, where students serve in-school suspensions of less than ten days. Students are referred to the ISS class for behavior such as tardiness and being disruptive in the classroom. The number of students in the ISS classroom varies, because it depends on how many students have been referred. There is a limit to how many students can be in the ISS class, because each school has a cap on the number of students it can refer at any given time. Testimony varied as to how many students were present at the time of the incident giving rise to this case. The most reasonable and credible testimony indicates that on November 14, 2012, there were approximately 15-20 students in the ISS class. There was adequate room in the ISS classroom for the number of students in the class. Some time prior to the incident giving rise to this case, part of the complex where the CARE Program and the ISS class were housed underwent construction. As a result, several staff members working in the complex had tires punctured because of construction debris in the area. The District would reimburse employees for repairs to tires that were punctured if the employee submitted the documentation related to the repair. Respondent had requested two new tires, as opposed to repair of his tires. Although the record is not clear when Respondent made his request, there was some delay in any action being taken to address it. Wilson McClellan was the superintendent of the District from 2000 to 2004, and then again from 2008 to 2012, after which he retired. Mr. McClellan, who is Caucasian, was an educator in Calhoun County for approximately 25 years. He had worked with Respondent in a summer recreation program at some point before Respondent was hired by the District. Mr. McClellan had told Respondent that if there was an opening in Calhoun County, he would give Respondent a call and let him know. On November 13, 2012, Mr. McClellan was defeated in his bid for re-election as superintendent. The next day, he visited the CARE Program and spoke with several of the staff there, presumably to touch base with people with whom he had worked. He came to the CARE Program around midday, and class was in session. While he was there, Mr. McClellan went to speak with Respondent about Respondent’s pending request for reimbursement for his tires. While repairs had been authorized, no other staff member had requested new tires. Mr. McClellan told Respondent that he would need to submit documentation for the reimbursement for action by the School Board, as opposed to the superintendent, because Mr. McClellan did not feel comfortable authorizing the expenditure when no one else had requested reimbursement for new tires instead of repair of existing ones. Mr. McClellan knocked on the door to the ISS classroom and he and Respondent went into the small office adjacent to it. When he told Respondent about the need to submit the reimbursement matter to the Board, Respondent became angry and walked back into his classroom. Respondent told McClellan, in the presence of his students, that if he had a different last name and a different color, then the results would have been different. McClellan denied Respondent’s claim and left the classroom. Mr. Thomas’s classroom had an inside door, going into a hallway, and an outside door that led to a covered pavilion area with picnic tables. Also adjacent to the area with the picnic tables is Barbara Hathaway’s office. Ms. Hathaway served as the Dean of Students for the CARE Program, a position that functions much like a principal does in a traditional school. When Mr. McClellan left the classroom, he went to the area with the picnic tables. Ms. Hathaway saw him there and came out to speak with him. While Ms. Hathaway and Mr. McClellan were speaking, Respondent came out of his classroom and asked Ms. Hathaway to get someone to cover his class because he was “pretty hot” and needed to walk. According to Ms. Hathaway, Respondent was agitated and upset. She did not understand him to mean he was overheated based on temperature, but rather that he was upset or angry, and her testimony is credited. Without waiting for coverage for his class, Respondent walked away from the classroom and the area where Mr. McClellan and Ms. Hathaway were standing and up the sidewalk. Ms. Hathaway left to ask another staff member to cover the classroom and was going to walk back outside when she heard Mr. Thomas speaking loudly. She could not hear what Mr. Thomas said, but his tone was agitated. She noticed that the ISS classroom door to the outside was open, and the students could hear the heated conversation between their instructor and the superintendent, so she opened the inside door and told a student to shut the outside door. Ms. Hathaway thought from the students’ reactions that they were enjoying the interchange between Mr. McClellan and Mr. Thomas. She used her phone to call for a resource officer because she felt the situation was agitated and that someone should be present to intervene. After Ms. Hathaway walked inside to arrange for coverage for the classroom, Mr. Thomas had walked back down the sidewalk to Mr. McClellan. He repeated to Mr. McClellan that in this county, if he had a different last name and a different color, it would probably be a different result. Mr. McClellan became impatient and said, “shut up Ed, I am just not wanting to hear any more about that.” Mr. Thomas walked closer to him, glared and said, “if you ever say shut up again to me, I will be the last black man you ever say that to.”1/ Mr. Thomas is a large, imposing figure, and according to Mr. McClellan, he spoke in a loud, angry voice and “bowed up” in a threatening gesture; however, he was never close enough to the superintendent to actually strike him. While Ms. Hathaway could not hear the actual language being used, both Ms. Barbee, who came to cover the ISS classroom, and the students in the classroom were able to hear the colorful exchange. Ms. Barbee testified that she did not remember the actual conversation, but that there was “some cussing and hollering.” Her statement written the day of the incident indicates that Mr. Thomas used the term “f**k.” Likewise, P.G., one of the students in the classroom, testified that Mr. Thomas told Mr. McClellan, “don’t tell me to shut the f**k up,” and for him to “shut the f**k up.” P.G. believed the students in the room were shocked at the interchange.2/ After this exchange, Respondent once again walked away from Mr. McClellan and up the sidewalk away from his class. On both occasions, Respondent was five to six classroom lengths away from his classroom, and unable to monitor in any way the actions of his students. Ms. Hathaway, as noted above, was not present for this heated exchange and did not hear what was said. When she returned outside, Mr. Thomas was standing on the sidewalk up the hill from the classroom. She spoke to Mr. McClellan, who told her about the conversation with Mr. Thomas. What he told her involved the reimbursement issue and not any complaint about overcrowding. About that time Warren Tanner, the school resource officer, came around the corner. When he arrived, he saw Ms. Hathaway and Mr. McClellan sitting on a bench under the pavilion, and Mr. Thomas was standing at the end of the driveway at the end of the building. Mr. Tanner asked what had happened, and Mr. McClellan told him that Mr. Thomas had threatened him. Mr. Thomas walked back down the hill to where the others were standing, and Mr. McClellan told him to go home for the rest of the day. Mr. Thomas went into his classroom briefly, then came out and asked Mr. McClellan if he was sending him home for the rest of the day, and was told, “yes.” Mr. Thomas got in his truck to leave, then got out and asked Mr. Tanner if this was going to be a complaint, and Mr. Tanner told him, not at this time. Mr. McClellan returned to his office and called David House, the school board attorney. He related the events of the morning and told Mr. House that, in light of past behavior by Mr. Thomas and the current incident, he was considering terminating Mr. Thomas. Later that afternoon, Vicki Davis, assistant superintendent for the District, called Mr. Tanner and asked him to collect statements from those who witnessed or heard the morning’s events. Mr. Tanner got statements from Mr. McClellan, Ms. Hathaway, Ms. Barbee, and several students in Mr. Thomas’s class.3/ On Thursday, November 15, 2012, Mr. McClellan wrote to Mr. Thomas advising him that he was suspended with pay, effective immediately. Respondent had been the subject of discipline previously, and there had been concerns expressed about his behavior during his employment in Calhoun County. For example, in January 2008, he received a formal reprimand for allegedly confronting a fellow teacher in front of students in a loud, belligerent, and profane manner.4/ On June 3, 2008, Respondent received a second reprimand for allegedly leaving a magazine with an unclothed woman on the cover in the Health Building bathroom where it could be viewed by students. On January 13, 2011, Neva Miller, the principal of Blountstown Middle School, wrote a lengthy letter to Superintendent McClellan detailing several alleged incidents involving Mr. Thomas that caused her to “express concerns that I have as to the effectiveness and concerning anger control abilities of Edward Thomas.” A two-page document titled “Ed Thomas Issues Calendar Year 2011” was placed in his personnel file, recounting a series of concerns regarding alleged deficiencies in his performance. On February 23, 2012, Ms. Hathaway, as Dean of the CARE Program, documented an alleged incident involving a ninth-grade student.5/ On December 11, 2012, Mr. McClellan’s successor, Superintendent Ralph Yoder, issued a Notice of Charges for Dismissal to the Calhoun County School Board, recommending Respondent be suspended without pay and dismissed from employment by the District. The Notice of Charges stated, “Mr. Thomas has a history of engaging in insubordinate, hostile and confrontational behavior toward faculty members and administrators, which began in 2007 and culminated in an incident that occurred on November 14, 2012, involving the former Superintendent of Schools, Mr. Tommy McClellan. Mr. Thomas has been repeatedly instructed by persons in authority to correct his behavior, but he has failed to do so.” The Notice goes on to describe 13 separate incidents and references several others. Only the incident involving Mr. McClellan on November 14, 2012, is alleged in the Administrative Complaint, and Petitioner presented no evidence to prove what happened with respect to the other incidents. No findings are made concerning the validity of the other allegations in the Notice of Charges. It is considered solely to show that the District took action with respect to Respondent’s employment. Likewise, it is unclear what, if any, proceedings were conducted with respect to the Notice of Charges before the school board. Respondent acknowledged that his employment was terminated as of December 11, 2012, the day the Notice was issued.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Education Practices Commission enter a Final Order finding that Respondent has violated section 1012.795(1)(g) and (j), as well as Florida Administrative Code Rule 6A-10.081(3)(a). It is further recommended that the Commission suspend Respondent’s teaching certificate for one year; that he submit to an evaluation for anger management by the Recovery Network on terms to be set by the Education Practices Commission; and that upon re-employment as an educator, Respondent be placed on probation for a period of three years, with terms and conditions to be set by the Commission. DONE AND ENTERED this 19th day of June, 2015, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S LISA SHEARER NELSON 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 19th day of June, 2015.

Florida Laws (6) 1012.7951012.7961012.798120.569120.57120.68
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TAYLOR COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD vs NATALIE WHALEN, 05-000759 (2005)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Perry, Florida Mar. 01, 2005 Number: 05-000759 Latest Update: Oct. 19, 2005

The Issue The issue is whether Respondent's employment with the District School Board of Taylor County, Florida, should be terminated.

Findings Of Fact The School Board has employed Dr. Whalen since 1997. She was, when first employed, a teacher at Gladys Morse Elementary School and then was employed as a teacher at Taylor Elementary School. Until January 19, 2005, she taught at Taylor Elementary School. Her employment was pursuant to a professional services contract. Dr. Whalen has been confined to a wheelchair for almost 55 years. She cannot move her lower extremities and she is without feeling in her lower extremities. On January 19, 2005, she was approximately 58 years of age. During times pertinent Dr. Whalen taught a "varying exceptionalities" class. A "varying exceptionalities" class is provided for students who have a specific learning disability, or have emotional difficulties, or have a physical handicap or handicaps. She has been an exceptional student education teacher for about 20 years. She has never been disciplined by an employer during her career. In addition to her teaching activities, she is County Coordinator for the Special Olympics. The School Board operates the school system in Taylor County. The School Board is a party to a Master Teacher Contract (Master Teacher Contract), with The Taylor Education Association, which is an affiliate of the Florida Education Association, the American Federation of Teachers, the AFL-CIO, and the National Education Association. This contract governs the relations between teachers, and others, and the School Board. Accordingly, it governs the relations between the School Board and Dr. Whalen. Kathy Kriedler is currently a teacher at Taylor Elementary School. She is certified in teaching emotionally impaired children and has taught emotionally impaired children in Taylor County since 1983. She is an outstanding teacher who was recently named Taylor County Elementary School Teacher of the Year and Taylor County District Teacher of the Year. Ms. Kriedler is a master level instructor in Nonviolent Crisis Intervention, which is a program of the Crises Prevention Institute. The use of skills associated with the program is generally referred to as CPI. CPI arms teachers with the skills necessary to de-escalate a crisis involving a student, or, in the event de-escalation fails, provides the skills necessary to physically control students. Ms. Kriedler has been the School Board's CPI teacher since 1987. CPI teaches that there are four stages of crisis development and provides four staff responses to each stage. These stages and responses are: (1) Anxiety-Supportive; (2) Defensive-Directive; (3) Acting Out Person-Nonviolent Physical Crisis Intervention; and (4) Tension Reduction-Therapeutic Rapport. The thrust of CPI is the avoidance of physical intervention. The CPI Workbook notes that, "The crisis development model . . . is an extremely valuable tool that can be utilized to determine where a person is during an escalation process." It then notes, helpfully, "Granted, human behavior is not an orderly 1-4 progression." The CPI Workbook provides certain responses for a situation that has devolved into violence. CPI physical control techniques include the "children's control position" which is also referred to as the "basket hold." CPI also provides a maneuver called the "bite release" which is used when a child bites a teacher and the "choke release" which is used when a child chokes a teacher. CPI specifically forbids sitting or lying on a child who is lying on the floor because this could cause "positional asphyxia." In other words, the act of lying upon a child could prevent a child from breathing which could result in injury or death. Ms. Kriedler teaches CPI throughout the District. The School Board encourages teachers to learn and apply CPI in their dealings with students. The use of CPI is not, however, mandatory School Board policy nor is it required by the State Board of Education. Dr. Whalen took and passed Ms. Kriedler's CPI course and took and passed her refresher course. She had at least 16 hours of instruction in CPI. She could not accomplish some of the holds taught because of her physical handicap. A memorandum dated April 7, 2003, and signed by Principal Sylvia Ivey, was presented to Dr. Whalen by Principal Ivey. The memorandum addressed conversations that Dr. Whalen had with two of her colleagues on April 3, 2003. The memorandum recited that these conversations raised concerns with regard to whether Dr. Whalen was using appropriate CPI techniques. The memorandum stated that Dr. Whalen's classroom would be video- taped for the remainder of the school year, that Dr. Whalen was to document each case of restraint used, that she should use proper CPI techniques, and that she should contact the office should a crisis situation arise in her classroom. The record reveals that Dr. Whalen's classroom was already being video-taped as early as November 20, 2002. It is certain that the classroom was being video-taped daily from April 2003, until the end of the school year. By January 2005 the practice of video-taping Dr. Whalen's classroom on a daily basis had ended. The incident giving rise to this case was not video-taped. Principal Ivey's memorandum of April 7, 2003, specified that ". . . Mr. Howard and I informed you that we will video-tape your Classroom . . . ." Thus it is clear that it was not Dr. Whalen's duty to cause the classroom to be video-taped. During January 2005, a school resource officer, who is a deputy sheriff, was available should it become necessary to physically restrain a child who was a threat to himself or herself or others. On January 19, 2005, J.R. a female, was a student in Dr. Whalen's classroom. J.R. was ten years old and in the third grade. J.R. had been a student in Dr. Whalen's classroom since about January 10, 2005. Dr. Whalen did not know much about J.R.'s history on January 19, 2005. At the hearing J.R. appeared physically to be approximately as large as Dr. Whalen. A determination as to exactly who was the larger could not be made because Dr. Whalen was seated in a wheelchair at the hearing. Assistant Principal Verges found that J.R.'s physical strength was greater than average for an elementary school student when once he had to restrain her after she bit another person. J.R. brought a CD player to class on January 19, 2005, and after lunchtime, Dr. Whalen discovered the CD player and confiscated it. Dr. Whalen took possession of the CD player because school rules forbid students to have CD players in class. Dr. Whalen put it in a drawer by her desk. When this happened, in J.R.'s words she, "Got mad." A heated discussion between Dr. Whalen and J.R., about the dispossession of the CD player ensued, but after a brief time, according to Dr. Whalen's aide, Angela Watford, "the argument settled." Even though Ms. Watford's lunch break had begun, she remained in the room, at Dr. Whalen's request, until she was satisfied that the dispute had calmed. Subsequent to the departure of Ms. Watford, J.R. approached Dr. Whalen who was seated behind her desk working. The configuration of the desk and furniture used by Dr. Whalen was such that she was surrounded by furniture on three sides. In order to obtain the CD player, it was necessary for J.R. to enter this confined space. J.R. entered this space, moving behind Dr. Whalen, and reached for the drawer containing the CD player in an effort to retrieve it. When Dr. Whalen asked her what she was doing, J.R. said, "I am getting my CD player and getting out of this f class." Dr. Whalen told J.R. to return to her desk. J.R. continued in her effort to obtain the CD player and succeeded in opening the drawer and grasping the headset part of the CD player. Dr. Whalen attempted to close the drawer. J.R. reacted violently and this surprised Dr. Whalen. J.R. attempted to strike Dr. Whalen. Dr. Whalen reared back to avoid the blow and then put her arm around J.R. When J.R. pulled away, this caused Dr. Whalen to fall from her wheelchair on top of J.R.'s back at about a 45-degree angle. Immediately thereafter, J.R. bit Dr. Whalen several times. The bites broke Dr. Whalen's skin in three places and the pain caused her to cry. J.R. began cursing, screaming, and kicking. J.R. said she was going to "kick the s _ _ _" out of her teacher. In fact, while on the carpet, J.R. kicked Dr. Whalen numerous times. Dr. Whalen believed she would be in danger of additional harm if she allowed J.R. to regain her feet. This belief was reasonable. J.R. was in no danger of asphyxiation during this event because Dr. Whalen removed part of her weight from J.R. by extending her arms. Upon returning from lunch Ms. Watford spotted T.B., a boy who appears to be eight to ten years of age. T.B. was standing outside of Dr. Whalen's classroom and he calmly said to Ms. Watford, "Help." Ms. Watford entered the classroom and observed Dr. Whalen lying on top of and across J.R., who was face down on the carpeted floor, and who was cursing and kicking while Dr. Whalen tried to restrain her. Ms. Watford ran over to assist in restraining her by putting her legs between J.R.'s legs. J.R. thereafter tried to hit Ms. Watford with her right hand. Ms. Watford grabbed J.R.'s right arm and was severely bitten on the knuckle by J.R. The three of them ended up, Ms. Watford related, "in a wad." Within seconds of Ms. Watford's intervention, Frances Durden, an aide in the classroom next door came on the scene. She was followed by Takeisha McIntyre, the dean of the school, and Assistant Principal Vincent Verges. Ms. McIntyre and Mr. Verges were able to calm J.R. and safely separate her from Dr. Whalen. Then J.R. stated that Dr. Whalen had bitten her. Dr. Whalen and Ms. Watford went to the school's health clinic to have their wounds treated. The wounds were cleaned and Ms. Watford subsequently received an injection. While Dr. Whalen and Ms. Watford were at the health clinic, J.R. was ushered in by Ms. McIntyre. J.R.'s shirt was raised and the persons present observed two red marks between her shoulder blades. Dr. Whalen said that the marks must have been produced by her chin or that possibly her teeth may have contacted J.R.'s back. She said that she had forced her chin into J.R.'s back in an effort to stop J.R. from biting her. Ms. McIntyre took photographs of the marks. The photography was observed by Mr. Verges. The photographs reveal two red marks positioned between J.R.'s shoulder blades. The two marks are vertical and aligned with the backbone. They are from one, to one and one half inches in length. The skin is not broken. There is no wound. Teeth marks are not discernible. A teacher who has years of experience in the elementary or kindergarten education levels, and who has observed many bite marks, may offer an opinion as to whether a mark is a bite mark. Mr. Verges has the requisite experience to offer an opinion as to the nature of the marks on J.R.'s back and he observed the actual marks as well as the photographs. It is his opinion that the two marks were caused by a bite. Ms. McIntyre, who has also observed many bite marks in her career, and who observed the actual marks as well as the photographs, stated that the marks were consistent with a bite. Registered Nurse Cate Jacob, supervisor of the School Health Program observed J.R.'s back on January 19, 2005, and opined that the red marks on J.R.'s back were bite marks. J.R. reported via her mother, the day after the incident, that she had been bitten by a boy on the playground of Taylor Elementary School, by a black boy with baggy pants, possibly before the incident with Dr. Whalen. Facts presented at the hearing suggest that it is unlikely that J.R. was bitten under the circumstances described. T.B. was the only nonparticipant close to the actual combat who was a neutral observer. He did not see Dr. Whalen bite J.R., but did see her chin contact J.R.'s back and he heard Dr. Whalen say words to the effect, "I am going to make you say 'ouch.'" Dr. Whalen denied biting J.R. She stated at the time of the event, and under oath at the hearing, that she forcibly contacted J.R.'s back with her chin. She stated that it was possible that in the heat of the struggle her teeth may have contacted J.R.'s back. The opinion of the school personnel as to the origin of the marks upon J.R.'s back is entitled to great weight. On the other hand, a study of the photographs exposed immediately after the incident, reveals no teeth marks and no broken skin. The marks are consistent with pressing one's chin upon another's back or pressing one's teeth in one's back. In the latter case, whether J.R. was bitten may be a matter of definition. Generally, a bite occurs when the victim experiences a grip or wound like that experienced by Ms. Watford or Dr. Whalen in this incident. Although J.R. asserted that the marks occurred because of the actions of, "a boy on the playground," given J.R.'s general lack of credibility, that explanation is of questionable reliability. The evidence, taken as a whole, does not lend itself to a finding as to the origin of the marks on J.R.'s back. Principal Ivey's memorandum of April 7, 2003, specified that ". . . Mr. Howard and I informed you that we will video-tape your classroom . . . ." Thus it is clear that it was not Dr. Whalen's duty to cause the classroom to be video-taped. It is found that the assault on Dr. Whalen was sudden and unexpected. J.R. was suspended from Taylor Elementary School for ten days following this incident. Sylvia Ivey has been the principal of Taylor Elementary for three years. She has evaluated Dr. Whalen three times. She has evaluated Dr. Whalen as "effective," which is the top mark that a teacher may receive. Dr. Whalen received memoranda of counseling on December 2, 2002, and April 7, 2003.

Recommendation Based upon the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that Dr. Whalen be immediately reinstated to her former position without diminution of pay or benefits, pursuant to the Master Teacher Contract. DONE AND ENTERED this 15th day of June, 2005, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S HARRY L. HOOPER 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 15th day of June, 2005. COPIES FURNISHED: Mary F. Aspros, Esquire Meyer and Brooks, P.A. 2544 Blairstone Pines Drive Post Office Box 1547 Tallahassee, Florida 32302 Angela M. Ball, Esquire Post Office Box 734 Perry, Florida 32348 Daniel J. Woodring, General Counsel Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1244 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 Honorable John L. Winn Commissioner of Education Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1514 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 Oscar M. Howard, Jr., Superintendent Taylor County School Board 318 North Clark Street Perry, Florida 32347

Florida Laws (2) 1012.33120.57
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MARION COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD vs BRANDI STEPHENS, 19-002885 (2019)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Ocala, Florida May 30, 2019 Number: 19-002885 Latest Update: Dec. 24, 2024
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GERARD ROBINSON, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs JENNIFER MARIE LANGAN, 12-003648PL (2012)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Fort Myers, Florida Nov. 13, 2012 Number: 12-003648PL Latest Update: Oct. 16, 2013

The Issue The issue in this case is whether, and how, Respondent should be disciplined for failing to take appropriate action regarding a middle school student who brought a knife to school.

Findings Of Fact Respondent holds Florida Educator Certificate 1063574 and is licensed in the fields of English, English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL), Reading, and Exceptional Student Education. She began teaching at Bonita Springs Middle School in Lee County in September 2011, after the start of the 2011-2012 school year. During instruction in her fourth period class on February 13, 2012, Respondent heard a student ask another student, who was an Exceptional Student Education (ESE) student with emotional issues, "was that a knife?" The ESE student responded, "Drama!" When Respondent looked up, she saw the ESE student place something in her lap, out of Respondent's view. Respondent did not see what it was but saw a flash of silver or metal. The class started to "act up," and Respondent decided to diffuse the incident and quiet the class by telling the ESE student to "put it away." The ESE student then put the object in her backpack. When the class ended, Respondent approached the ESE student and asked if she had a knife. The student denied it. Respondent told the student, if she had a knife, that would be unacceptable, but Respondent did not pursue the matter any further at the time and allowed the student to leave for her next class. During Respondent's eighth period class, the last period of the day, Respondent asked her student-aide, who also was a student in her fourth period class, about the incident during fourth period. The student-aide told Respondent that it was a knife, like a small steak knife, and that the ESE student had been licking it. After speaking with her student-aide, Respondent sent the school's ESE director, who also was the ESE student's caseworker, an electronic message simply asking to discuss the student with her when she had a moment. No details about the incident were included in the message out of Respondent's concern that it would be a public record. Respondent did not receive a response by the end of the school day. The ESE director received the message after hours. The next morning, Respondent saw the ESE director at a teacher's meeting and explained the previous day's incident. The ESE director was concerned about the delay in doing anything else about it and immediately went to the school principal, who was in the cafeteria, as were several other students, including Respondent's ESE student. The principal immediately went to the student and asked if she had a knife. The student admitted she did and thought it was no big deal since Respondent did nothing about it the day before. The student later stated that she was depressed and was considering cutting herself with the knife. Respondent now understands that she did not take the appropriate action on February 13, 2012. However, she contends that there are mitigating factors to consider, and any discipline should be constructive (such as, additional training), not punitive. Respondent attempts to defend herself to an extent by saying she did not actually see the knife during fourth period. However, it is clear that Respondent heard students asking about a knife, and saw something silver or metallic that could have been a knife, and was aware of the student's emotional issues. In light of those circumstances, Respondent should not have been satisfied with the student's denial that she had a knife; she should have involved the school's administrators and resource officer at that point. When she learned during eighth period that the student in fact had a knife, she should not have been satisfied with an unacknowledged electronic message to the ESE director. Respondent also attempts to deflect some blame onto the school for not making sure she knew what to do about incidents like the one that confronted her on February 13, 2012. It may well be true, as she testified, that Respondent did not get a copy of the Parent Guide and Code of Conduct for Students, normally distributed to teachers at the beginning of the school year, which identifies a kitchen knife as a weapon and prohibits it. Petitioner attempted to impeach Respondent's denial of receipt of the document by citing a handful of student discipline referrals by Respondent that use incident types taken from that document. One incident type, albeit not used by Respondent in any of her referrals, was possession of weapons; however, the form does not define weapons. Respondent testified convincingly that she used the forms without reference to the source document. Nonetheless, she knew it would be unacceptable for a student to have a knife at school. When Respondent started teaching at the school, she was offered an opportunity to take the APPLES program for new teachers, which provides information and training on codes of conduct, including provisions to protect the safety of students and faculty. Respondent opted out, stating that she took the APPLES program during her previous employment in Collier County. While perhaps not handed to Respondent when she started teaching at Bonita Springs Middle School, the Parent Guide and Code of Conduct for Students was easily accessible from Respondent's school computer via a program called SharePoint that was a link on the home page. Respondent denies ever accessing the material from her computer. However, Respondent prepared a professional development plan shortly after she started teaching at the school in October 2011. It included a plan to train on how to download documents from SharePoint, but Respondent had not yet followed through on that plan by the time of the incident. Information also was available to Respondent in the form of an Agenda book that she was given. The Agenda book contained the school's rules, including one prohibiting weapons as nuisances and providing that they would be confiscated. It is not clear whether any of the information provided or available to Respondent would have told her what to do in circumstances where she suspected, but was not certain, that a student had a knife, and the student denied it. Based on the facts of this case, additional training is appropriate and actually is desired by Respondent. On the other hand, Respondent would rather not be reprimanded, submit to supervised probation, and pay a $500 fine and pay costs, as Petitioner proposes. Under the facts and circumstances of this case, Petitioner's proposal would be harsh, not constructive, and possibly demoralizing. The evidence is clear that Respondent will follow the rules she is given and take appropriate action in a situation if she knows what is expected of her. A repeat of the failure to act appropriately in a situation similar to the incident on February 13, 2012, is not likely.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Education Practices Commission find Respondent guilty of violating rule 6B-1.006(3)(a), issue a letter of reprimand, and place her on a short term of probation conditioned on the completion of appropriate additional training. DONE AND ENTERED this 8th day of April, 2013, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S J. LAWRENCE JOHNSTON 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 8th day of April, 2013.

Florida Laws (1) 1012.795
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PAM STEWART, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs ERIN SCHEUMEISTER, 14-001052PL (2014)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Port St. Lucie, Florida Mar. 11, 2014 Number: 14-001052PL Latest Update: Jan. 27, 2015

The Issue Whether Respondent committed any of the offenses alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint dated March 26, 2014, and, if so, what is the appropriate disciplinary penalty?

Findings Of Fact Petitioner is responsible for the investigation and prosecution of complaints against holders of Florida Educational Certificates accused of violating section 1012.795, Florida Statutes, and related rules. Respondent Erin S. Scheumeister holds Professional Educator’s Certificate 982133. Valid through June 30, 2015, the certificate covers the areas of Elementary Education, English for Speakers of Other Languages, Exceptional Student Education, and Autism Spectrum Disorders. At all times material to this proceeding, the St. Lucie County School District (District) employed Ms. Scheumeister as an Exceptional Student Education teacher at Samuel S. Gaines Academy K-8 (“Samuel Gaines” or “Gaines Academy”). During the 2012-2013 school year, a typical school day in Ms. Scheumeister’s class ended with a science or social studies lesson which would be presented jointly with the class of Ms. Madelina. Ms. Madelina was another Exceptional Student Education teacher at Gaines Academy, and she and Ms. Scheumeister would co-teach the class. For the science lesson, Ms. Madelina would bring her class to Ms. Scheumeister’s classroom. Ms. Madelina’s self-care aide, Jane Alice Waite, assisted with the joint science lesson. During the 2012-2013 school year, two support staff members, a behavior tech and a paraprofessional, were assigned to Ms. Scheumeister’s class. Ms. Scheumeister is charged with violations that flow from an incident that occurred during a joint science class on Friday, March 8, 2013. The joint science class was conducted, as was customary, at the end of the school day but in Ms. Madelina’s absence because she was absent from school the entire day. In her place was Amy Crossland, a frequent substitute teacher at Gaines Academy. Ms. Crossland also substituted on occasion for Ms. Scheumeister when she was absent and had filled in for Ms. Scheumeister’s paraprofessional aide on more than one occasion so that she was familiar both with Ms. Scheumeister’s class and Ms. Madelina’s class and the arrangement for joint science or social studies classes at the end of the day. As Ms. Crossland put it at the hearing, “It [Ms. Scheumeister’s class] was a challenging classroom, so they [the Administration] would put me in there frequently because they knew I [could] do it.” Hr’g Tr. 11. One of the students in Ms. Scheumeister’s class was R.W., a nine-year-old male student with Autism Spectrum Disorder and Language Impairments. Described by Ms. Crossland as “a sweet kid but . . . a handful,” Hr’g Tr. 12, R.W. exhibited aggressive behavior on a regular, if not daily, basis. Ms. Scheumeister summed this behavior up as follows: He would hit, kick, punch staff, students, knock over desks, fall on the floor, roll around on the floor, knock over furniture. He would do self-injurious behavior such as pinching himself on the arm or he would run over into the kitchen and hit his head on . . . the counter where we have to block him from hurting himself. Hr’g Tr. 102. R.W.’s aggressive behavior was triggered when his routine was disrupted or he became upset. Whenever the trigger occurred, R.W.’s behavior became aggressive quickly. An example of R.W.’s aggressive behavior involved a sink in an island in the kitchen that is either adjoining the classroom or part of the classroom. The sink had a faucet that could be rotated away from a position above the sink into a position above the floor. In moments of acting out, R.W. would swivel the faucet and turn the water on so that water would pour onto the floor. Over the course of the several times that Ms. Crossland was present in Ms. Scheumeister’s class, she saw R.W. turn the faucet on above the floor. Ms. Scheumeister’s response usually consisted of attempts to redirect R.W. to appropriate behavior. By the time of the incident on March 8, 2013, R.W. had swiveled the faucet and turned it on to spill water onto the floor more than once that day. These spills occurred during the joint science class in the presence of students from the two classes of Mses. Scheumeister and Madelina. Immediately after the first time, R.W. ran from the sink and dropped to the floor, which was common behavior for R.W. when he did not get his way or was disciplined. Ms. Scheumeister “raised her voice a little bit,” Hr’g Tr. 13, and her facial expression indicated that her patience with R.W. was wearing thin. Ms. Crossland attributed Ms. Scheumeister’s less-than calm reaction to R.W.’s misbehavior, plus the added stress of the joint science lesson with so many students present in the classroom at once. Ms. Scheumeister did not do anything to R.W. physically the first time he ran the water onto the classroom floor on March 8, 2013. Her reaction became physical, however, when R.W. did it again. Ms. Scheumeister grabbed R.W.’s shoulders with both of her hands. With R.W. kicking and screaming, Ms. Scheumeister sat him on the floor. Ms. Scheumeister pushed and pulled R.W. through the water in what witnesses described as a mopping action. His shirt and shorts became wet. Ms. Scheumeister followed this physical discipline with words to R.W. with the effect that if he thought it was funny to spill water on the floor, she thought it would be funny for him to have to explain to his parents why his clothes were wet. Jane Alice Waite, a paraprofessional aide assigned to Ms. Madelina’s class, observed Ms. Scheumeister push and pull R.W. through the water on the classroom floor. Ms. Waite’s response was immediate. She gathered Ms. Madelina’s students, left Ms. Scheumeister’s classroom with them, and returned the students to Ms. Madelina’s classroom. Ms. Waite did not want her students to remain in the presence of Ms. Scheumeister’s actions with R.W. for fear that they would be upset or become over-excited, a tendency of autistic students. Ms. Waite appreciates that maintaining order in a classroom of autistic students can be a task that is “overwhelming.” Hr’g Tr. 46. Nonetheless, Ms. Waite found Ms. Scheumeister’s method of discipline of R.W. to amount to a loss of control and to be unjustifiable and inappropriate. Morgan Kelly was the behavior tech in Ms. Scheumeister’s classroom the day of the incident. Ms. Kelly confirmed the testimony of Mses. Crossland and Waite. She saw Ms. Scheumeister “proceed with the mopping action dragging [R.W.] back and forth across the water.” Hr’g Tr. 53. Ms. Kelly’s immediate reaction was to offer to change R.W.’s clothing. Ms. Scheumeister reiterated that R.W. could go home wet and his parents can wonder why. R.W. responded to the comment by again turning on the faucet and running water onto the floor. Ms. Scheumeister grabbed R.W. and dragged him through the water again and then instructed Ms. Kelly to put R.W. on the bus wet without a change in clothing. R.W. rode the bus home in wet clothing. The incident with R.W. was not the first time Ms. Kelly had observed Ms. Scheumeister act inappropriately with the autistic students in her classroom. On one occasion, Ms. Scheumeister disparaged her students for their inability to answer questions about a topic at kindergarten level that she had just read to them. On other occasions, Ms. Scheumeister said to some of her students that she intended to “choke them out.” Ms. Scheumeister also on more than one occasion pulled a student’s tee shirt over the back of the chair in which they were sitting so that the student could not get up. Ms. Kelly reported the incident with R.W. to Carolyn Wilkins, the principal of Gaines Academy at approximately 5:30 p.m. on the evening of March 8, 2013, a few hours after it occurred. Ms. Crossland also reported the matter. Rather than to the principal, Ms. Crossland submitted the report to the Exceptional Student Education Department chairperson. In the investigation that ensued, Mses. Kelly, Crossland, and Waite provided written statements. Ms. Waite’s view of the incident with R.W. differed from Ms. Crossland’s in one respect. Ms. Waite was “not sure” how R.W. ended up in the water. But her statement was consistent with the other two statements in that Ms. Waite wrote that Ms. Scheumeister “pulled him in the water two or three time[s] and stated she was not going to change him and he was going home wet and he got on the bus wet.” Pet’r’s Ex. 4. In the wake of the report from Ms. Kelly, Ms. Wilkins called the assistant superintendent of Human Resources. The assistant superintendent directed Principal Wilkins to call the Department of Children and Families and the school resource officer. Ms. Wilkins did so. She followed up the reports with a call to Ms. Scheumeister. In the conversation with Ms. Scheumeister, the principal informed her of the allegations, and ordered Ms. Scheumeister to report to the District office on the following Monday. The District followed its procedures dictated by reports of a teacher’s inappropriate conduct with a student. The District commenced an investigation, and Ms. Scheumeister was transferred to the District office on what the District refers to as a “temporary duty assignment,” Hr’g Tr. 81, or “TDA.” See Pet’r’s Ex. 7. In keeping with standard procedure, the District hand-delivered to Ms. Scheumeister a copy of a written document entitled “Notice of Investigation and TDA” dated March 11, 2013, the Monday after the incident with R.W. In May 2013, Principal Wilkins sent a letter dated May 29, 2013, to Ms. Scheumeister. It informed her that Principal Wilkins had decided not to recommend Ms. Scheumeister for reappointment for the 2013-2014 school year. An Administrative Complaint was executed on November 7, 2013. On March 26, 2014, Petitioner moved to amend the Administrative Complaint. The motion was granted following Respondent’s notice of withdrawal of her opposition to the amendment. A section of the Amended Administrative Complaint entitled “MATERIAL ALLEGATIONS” contains three paragraphs, numbered 3, 4, and 5. Paragraph 3 alleges: Respondent twice grabbed R.W., a 9-year-old student diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder and Language Impairment, and dragged him across the floor in an attempt to mop up a puddle of water that R.W. had spilled. During this, Respondent stated to the student, “You think it is funny to flood the room? Well, I think its funny your clothes are wet.” When another school personnel offered to change R.W.’s clothes, Respondent refused to allow it and commented she wanted R.W. to go home with wet clothes. Paragraph 4 alleges: Respondent made inappropriate comments or actions to her nine (9) students, who are diagnosed with Autism, including but not limited to, “I’m going to choke you out”; “That’s a kindergarten book and you (students) are not as smart as kindergarteners”; “It’s ok his (student’s) pants are too tight, he shouldn’t reproduce,”; putting student’s over their chairs to prevent them from getting out of their chair and yelling at students. Amended Administrative Complaint, executed March 26, 2014, EPC Case No. 123-2596. Paragraph 5 alleges that following an investigation, Ms. Scheumeister’s “employment contract was non- renewed for the 2013-2014 school year.” On the basis of the material allegations, the Amended Administrative Complaint charged Ms. Scheumeister as follows: STATUTE VIOLATIONS COUNT 1: The Respondent is in violation of Section 1012.795(1)(d), Florida Statutes, in that Respondent has been guilty of gross immorality or an act involving moral turpitude as defined by rule of the State Board of Education. COUNT 2: The Respondent is in violation of Section 1012.795(1)(g), Florida Statutes, in that Respondent has been found guilty of personal conduct which seriously reduces her effectiveness as an employee of the school board. COUNT 3: The Respondent is in violation of Section 1012.795(1)(j), Florida Statutes, in that Respondent has violated the Principles of Professional Conduct for the Education Profession prescribed by State Board of Education rules. RULE VIOLATIONS COUNT 4: The allegations of misconduct set forth herein are in violation of Rule 6A- 10.081(3)(a), Florida Administrative Code, in that Respondent has failed to make reasonable effort to protect the student from conditions harmful to learning and/or to the student’s mental health and/or physical health and/or safety. COUNT 5: The allegations of misconduct set forth herein are in violation of Rule 6A- 10.081(3)(e), Florida Administrative Code, in that Respondent has intentionally exposed a student to unnecessary embarrassment or disparagement. Ms. Scheumeister requested a formal hearing before DOAH on an Election of Rights form in which she disputed all allegations of the Administrative Complaint. On March 10, 2014, the Office of Professional Practices Services filed the case with the EPC, and the EPC announced in a letter dated March 11, 2014, that it would forward the case to DOAH.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that Respondent’s educator’s certificate be revoked for a period of not less than five years and that an appropriate fine be levied for each count. If Respondent, when eligible, reapplies for an educator’s certificate and receives one, a condition of the certificate should be probation for a period of five years with additional conditions appropriate to the facts of this case to be set by the Education Practices Commission. DONE AND ENTERED this 8th day of September, 2014, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S DAVID M. MALONEY 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 8th day of September, 2014. COPIES FURNISHED: Gretchen Kelley Brantley, Executive Director Education Practices Commission Department of Education 325 West Gaines Street, Suite 316 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 (eServed) Lois S. Tepper, Interim General Counsel Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1244 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 (eServed) Marian Lambeth, Bureau Chief Bureau of Professional Practices Services Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 224-E 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 (eServed) Carol R. Buxton, Esquire Florida Education Association 1516 East Hillcrest Street, Suite 109 Orlando, Florida 32803 (eServed) Charles T. Whitelock, Esquire Charles T. Whitelock, P.A. 300 Southeast 13th Street, Suite E Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33316 (eServed)

Florida Laws (5) 1012.795120.569120.57120.68775.021
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PAM STEWART, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs JOAN ANN GULLEY, 16-004593PL (2016)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:New Port Richey, Florida Aug. 15, 2016 Number: 16-004593PL Latest Update: Dec. 24, 2024
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MARION COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD vs SHIVONNE BENNETT, 19-002883 (2019)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Ocala, Florida May 30, 2019 Number: 19-002883 Latest Update: Dec. 24, 2024
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RICHARD CORCORAN, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs DIANE VELEZ, 20-000148PL (2020)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Jacksonville, Florida Jan. 15, 2020 Number: 20-000148PL Latest Update: Dec. 24, 2024

The Issue The issues to be determined are whether Respondent, Diane Velez, violated section 1012.795(1)(g) and (j), Florida Statutes (2017), and Florida Administrative Code Rule 6A-10.081(2)(a)1., and if so, what penalty should be imposed.

Findings Of Fact Based on the demeanor of the witnesses, the testimony given, and the documentary evidence received, the following Findings of Fact are made. Respondent holds Florida Educator’s Certificate 789520, covering the areas of Elementary Education, English for Speakers of Other Languages, (ESOL), and Exceptional Student Education (ESE), which is valid through June 30, 2020. At all times relevant to the allegations in the Administrative Complaint, Respondent was employed as an ESE teacher at Stillwell Middle School (Stillwell) in the Duval County School District. She has been teaching for approximately 20 years, with no prior discipline. Respondent teaches in a wing at Stillwell that is referred to as the SLA Unit, which stands for Supported Level Academics. The students in the SLA Unit are cognitively delayed and have all of their classes in this self- contained unit. The SLA Unit is located in a wing at the back of the school, near the bus loop. If someone is looking down the hall from the doors closest to the rest of the school, there are female and male bathrooms for students to the left and right, respectively, closest to those doors. From those bathrooms, there are five classrooms on each side of the hall. Ms. Velez’s classroom is the third classroom on the right-hand side of the hallway. There are additional restrooms in the wing, all congregated in the area between the third and fourth classrooms on the left hand side of the hallway. At least one of those bathrooms is entered from within a classroom. Stillwell had a policy that if a student was given permission to leave the classroom, the student should not be gone for more than eight to ten minutes without the teacher calling for assistance to locate the student. Teachers could call for assistance from Ronald Messick, the lead ESE teacher; send a paraprofessional to look for the student; or call the front office or a resource officer. The eight-to-ten minute window was not a written policy, but was discussed during pre-planning meetings at the beginning of the year, as well as at faculty meetings. While attendance logs from pre-planning and faculty meetings were not introduced to establish that Respondent was present during faculty meetings or pre-planning meetings, no evidence was presented to indicate that she was absent. In addition, the 2017-2018 Faculty Handbook (Handbook) for Stillwell had more than one section that addressed supervision of students. For example, under the caption “Supervision of Students,” beginning on page 12 of the Handbook, it states:1 It is the responsibility of the school to provide supervision for students in attendance. It is the teacher’s responsibility to make sure that students in his/her charge are supervised at all times. Teachers should be aware of the legal and progressive discipline aspects of failure to provide adequate supervision. Students should always have adult supervision. Under the caption “Hall Passes,” on page 16 of the Handbook, it states: Hall passes are to be used for emergencies only. In an effort to reduce the number of students out of class during instructional time, each classroom will have either a lime/orange vest or a Colored clipboard. Students needing to leave the classroom are required to wear the vest or carry the clipboard. Please make sure students continue to sign-out when leaving/returning to your classroom so if the vest/clipboard disappears, you will know who was in possession of it last. Only one student per class may be on a hall pass at any given time. If it is necessary that a student leave your classroom to go to an Administrative Office and your vest/clipboard is already being used, security will need to escort student(s) to and from the classroom. While it is our desire that no student be in the halls during instructional time, there are absolutely NO hall passes for any reason during the first/last 30 minutes of each class and NO hall passes during 2nd block each day unless called by an Administrator. Students who are found out of class during the first/last 30 minutes of the block will have the vest or clipboard taken and given to the Assistant Principal for you to retrieve. Students who are out of class, unaccompanied by security, and do not have a vest/clipboard will be 1 All italics, underlining, and bold used in the quoted material is as it appears in the Handbook. considered skipping and appropriate consequences will be assigned. The teacher will also be held accountable if not following school procedure. Finally, under the heading “Hall and Campus Monitoring,” it states in all capitals and bold letters, “STUDENTS SHOULD NEVER WALK BY THEMSELVES.” On or about January 11, 2018, J.L. was an 11-year-old female student in the sixth grade. J.L. was assigned to Respondent’s classroom, and has an Individual Education Plan (IEP). J.L. was a student in a class containing students who functioned cognitively at the lowest level for students at Stillwell. While those who testified could not state definitively what the IQ level was for the class, it was generally around 67-70. Ms. Velez described the class as one for which there was “a need to have eyes on them.” J.L. was new to the school during the 2017-2018 school year. On August 22, 2017, Ronald Messick sent an email to J.L.’s teachers, including Respondent, stating that J.L. could not be left alone and that she would “leave with a complete stranger.” He advised that when J.L. uses the restroom, she likes to play in it, and directed that the teacher who has J.L. the last period of the day needed to make sure she used the restroom. J.L.’s mother had called Mr. Messick the first week of school with concerns that J.L. had been unsupervised in the bus pick-up area. Her mother explained her concerns to Mr. Messick regarding J.L.’s need for constant supervision. The email referenced making sure that J.L. went to the bathroom before boarding the bus simply because she would have a long ride home from school. An IEP meeting was conducted for J.L. on October 12, 2017. Mr. Messick was present as the LEA (lead educational agency) representative, along with Ms. Velez, who wrote the IEP, and three others. J.L.’s IEP states that “[s]he has Williams Syndrome which is a developmental disorder that affects many parts of her body.” The IEP also states that J.L. “is a very trusting child and will walk away with a stranger. She does not distinguish friend from stranger and this causes danger to her safety,” and that J.L. “needs increased supervision to ensure her safety.” The statement that J.L. needs increased supervision to insure her safety is included in two separate sections of her IEP. Respondent was J.L.’s case manager. As her case manager, Respondent reviews, completes entries, and inputs other appropriate data in J.L.’s IEP. She was aware of the information contained in J.L.’s IEP. On January 11, 2018, J.L. was present in Ms. Velez’s classroom during the last period of the day. At approximately 2:05, she asked for, and received, permission to go to the bathroom. Ms. Velez allowed J.L. to go by herself. No adult or other student accompanied her. Allowing J.L. to go the restroom alone was not permitted by her IEP. Further, it appears to violate the policies outlined in the Handbook, which prohibits allowing hall passes for the first 30 minutes of each class. The final class of the day began at 2:05.2 It also runs afoul of the email sent by Mr. Messick at the beginning of the school year, which specifically directed that J.L. not be left alone. After J.L. was permitted to leave the classroom, T.B., a male student in Respondent’s class, also asked to go the bathroom, and was allowed to leave the classroom. Ms. Velez did not check to see where J.L. was before letting T.B. leave the classroom. T.B. was also unaccompanied. J.L. was absent from the classroom for approximately 24 minutes. There are no credible circumstances presented at hearing by which a student should be absent from the classroom for that length of time, regardless of 2 The Administrative Complaint does not charge Respondent with violating this policy, and no discipline is recommended for apparently doing so. It is included simply to show that there were multiple guidelines in place to prohibit allowing J.L. outside of the classroom alone. their mental capacity, the policy contained in the Handbook, or any policy discussed at faculty meetings. T.B. returned to the classroom before J.L. After he entered Ms. Velez’s classroom, T.B. apparently told Ms. Velez that J.L. was in the boys’ bathroom. Ms. Velez testified that she was about to look for her when J.L. returned to the classroom. Ms. Velez testified that she noticed J.L. had “a lot of energy,” and was breathing hard and her hands were shaking. Ms. Velez asked J.L. if she had been in the boys’ bathroom, and testified at hearing that J.L. responded that she did not want to get in trouble. J.L. became upset and asked to speak with the school nurse. Ms. Velez allowed her to go to the nurse’s office, this time accompanied by an eighth grade girl. While Ms. Velez described the child who accompanied J.L. as “very responsible,” it is noted that she was also a child in this classroom of children who represented the lowest functioning students at Stillwell. Lana Austin was the school nurse at Stillwell, and her office was down the hall from Ms. Velez’s room in the SLA wing. She testified T.B. was in her office when J.L. arrived. It was not explained at hearing whether T.B. had also asked Ms. Velez to go to the nurse’s office or just how he came to be there. When she arrived at the nurse’s office, J.L. was crying and somewhat distraught, and T.B. was also getting upset. Ms. Austin tried to get J.L. to tell her what was wrong, and J.L. kept saying they were trying to get her in trouble. J.L. wanted to call her mother, and Ms. Austin let her do so, because she believed it would calm her down. A paraprofessional came into Ms. Austin’s office while J.L. was on the phone with her mother. So while the paraprofessional was in the office with the students, Ms. Austin contacted Ms. Raulerson, the principal at Stillwell, and notified her there might be a problem so that someone could look at the hallway video and find out if anything happened. Ms. Austin knew that J.L. was a student who needed to be escorted. She was always brought to the nurse’s office by an adult. On this occasion, there was no adult. Jennifer Raulerson was the principal at Stillwell during the 2017-2018 school year. She is now the executive director for middle schools in Duval County. Ms. Raulerson testified that J.L.’s father came to the school immediately after J.L.’s telephone call home, and started asking questions. Because of the nature of his questions, consistent with school protocols, Ms. Raulerson contacted Stillwell’s school resource officer (SRO), Officer Tuten, as well as Mr. Messick and Ms. Hodges, who was the dean of students, to discuss with J.L.’s father what needed to be done to investigate what actually happened.3 The following morning, Ms. Raulerson, Ms. Hodges, and Mr. Messick spoke to J.L., T.B., and M.N., another student in the hallway, about what happened the day before. Based on their answers, Ms. Raulerson gave Ms. Hodges a basic timeframe, and asked her to check the cameras to see if she saw anything that would indicate that something happened involving J.L. and T.B. Ms. Hodges testified that a person can type in a date and time on the computer and look at a specific timeframe on the video, which is what she did. Once she viewed the video and realized how long a student had been out of the classroom, she went to Ms. Raulerson and they looked at the video again. Mr. Messick also watched the video with them. Administrators at the school could access the surveillance video on their computers. The surveillance video software has dates and times from which you can retrieve a time period to watch. However, when you download 3 Although they were under subpoena, neither J.L. nor J.L.’s father appeared to testify at hearing. Any statements attributed to them cannot support a finding of fact for the truth of the matter asserted. § 120.57(1)(c), Fla. Stat. Statements by J.L. that are included in this Recommended Order are not intended to establish the truth of her statements, but rather, to explain why teachers and administrators took the actions they did in response to the situation. a section of the surveillance video, the downloaded portion does not include the timestamp. When Ms. Raulerson viewed the surveillance video on the computer screen, she could see the time stamp. While the video in evidence as Petitioner’s Exhibit 17E does not contain the time stamp, Ms. Raulerson credibly testified that it is the same video she and the others viewed to determine whether J.L. and T.B. were out of the classroom and how long they were out of the classroom. Petitioner’s Exhibit 17E is a type of evidence commonly relied upon by reasonably prudent persons in the conduct of their responsibilities as a school administrator. There is no evidence that the tape itself has been altered, edited, or tampered with in any way. The lack of a time stamp is not all that important. What is important is not so much the time of day when J.L. and T.B. were absent from Respondent’s classroom, but the length of time that they were absent.4 Ms. Velez admits that she allowed both students to leave her classroom on January 11. She simply disputes how long J.L. was gone. The surveillance video is 39 minutes and 53 seconds long. The times given in the summary of the video activity below are based on the times recorded on the video, as opposed to the time of day. A comparison of those timeframes with the timeline made by Ms. Austin and Mr. Messick shows that the timelines are essentially the same. The video shows the following: 4 Respondent claims she is prejudiced by the admission of the video, because she was not able to view it with the time-stamps to verify that it was, in fact, the video for January 11, 2018. It is noted that Respondent initiated no discovery in this case. Petitioner filed an exhibit list that included a reference to a video as early as July 24, 2020, some three weeks before hearing. Moreover, the Order of Pre-Hearing Instructions specifically requires not only a list of all exhibits to be offered at hearing, but also any objections to those exhibits and the grounds for each objection. Respondent did not note any objection in the Second Amended Joint Pre-Hearing Statement to the admission of any of the videos admitted as Petitioner’s Exhibit 17. At eight minutes, 17 seconds, J.L. leaves Ms. Velez’s classroom and heads down toward the girls’ bathroom at the end of the hall.5 She is wearing an over-sized jacket, but is not wearing a vest or carrying a clipboard. At nine minutes, 15 seconds, she comes out of the girls’ bathroom and speaks to an adult in the hallway, and then heads back to the bathroom. At the 13-minute, 4-second mark, T.B. walks down the hall from Ms. Velez’s classroom and, curiously, walks over toward the girls’ bathroom before going over to the boys’ bathroom. At 14 minutes, 39 seconds, T.B. comes out of the boys’ bathroom and walks over toward the girls’ bathroom a second time. After approximately ten seconds, he exits the area near the girls’ bathroom and heads back to the boys’ bathroom. At approximately 15 minutes into the video, and almost seven minutes after leaving Ms. Velez’s classroom, J.L. comes out of the girls’ bathroom, peers down the hallway in both directions, and goes over to the boys’ bathroom. At this point, she is still wearing her jacket. At approximately 18 minutes, 16 seconds into the video, a second male student, later identified as M.N., walks down the hall. M.N. is not in Ms. Velez’s class during this class period. He also goes toward the girls’ bathroom first, and then stands in the hallway outside the boys’ bathroom. After approximately 30 seconds, he walks down the hall and back, before going toward the boys’ bathroom and out of sight at 19 minutes and 40 seconds. At 20 minutes, 16 seconds into the video, other students start lining up in the hallway. Approximately four classes line up in the hallway, with no one coming out of the boys’ bathroom. At approximately 29 minutes, 5 Respondent established at hearing that one cannot actually see students enter and exit the bathrooms from the surveillance video. The sight line for the video stops just short of the doors to the two bathrooms. However, the only other alternative to going in the bathrooms would be for students to exit the SLA unit through the doors near the bathrooms. If that were the case, J.L. would be subject to harm as well, given that the doors lead to the rest of the school and the bus loading zone. 26 seconds, girls in line outside the bathroom are seen looking toward the boys’ bathroom and appear to be laughing. J.L. comes out of the boys’ bathroom at the 29-minute, 53-second mark, followed by T.B. J.L. is not wearing her jacket, and her belt is undone. T.B. throws J.L.’s jacket on the floor and walks down the hallway with his hands up in the air. Both J.L. and T.B. walk down the hall toward Ms. Velez’s room, and then turn around and return to their respective bathrooms. At the 31-minute, 53-second mark, J.L. comes out of the bathroom with her shirt tucked in and her belt fastened. She is still not wearing her jacket, a small portion of which can be seen on the floor of the hallway. She does not pick it up, but stays in the hallway until T.B. comes out of the bathroom, then both go down the hall toward Ms. Velez’s class, with T.B. running and J.L. walking. J.L. re-enters Ms. Velez’s classroom at 32 minutes, 21 seconds into the video. Finally, at 32 minutes, 30 seconds, M.N. comes out of the boys’ room, picks up J.L.’s jacket and heads down the hall. Based on the surveillance video, J.L.was out of the classroom for slightly over 24 minutes. T.B. was absent from the classroom for over 18 minutes. Ms. Velez is never seen in the hallway. There is no admissible evidence to demonstrate what actually occurred during the time that J.L. appeared to be in the boys’ restroom. Regardless of what actually happened, no female student should be in the boys’ bathroom, and a female student already identified as needing increased supervision should not be allowed to be unsupervised outside of her classroom at all, much less for such a lengthy period of time. The potential for harm was more than foreseeable, it was inevitable. Ms. Velez did not go in the hallway or send Ms. Kirkland, the paraprofessional present in her classroom that day, to check on J.L. or T.B. She did not call the SRO, the front office, or Mr. Messick to ask for assistance in locating either child. She also did not contact Ms. Raulerson, Mr. Messick, or J.L.’s parents after T.B. told her that J.L. had been in the boys’ restroom. She testified that, while J.L. certainly should not be in the boys’ restroom, there was nothing that led her to believe or suspect that there could be neglect or abuse. Ms. Velez acknowledged that she allowed J.L. to go to the bathroom unsupervised, and stated that she was training J.L. to go to the bathroom by herself. If that was the case, doing so was directly contrary to Mr. Messick’s email of August 22, 2017, and to the requirements of J.L.’s IEP. Ms. Velez had approximately 18 students in her classroom. Her focus, according to her, was on providing instruction to the students in her class. She denied losing track of time, but stated that once the students were engaged, she took her time with the lesson, which “led me to not noticing what time it was as normally as I should,” and she “possibly got distracted.” She did not take any responsibility for her actions. Instead, she blamed the situation on the fact that, at the time of the incident, she did not have a full- time paraprofessional assigned to her classroom. While the paraprofessional position for her class was not filled at the time of this incident, Ms. Kirkland traveled with the class and was present in Ms. Velez’s class when J.L. was allowed to leave the classroom. Ms. Velez also appeared to minimize the importance of providing increased supervision for J.L., and claimed that she was training her to go to the bathroom by herself. Yet, she described the class as a whole as one that needed “eyes on them” at all times. Further, J.L.’s parents clearly felt the increased supervision was crucial, and called early in the school year to make sure that staff knew J.L. was not to be left alone. Ms. Velez gave no explanation as to why she would “train” J.L. to leave the room unsupervised (and one wonders what training could be taking place, if the child is allowed to go alone outside the classroom), when she knew that to do so was clearly contrary to J.L.’s parents’ wishes. On January 22, 2018, the Duval County School District (the District) began an investigation into the incident concerning J.L. that occurred on January 11, 2018. During the District investigation, Ms. Raulerson notified the Department of Children and Families (DCF) and law enforcement of the incident. Both entities conducted investigations. The results of those investigations are not part of this record. On March 16, 2018, the District reprimanded Respondent and suspended her for 30 days for failing to provide adequate supervision of her students. The School Board’s approval of the suspension and the basis for it was reported in the press.

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Education Practices Commission enter a final order finding that Respondent violated section 1012.795(1)(j) and rule 6A- 10.081(2)(a)1. It is further recommended that Respondent pay a fine of $750, and that her certificate be suspended for a period of one year, followed by two years of probation, with terms and conditions to be determined by the Education Practices Commission. DONE AND ENTERED this 29th day of October, 2020, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S LISA SHEARER NELSON 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 29th day of October, 2020. COPIES FURNISHED: Ron Weaver, Esquire Post Office Box 770088 Ocala, Florida 34477-0088 (eServed) Stephanie Marisa Schaap, Esquire Duval Teachers United 1601 Atlantic Boulevard Jacksonville, Florida 32207 (eServed) Lisa M. Forbess, Interim Executive Director Education Practices Commission Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 316 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 (eServed) Matthew Mears, General Counsel Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1244 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 (eServed) Randy Kosec, Jr., Chief Office of Professional Practices Services Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 224-E 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 (eServed)

Florida Laws (6) 1012.7951012.7961012.798120.569120.57120.68 Florida Administrative Code (1) 6B-11.007 DOAH Case (1) 20-0148PL
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RICHARD CORCORAN, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs YOLIE BAUDUY, 21-000707PL (2021)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Orlando, Florida Feb. 19, 2021 Number: 21-000707PL Latest Update: Dec. 24, 2024

The Issue Did Respondent, Yolie Bauduy, violate section 1012.795(1)(g), Florida Statutes (2018)?1 Did Respondent, Yolie Bauduy, violate section 1012.795(1)(j)? 1 All citations to the Florida Statutes are to the 2018 codification unless otherwise noted. Did Respondent, Yolie Bauduy, violate Florida Administrative Code Rule 6A-10.081(2)(a)1.?

Findings Of Fact Parties Petitioner, Richard Corcoran, is the Commissioner of Education. The Commissioner is the head of the state agency, the Florida Department of Education, responsible for investigating and prosecuting allegations of misconduct against individuals holding Florida educator certificates. Ms. Bauduy holds a Florida Educators Certificate covering the areas of Autism Spectrum Disorder, Elementary Education, English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL), Exceptional Student Education (ESE), and Middle Grades Integrated Curriculum. It is valid through June 30, 2025. Ms. Bauduy teaches at Gotha Middle School in the Orange County School District and did at the time of the events alleged in the Administrative Complaint. During the period during which the alleged acts occurred, Ms. Bauduy taught students with autism. She has served students with disabilities of Orange County as an educator in ESE programs for 16 years. She taught at Gotha Middle School for 14 of those 16 years. Other than discipline for the incidents that are the subject of this proceeding, the District has never disciplined Ms. Bauduy. The school has recognized Ms. Bauduy as an effective teacher. For instance, an evaluation resulting from seven days of in-class observation in November 2020 concluded that she was applying all four expected classroom strategies and behaviors. The Education Practices Commission has never disciplined Ms. Bauduy. Gotha Middle School and Ms. Bauduy's Class During the 2018-2019 school year, all of Ms. Bauduy's students had disabilities that required more assistance and support than needed by students in the general population. Because of their disabilities, Ms. Bauduy's students required a modified curriculum that was less rigorous than the standard curriculum. The modified curriculum included social, skills, personal skills, and independent function skills. Teaching those skills helps students learn to manage their behavior and become more independent. All of Ms. Bauduy's students had Individual Education Plans (IEP). These plans identify a student's disabilities, their effect, and behavior that may arise from them. They establish goals for the student in light of the student's disabilities. And they identify strategies for helping the students accomplish the established goals. The demands of teaching students with disabilities required additional staff in the classroom to assist Ms. Bauduy. The school determined that properly caring for and teaching the children required a three to one student teacher ratio. The students' IEPs also required this staffing ratio. For that reason, the school assigned two paraprofessionals to assist in Ms. Bauduy's class of ten people. This was in addition to Ms. Edoo, who was assigned to student E.K. one-on-one. Thus, the proper staffing complement for Ms. Bauduy's class was four adults. Throughout the 2018-2019 school year, Gotha Middle School experienced chronic staffing shortages. One paraprofessional position in Ms. Bauduy's class was vacant the entire year. The school engaged a long- term substitute. That person often did not show up for work. In those instances, the school sought, often unsuccessfully, to engage fill-ins from a temporary staffing agency. In addition, the school usually did not provide staff to cover the paraprofessionals' breaks and lunches. Throughout the year, Ms. Bauduy had to juggle staffing shortages as best she could. During the representative month of September 2018, Ms. Bauduy's class was short one adult seven full days and four partial days. On September 11, 2018, Ms. Bauduy's class was down two professionals. When the paraprofessional staff took their breaks or lunch periods, the staffing deficiencies worsened. Ms. Bauduy repeatedly advised the administration about the staffing deficiencies, sought assistance, and expressed her concerns about not complying with students' IEP requirements. Her communications included a September 5, 2018, email advising that a substitute had not arrived, a September 11 email forwarding an email from a paraprofessional advising she was not coming in, and a September 26 email advising that a substitute once again failed to arrive and asking for assistance. In January 2019, despite the chronic understaffing, the school transferred two students, T.M. and N.A., from other classrooms to Ms. Bauduy's class. These students' disabilities were more profound and required more supports than the other students. They were regular elopers, required diaper changes, and required individual nearly one-on-one prompting for tasks. Among other things, T.M.'s disabilities required having someone hold his hand during transitions. Placement of T.M. and N.A. in Ms. Bauduy's class was not appropriate. Ms. Bauduy continued sending emails expressing her concerns and frustrations about understaffing. She also repeatedly, without effect, sought to get the school to change mandatory meetings to her planning period or after school because the meetings caused her to leave the classroom and exacerbated the staffing problems. Between October 25, 2018, and March 4, 2019, Ms. Bauduy sent 17 emails requesting full staffing and advising of staff absences. Ms. Bauduay could not rely upon prompt responses when she called for assistance or additional staffing to put her room back in compliance with the required student/adult ratio. Sometimes she received a quick response. Sometimes no one came. Often there was a 20 to 30-minute delay before assistance arrived. Even when management responded to Ms. Bauduy's request for a schedule of when behavior staff would be available to support her students, management's response was conditional. For instance, Laura Fogarty, ESE Curriculum and Instruction Team Instructional Coach, conditioned the schedule of available staff that she provided as follows. Please remember, however, that this schedule is in a perfect world. The behavior support team's first priority is to respond to radio calls and have other responsibilities that don't always make it possible for them to be in your room for the times listed below. They may also have to leave to respond to a behavior call when they are in there. Below is the ideal, if everything goes right and there are no behavior calls or other areas that require their attention. The world in which Ms. Bauduy taught was neither perfect nor ideal. Ms. Bauduy's testimony about staffing difficulties and insufficient responses to requests for assistance differs from testimony of school representatives. Ms. Bauduy was more credible and persuasive than the school representatives. Four of the reasons for this judgment are Ms. Bauduy's sincere demeanor, documents such as emails and logs consistent with her testimony, the admission in Ms. Fogarty's email that even scheduled availability of support was not reliable, and the corroborating testimony of a paraprofessional who worked in Ms. Bauduy's room, Lauren Mueller. K.C. K.C. was a male sixth grade student in Ms. Bauduy's class. K.C.'s IEP specified that K.C. should always be supervised. It stated, "He requires continuous supervision as he is very impulsive and responds aggressively and or obscenely." K.C. also had a Behavioral Improvement Plan (BIP). It too noted a need for intensive intervention to address inappropriate touching of and advances toward female students. The BIP provided, among other things, "If outside the classroom, one on one supervision must be provided." The BIP went on to state that K.C.'s transitions out of the classroom should be limited to necessary transitions and that a staff member should provide one-on-one supervision during all transitions. Ms. Bauduy was aware of the contents of the IEP and BIP. At each day's end, Ms. Edoo usually escorted K.C. from class to the transportation loading area, after escorting her assigned student to the transportation area. This did not happen on September 11, 2018. This was one of the many days when Ms. Bauduy's room was short-staffed. Because of a vacant position and a paraprofessional not showing up, Ms. Bauduy was down to two adults, including herself, of the staff that should have been in the room. This excludes Ms. Edoo who was responsible for providing one-on- one care for a single student. The afternoon of September 11 the substitute paraprofessional was to escort the students, in shifts, to the transportation area. The substitute took a student to the transportation area and did not return. This left Ms. Bauduy the sole adult in the room, responsible both for getting the children to the transportation area and supervising students in the classroom. Ms. Edoo called Ms. Bauduy on the radio and said to release K.C. Ms. Bauduy thought that meant Ms. Edoo was returning to the classroom and would meet K.C. in the hall. Although her room had a telephone and a two-way radio, Ms. Bauduy knew from experience a response to a request for help would be slow, if there even was one. Faced with confounding choices, Ms. Bauduy explained to K.C. that she would release him to go directly down the hall to meet Ms. Edoo. K.C. did not go straight down the hall to Ms. Edoo, and Ms. Edoo was not in the hall. K.C. went to the bathroom that opened on the hall. A student, K.M., found K.C. laying naked, save for his socks, on the bathroom floor, masturbating. This scared and confused K.M. He went home and told his mother about the incident. She called the school. The next day a guidance counselor met with K.M. to discuss the incident and reassure him. Shortly after K.M. left for home, an ESE clerk, Elizabeth Elkholi, saw K.C. naked in the bathroom, through the open door. She called for Shantell Johnson, a behavior trainer. Ms. Johnson did not wish to enter the bathroom because K.C. was naked. A substitute, Stephen Harnishfeger, and Deputy Luna, a school resource officer, joined Ms. Elkholi and Ms. Johnson. Between them, these four adults kept K.C. in sight. K.C. got dressed in a stall. Ms. Johnson escorted him back to Ms. Bauduy's classroom. Ms. Bauduy was not aware of this activity until K.C. was returned to her room. K.C. could have left the school grounds during the period that he was unsupervised. Eventually the substitute reappeared and declared she was leaving for the day. Ms. Bauduy convinced the substitute to escort K.C. to the transportation loading area before leaving. The school suspended Ms. Bauduy for five days without pay for this incident. T.M. T.M. was a student on the autism spectrum that the school transferred to Ms. Bauduy's class in January. T.M.'s previous classroom, Ms. Franklin's, was adjacent to Ms. Bauduy's classroom. On February 25, 2019, the school had again failed to staff Ms. Bauduy's classroom in compliance with the requirements of her students' IEPs. That day the school required Ms. Bauduy to participate in an IEP meeting, scheduled for 30 minutes, during her planning period. The meeting took two hours, running through her lunch period and ending at 4:00 p.m. When Ms. Bauduy returned to the classroom, she realized none of her paraprofessionals had taken a break. So, she released them one at a time for a short break. While one paraprofessional was gone on break, the remaining one left the room with a student to go to the restroom and change a diaper. This left Ms. Bauduy alone with the students. At that time, Ms. Bauduy was providing directions to a group of students. She heard the door slam. She looked for T.M. and did not see him in the classroom. T.M. had slipped away from Ms. Bauduy's classroom out into the hall. He left through the classroom's only door. Ms. Bauduy immediately went to the doorway to look for him. She knew T.M. had a history of leaving the classroom but waiting just outside the door. She did not see him. Then Ms. Bauduy took a few steps outside the door of her classroom into the hall. To the left of Ms. Bauduy's classroom the hall met double doors just yards away that led to the outside and a nearby road. Ms. Bauduy was in the hall approximately 23 seconds seeking to ensure that T.M. had not gone to the left toward the double doors. During these 23 seconds there was no adult inside Ms. Bauduy's class room. She however was just feet from the only door. One of the students could have done something destructive or harmful. But the brief period of time that Ms. Bauduy was outside the classroom, her proximity to the door, and the very short distance she was from her students made that risk minimal. Ms. Bauduy saw the door to Classroom B104 close. This was T.M.'s former classroom, which was next to Ms. Bauduy's room. This reassured her that T.M. was safe. She ran back to her classroom. The students had spent the 23 seconds without incident. Then Ms. Bauduy called for assistance. A staff member came to return T.M. to Ms. Bauduy's room. When T.M. slipped away, Ms. Bauduy had no good choices. In the time it would take to call for assistance and wait for it to arrive, if it did, T.M. could have been out the doors and in the road. Ms. Bauduy's experience taught her that assistance was often slow to arrive and sometimes did not arrive at all. Stepping out in the hall to quickly see where T.M. went left the eight remaining students without direct adult supervision for 23 seconds. But Ms. Bauduy was just outside the only door out of the classroom. She made a reasonable choice, one that most reduced the risk of a bad outcome to T.M. and his classmates. The school suspended Ms. Bauduy for five days without pay because of this incident. F.O. F.O. was a student in Ms. Bauduy's class. F.O. was non-verbal and deaf. She was working on pre-academic skills. F.O. was a joyful and social student. She, however, was defiant. She did not like to be corrected. She wanted to be on her own, basically following her own schedule. When corrected, F.O. would shake her head, point her finger, and stick her tongue out. The school regularly delivered breakfast and lunch to the class. On September 11, 2019, F.O. ate breakfast around 10:00 a.m. After breakfast, F.O. and the other students had a short lesson and went to PE. After they returned to class, they had another short lesson. Afterwards, Ms. Bauduy gave the class another short break. Around 11:30 a.m., the lunch cart's arrival signaled the beginning of lunch to the class. The lunch service procedure began with placing meals on tables for students who could feed themselves. Then Ms. Bauduy and the paraprofessionals assisted students who needed help eating. F.O.'s lunch was placed in front of her. It was time for F.O. to pick up her toys and eat. She refused. Ms. Bauduy tried prompting F.O. several ways. Ms. Bauduy's efforts to persuade F.O. to put her toys up included gestures, pantomiming the desired actions, and modeling the actions by picking up some toys herself. This did not work. Ms. Bauduy took F.O. out of the classroom to see if a change in environment would help. Ms. Bauduy then took F.O. to the behavior specialist's classroom down the hall. But it was not staffed. They returned to Ms. Bauduy's classroom. There Ms. Bauduy tried to get F.O. to comply with simple directions like "put it down." F.O. would not respond. Also, F.O. continued to refuse to pick up her toys and eat lunch. Ms. Bauduy concluded that F.O.'s refusal to eat lunch was a defiance issue. Ms. Bauduy learned a behavior management strategy called "First – Then" in her applied behavior classes at the University of Central Florida. Ms. Bauduy kept a graphic depicting this strategy posted in her classroom. Other teachers and paraprofessionals in the school also used this strategy. It was a system where the "Then" was something the child wanted or wanted to do and the "First" was a task the child was resisting. After F.O. continued to play with toys and ignore her lunch. Ms. Bauduy decided to use the "First—Then" strategy by withholding F.O.'s lunch until she picked up her toys. She asked a paraprofessional, Ms. Lewis, to remove the food. Ms. Lewis refused. Ms. Bauduy then placed the lunch on a shelf so that other students would not eat it or play with it. Around 2:00 p.m., snack time, F.O. had put up her toys. Ms. Bauduy gave her the lunch. Ms. Bauduy's log for the day, sent home with each student each day, advised F.O.'s parents that F.O. would not listen or follow directions most of the day and that "lunch was delayed till she showed more compliance." Withholding lunch was not a proper use of the "First – Then" strategy. Meals are a regular part of the day and necessary for nutrition, although in this case the student repeatedly declined food. Withholding a meal, as opposed to withholding a treat, is not proper. Also, since F.O. was not interested in eating lunch, making lunch the "Then" was not a well-reasoned use of the strategy. Ms. Bauduy, however, did not withhold lunch as a punishment. But withholding lunch was not a reasonable behavior management strategy. The school suspended Ms. Bauduy for five days for this instance.

Conclusions For Petitioner: Ron Weaver, Esquire Post Office Box 770088 Ocala, Florida 34477-0088 For Respondent: Branden M. Vicari, Esquire Herdman & Sakellarides, P.A. 29605 U.S. Highway 19 North, Suite 110 Clearwater, Florida 33761

Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Education Practices Commission enter a final order finding that Respondent, Yolie Bauduy, violated section 1012.795(1)(j), Florida Statutes, by violating Florida Administrative Code Rule 6A- 10.081(2)(a)1., and imposing a reprimand upon Respondent, Yolie Bauduy. DONE AND ENTERED this 24th day of November, 2021, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S JOHN D. C. NEWTON, II Administrative Law Judge 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 www.doah.state.fl.us COPIES FURNISHED: Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 24th day of November, 2021. Lisa M. Forbess, Executive Director Education Practices Commission Department of Education Turlington Building 325 West Gaines Street, Suite 316 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 Branden M. Vicari, Esquire Herdman & Sakellarides, P.A. 29605 U.S. Highway 19 North, Suite 110 Clearwater, Florida 33761 Randy Kosec, Jr., Chief Office of Professional Practices Services Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 224-E 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 Ron Weaver, Esquire Post Office Box 770088 Ocala, Florida 34477-0088 Anastasios Kamoutsas, General Counsel Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1244 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400

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JIM HORNE, AS COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION vs NEIL A. MERICA, 03-003158PL (2003)
Division of Administrative Hearings, Florida Filed:Tampa, Florida Sep. 03, 2003 Number: 03-003158PL Latest Update: Oct. 06, 2005

The Issue The issues in this case are whether Respondent, Neil A. Merica, committed the offenses alleged to have begun in 1994 through 1999 as stated in the Amended Administrative Complaint dated May 7, 2003, and, if so, what penalty should be imposed.

Findings Of Fact Based upon observation of the demeanor and candor of the witnesses while testifying; the documentary materials received in evidence; evidentiary rulings made pursuant to Section 120.57, Florida Statutes (2003); stipulations and arguments of the parties; and the entire record compiled herein, the following relevant, material, and ultimate facts, arrived at impartially, based solely upon the extensive evidence adduced at the final hearing, are determined: Respondent's Qualification and Teaching Experiences Mr. Merica holds a degree in speech communication from the University of South Florida. He is also certified in specific learning disabilities (SLD) by that institution. Early in his 13-year tenure as a teacher at Foster Elementary School (Foster), he acquired a degree in computer science from Florida Metropolitan University. Mr. Merica holds Florida Educator's Certificate No. 532934, covering areas of English Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL), SLD,2 and Speech. His Florida Educator's Certificate expired June 30, 2003. As of the date of this proceeding, Mr. Merica had not exercised his right to renew his Florida Educator's Certificate. Mr. Merica also holds a teaching certificate from New Hampshire. Mr. Merica has a very demonstrative and expressive personality. His voice, when speaking at his normal conversational tone, resounds from the back of his throat in a louder than average volume. During his testimony, the pitch of his voice and his rapid speech pattern was accompanied by an unexpected and sudden outburst of spastic energy. Hillsborough County School Board's "Pull-out" Classroom Policy In 1987, the Hillsborough County School Board (Board) operated a Pull-out Classroom Policy (Pull-out Policy) for SLD and Physically Impaired (PI) students. Pursuant to the Board's Pull-out Policy, SLD and PI students were pulled out of their regular classes, divided into various numbered groups, and sent to a designated "resource" class teacher during the school day. Respondent's Initial Teaching Assignment Under the Pull-out Policy in 1987-1988 Mr. Merica began teaching at Foster as a SLD resource class teacher in October 1987 when the Board's Pull-out Policy was in effect. A resource teacher is the teacher whose class consisted of SLD students who were "pulled out" of regular classes of non-SLD students and sent to a resource class consisting of all SLD students for teaching and instruction. In 1989, the Board changed its Pull-out Policy to a "Self- contained" Classroom Policy (Self-contained Policy). The Self- contained Policy was designed to keep all SLD students together in one identified class throughout the school year. Mr. Merica taught SLD students under the Self-contained Policy at Foster until the 1992-1993 school year. Beginning at the start of the 1992-1993 school year, Foster's administration assigned Mr. Merica to teach a resource class consisting of PI and Learning Disabled Resource (LDR) students. PI classes consisted of students with a variety of physical impairments, including students who required various assistance devices such as wheelchairs, walkers, braces and "talkers," a machine device that assists the student with speaking difficulties to communicate. Mr. Merica continued as a PI and LDR teacher from the 1992-1993 school year through the 1998-1999 school year. Foster Elementary Exceptional Student Education Student Population from 1998 to 2000 During the two-year period of the 1998-1999 and 1999- 2000 school years, Foster had a large exceptional student education (ESE) population among its general student population. Foster's ESE community population consisted of 22 units, composed of full-time ESE students. There were six units of mentally handicapped students, with mental handicaps ranging from severe and profound mentally handicapped to mild emotionally mentally handicapped. There were four units of autistic students and four units of PI students. Foster had approximately five units of early exceptional learning programs, and three units of SLD students. Policy Change to Self-Contained Classes in 1998-1999 During the fall of the 1998-1999 school year, the Board changed their Pull-out Policy for SLD and PI students to a Self- contained Policy. The Self-contained Policy was instituted because of the severity of the students' learning disabilities, their struggles with academics, and the administration's conviction that the daily routine of shifting the SLD and PI students from "regular class to resource class" did not sufficiently address the students' individual learning disabilities and individual educational needs. Foster's administration identified students whom they believed did not handle transition well and recommended them as candidates for self-contained classes. The primary objective of the administration was to provide more "direct teaching time" and "direct teaching services" to each SLD or PI student. In the self-contained classes, SLD and PI students were assigned to one class and one teacher with a teacher's aide and/or a Department of Education for Exceptional Students (DEES) attendant throughout the day. The teacher's aides were those persons who were permitted to assist, under the oversight of the teacher, the classroom teacher with all facets of teaching, instruction, and classroom control. The DEES attendants were those persons whose duties consisted primarily of assisting the teacher by attending to individual and personal needs of SLD and PI students, i.e. changing their clothing, providing restroom assistance, etc. Respondent's 1999-2000 Reassignment to Teach Self-contained SLD Class In mid 1998, Brenda Griffin (Principal Griffin) was appointed principal of Foster replacing Janice Payne, f/k/a Pils (Principal Payne). At the start of the 1999-2000 school year, Principal Griffin changed Mr. Merica from his PI and LDR class and assigned him to teach a self-contained class of SLD students. A self-contained SLD class is a class composed of SLD students, each of whom has an individual educational plan (IEP) designed as the teacher's guide to assist in teaching each student to achieve specific, individual, and predetermined educational goals. Each IEP is developed by joint agreement of the SLD student's parent, his/her teacher and the assigned therapist (teacher). The IEP also identifies special educational services and supports that may be necessary to achieve desired outcomes and short-term objectives, and it establishes student educational benchmarks. An IEP may or may not contain daily, weekly or monthly checklists to evaluate a student's progress in achieving the benchmarks contained in his or her IEP. To make an objective determination of whether a student with an IEP has made progress (advanced from or to an ascertainable educational position), knowledge of the educational benchmarks contained in the student's IEP are essential. During the earlier years as a teacher at Foster, Mr. Merica served as the school's Classroom Teacher's Association (CTA) representative. In this capacity, he would address and argue those issues he believed to have had direct impact upon teachers who were members of the CTA. Mr. Merica attributed many of the comments made during staff meetings to addressing issues he believed had an impact upon teacher members of the CTA. During the 1997-1998 school year and after lengthy discussions with Principal Payne, but before Principal Griffin was appointed principal, Mr. Merica resigned as CTA representative. In September of 2000 and after 13 years of annual employment contract renewals, the Board terminated Mr. Merica's employment. At the time of this proceeding, Mr. Merica had not exercised his right to renew his Florida Educator's Certificate. In this proceeding, the Commissioner seeks to permanently revoke Mr. Merica's right to renew his Florida Educator's Certificate. The Amended Administrative Complaint The Amended Administrative Complaint alleged specific instances of specific conduct, specific acts, and specific speech to have occurred at unspecified dates and at unspecified times during a five-year span of time from 1994 through 1999. Accordingly, only incidents specifically alleged and proven by evidence of record to have occurred on or after January 1, 1994, through December 31, 1999, are considered in determining whether the Commissioner proved each allegation charged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. STATUTE VIOLATIONS Count 1: The Respondent is in violation of Section 1012.795(1)(b), Florida Statutes, in that Respondent has proved to be incompetent to teach or perform duties as an employee of the public school system or to teach in or to operate a private school. Count 2: The Respondent is in violation of Section 1012.795(1)(c), Florida Statutes, in that Respondent has been guilty of gross immorality or an act involving mortal turpitude. Count 3: The Respondent is in violation of Section 1012.795(1)(f), Florida Statutes, in that Respondent has been found guilty of personal conduct which seriously reduces his effectiveness as an employee of the school board. Count 4: The Respondent is in violation of Section 1012.795(1)(i), Florida Statutes, in that Respondent has violated the Principles of Professional Conduct for the Education Profession Prescribed by State Board of Education rules. RULE VIOLATIONS Count 5: The allegations of misconduct set forth herein are in violation of Rules 6B-1.006(3)(a), Florida Administrative Code, in that Respondent has failed to make reasonable effort to protect the student from conditions harmful to learning and/or to the student's mental health and/or physical health and/or safety. Count 6: The allegations of misconduct set forth herein are in violation of Rule 6B-1.006(3)(e), Florida Administrative Code, in that Respondent has intentionally exposed a student to unnecessary embarrassment or disparagement. Count 7: The allegations of misconduct set forth herein are in violation of Rule 6B-1.006(5)(d), Florida Administrative Code, in that Respondent has engaged in harassment or discriminatory conduct which unreasonably interfered with an individual's performance of professional or work responsibilities or with the orderly processes of education or which created a hostile, intimidating, abusive, offensive, or oppressive environment; and further, failed to make reasonable effort to assure that each individual was protected from such harassment or discrimination. WHEREFORE, Petitioner recommends that the Education Practices Commission impose an appropriate penalty pursuant to the authority provided in Sections 1012.795(1) and 1012.796(7), Florida Statutes, which penalty may include a reprimand, probation, restriction of the authorized scope of practice, administrative fine, suspension of the teaching certificate not to exceed three years, permanent revocation of the teaching certificate, or combination thereof, for the reasons set forth herein, and in accordance with the Explanation and Election of Rights forms. Amendment to Amended Administrative Complaint to Correct Scrivener's Error. On December 24, 2003, Petitioner filed a Motion for Leave to Amend Complaint to Correct Scrivener's Error, which was granted and provided the following: On November 6, 2003, Petitioner Amended the Administrative Complaint in this matter. Paragraph 5 of the Amended Administrative Complaint should be further amended to correct the scrivener's error. Paragraph 5 of the Amended Administrative Complaint currently states: "During the 1998-99 school year, Respondent sexually harassed several different co- workers." That portion of Paragraph 5 should be amended to state: "Between 1994 and 1999, Respondent sexually harassed several different co-workers," to conform the time period for the allegations of Paragraph 5 with the time period for the allegations of all other paragraphs of the Amended Administrative Complaint. Janice Payne, Principal at Foster from 1987-1998 Principal Payne was principal at Foster from May 1987 to May 1998. An illness forced her to retire midyear in the 1997-1998 school year. After Principal Payne’s retirement, the Board appointed Principal Griffin as principal of Foster. Principal Griffin held that position during the time of this hearing. During Principal Payne's 1987 to 1998 tenure as principal at Foster and as required by statute, she performed yearly evaluations of Mr. Merica's professional performance as a teacher of SLD and PI students. Consideration was given to annual performance evaluations for the 1994-1995 and 1998-1999 school years. During the 1994-1995 through 1997-1998 school years, Principal Payne identified, in her annual evaluations of Mr. Merica's overall professional teaching performance, specific areas in which she independently determined Mr. Merica was in need of professional growth and improvement. At the end of each of those four evaluation periods, she met with Mr. Merica and discussed and identified for him those specific areas in which he was in need of professional growth and improvement. She provided him with specific, constructive advice and assistance to facilitate his professional growth and improvement as a professional teacher in the areas she identified. Undisputed evidence established that Mr. Merica accepted Principal Payne's constructive advice and assistance; he complied and implemented her suggestions in each area identified as in need of growth and improvement, and he grew and improved his performance in each identified area. It is noted, however, that Mr. Merica would sometimes suffer relapses and revert into his old pattern of voicing his personal opinions on a variety of subjects, described by Principal Payne as just: "talking up and rumoring everybody." Even with his propensity to occasionally "talk up and rumor everybody," Principal Payne concluded that he was a very good teacher and that he could be better. Principal Payne's methodology of assisting her young professional teachers' growth was to identify areas in need of improvement followed by personal conferences with each teacher explaining areas in need of improvement, making individualized suggestions tailored to the need(s) of the teacher, and, after an appropriate time interval, completing a follow-up assessment to evaluate the teacher's growth, improvement, and compliance with her suggestions. The record evidence demonstrated the existence of a professional and respectful relationship between Principal Payne and Mr. Merica, spanning the eight or more years they worked together, including the few occasions when there were disagreements. 1998-1999 Performance Evaluation of Mr. Merica In February 1998, Principal Payne gave Mr. Merica a letter of reprimand citing him for having acted in an "unprofessional manner" with Pam Wilkins, an ESE co-worker. Nevertheless, when Principal Payne evaluated his overall professional teaching performance for the 1998-1999 school year, including his personal conduct, she gave him a "satisfactory" rating in every area, without comments. Principal Payne made her independent written evaluation of Mr. Merica without assistance of any criteria or standards, other than as indicated on the evaluation form.3 In reaching her independent assessment of Mr. Merica's proficiency and effectiveness, scoring them on the characteristics and numerical scale indicated, she relied upon his teachings, his problems, and his improvements experienced. Her professional judgment of Mr. Merica was based upon her personal observation and day-to-day association with her teachers. Mr. Merica's 1998-1999 Performance Evaluation is the most accurate, reliable, and undisputed evidence of his competence and overall professional performance as a teacher during the 1998-1999 school year. There is no credible evidence of record that Mr. Merica engaged in unprofessional conduct evidencing either a past, an onset or a continuation of professional incompetence as a teacher in the school system during the 1998-1999 period covered by Principal Payne's annual evaluation. In response to the general inquiry of “whether or not her previous discussions and her prior improvement expectations of Mr. Merica as a teacher over the [unidentified] years were successful,” Principal Payne, convincingly, testified: Yes, temporarily, absolutely. My philosophy about Mr. Merica--first of all, he could be a good teacher if he wanted to be because I have observed him. I know that. He could behave if he wanted to. He could be a strong staff member. But, you know, he could do that probably for maybe four months or five months and all of a sudden it was just--he was just doing the same old thing, just going around, talking to everyone, rumoring people or getting rumors to people. It's just like this school was his life. Continuing, Ms. Payne testified: Mr. Merica would frequently apologize and realize what he had done was wrong, because at one time he's like a lamb and help to do whatever he can do and other times he just be so angry and upset to the point of where I said his behavior would frighten me. As the professional supervisor who worked with Mr. Merica for more than a ten-year period, Principal Payne was the most experienced and most knowledgeable person from years of hands-on experiences to have observed "the beginning of professional teaching incompetence that was not responsive to assistance provided by other professionals and continued unabated throughout her tenure." The Commissioner failed to prove, through the testimony and documentation of Principal Payne, "a beginning of demonstrated professional incompetence in 1994" or even as late as the school year of 1996-1997, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Based on the testimony of Principal Payne, it is a reasonable inference, and I infer, that the "behavior of anger" sometimes demonstrated by Mr. Merica in Principal Payne's presence was directed toward the subject matter of "what he had done was wrong" and not directed toward the person of Principal Payne. Through the above testimony, the Commissioner failed to prove that between 1994 and 1998-1999, Respondent was insubordinate and confrontational towards Principal Payne during her tenure as principal. The Commissioner failed to prove the allegation that Mr. Merica's personal conduct began to demonstrate "incompetence" as a professional teacher during the period of the 1994-1995 through mid-year of the 1997-1998 school years while Principal Payne was principal of Foster. A review of the record demonstrated, and the undersigned so finds, that no other witness called by the Commissioner provided credible, material and substantive evidence, based on personal knowledge contradicting the testimony of Principal Payne, that related to Mr. Merica's professional "teaching skills" during the period of the 1994-1995 through mid-year 1997-1998 school years. Brenda Griffin Principal at Foster Elementary beginning in 1998 After the 1997-1998 midyear resignation of Principal Payne, the Board appointed Principal Griffin as principal of Foster. The professional relationship between Principal Griffin and Mr. Merica became tense, and, based upon the collective testimonies of teachers and administrative staff members hereinafter, the tension was known by both the professional staff and administrative employees at Foster Elementary. Principal Griffin recalled that during her first year as principal at Foster (approximately the latter half of the 1997-1998 school year), she made an unannounced visit to Mr. Merica's self-contained classroom of PI students. Recalling her visit, she testified: [T] hey [students], all had IEPs that have specific goals for each student and what I observed was group instruction, but I felt like the PI students were not being stimulated. (Emphasis added) There is no record evidence of the particular teaching materials being used by Mr. Merica during this single visit. There is no record evidence establishing ascertainable professional expectations or teaching standards below which Mr. Merica was performing during Principal Griffin's initial visit. There is no record evidence of specific educational benchmarks or educational goals contained in the PI students' IEPs. Within the situational circumstances of this one visit as testified to, Principal Griffin's conclusiory opinion that Mr. Merica's "PI students were not being stimulated" lacks an objective benchmark for evaluation, as well as any reasonable degree of reliability to produce a firm belief as to the truth of the matter sought to be established. Continuing, Principal Griffin testified: Mr. Merica would go to the board, where there may or may not have been written some vocabulary words, and he would start some kind of instruction and I felt that was because I was in the room--sometimes the aides would get up to work with the kids and sometimes not, and I was sure they were waiting on the direction from their teacher at that time. (Emphasis added) Principal Griffin recalled another separate incident, but omitted providing the month or year, when she "observed Mr. Merica sitting at his computer--she "did not know what he was doing at his computer"--but she had been in his classroom on a previous (unidentified time) occasion when a golf game was on the computer and she--"knows that he was not tending to the students." Principal Griffin's conclusions, her feelings, and her opinions in findings 24 and 26 herein above, minus evidence of the situational circumstances surrounding each incident, lack reasonable reliability to produce a firm belief of the truth of the allegations sought to be established. Principal Griffin also recalled (unspecified) occasion(s) on which she observed Mr. Merica outside his classroom. She characterized those observations as having seen Mr. Merica: verywhere- in the hallways, in the lunchroom, at the PE field, in the back of the school--in the ESE wing building, where the buses are for the kids, in the clinic, in the office, everywhere-at any period of time during the day. There is no record evidence of personal knowledge by the witness or evidence of the situation and/or circumstances that caused Mr. Merica to be outside his classroom on those occasions when he was observed by this witness. The witness' summary characterization, "everywhere-at any period of time during the day," lacks certainty, reasonableness, and a degree of believable reliability to produce a firm belief as to the accuracy of the matters to which she testified. Viewed most favorably, Principal Griffin's testimony failed to establish that on each of those occasions she observed Mr. Merica outside his classroom; his presence outside his classroom was not within the scope of his professional responsibilities and duties as a professional staff member at Foster. The credibility of this witness is further diminished by her exaggerated testimony of facts at issue. This testimony and the intended inference that his absence from his classroom caused a direct and negative impairment on his students' learning, lack essential details to provide a reasonable degree of reliability and cast insurmountable doubt as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established. Principal Griffin testified she talked with Mr. Merica about not being in his classroom and he told her: [H]e needed a break or that it was his break time and that his aides were in the classroom and they were capable of instructing his students. Mr. Merica disputed and denied making the particular statement, i.e. "that his aides were capable of instructing his students." His version of the reason(s) for absences from his classroom were reasonable explanations(s) corroborated by other witnesses as found infra. Even if Mr. Merica's denial of the inferred accusation is unbelievable, it does not prove the accusation by the Commissioner to the contrary. The acceptable and unacceptable reasons or situations a teacher may or may not be out of his or her classroom, and personal knowledge of those unacceptable occasions that Mr. Merica was not in his classroom, were not established through the testimony of Principal Griffin. The evidence does not support the frequency or extent of her assertions but, instead, casts doubt on the accuracy of the witness' testimony. The Commissioner failed to prove through the testimony of this witness that on each occasion Mr. Merica was observed outside his classroom, his presence was unreasonable, unprofessional, and caused a direct and negative impairment on his students' learning. Principal Griffin testified, unconvincingly, regarding another incident (again with no record evidence of the month, school year or the situational circumstances) that "a mother" called her to bring to her attention "that the teacher was not using the touch-talker in the classroom and at one point took it away from the child as part of a discipline." The witness did not provide the mother's identity. The witness did not provide the child's identity. The witness did not provide the teacher's identity though those three persons were allegedly involved in this undocumented incident. The presumed inference(s) that Mr. Merica was "the teacher" referred to by the unidentified mother, who (inappropriately) disciplined "a child" by taking away the unidentified child's touch-talker, is unreasonable. The vague, non-specific testimony of this witness, and her inability and/or her refusal to identify the mother, the child, and the teacher, create an unacceptable level of credibility due to the absence of three significant points of identity. The credibility of this witness' testimony was further diminished by the lack of corroborating testimony by other witnesses, and the witness' credibility disappeared because no recording was made of such an important call from a parent to the principal of a school. The testimony by this witness does not establish or corroborate other testimony regarding the issue of "some teacher using the touch-talker in the classroom and at one point took it away from the child as part of a discipline." The Commissioner, through the testimony of this witness, failed to demonstrate that Mr. Merica "inappropriately disciplined a student," as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. The testimony of this witness, based solely on debatable expressions as her personal "feelings" and personal "opinions" regarding alleged conduct in the past reflected in findings 24 through 32 herein above, viewed most favorably, lacked reasonable reliability and substantial weight to produce a firm belief as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established. Respondent's 1998-1999 Personnel Performance Evaluation At the end of the 1998-1999 school year and notwithstanding her testimony in findings numbered 24 through 32 above, Principal Griffin, independently, determined that Mr. Merica's overall professional teaching performance, to include his personal conduct and, by reasonable and objective implication, his teaching competence, was satisfactory in every category for the 1998-1999 school year. The overall "satisfactory" performance evaluation given Mr. Merica by Principal Griffin for his professional teaching competence and personal conduct in the 1998-1999 school year is significant when juxtaposed to her testimony at the final hearing. As late as May 1999, this witness' independent evaluation of Mr. Merica's professional teaching competence and his personal conduct was reflected on his 1998-1999 performance evaluation as "all satisfactory." However, the testimony contained in Findings of Fact 24 through 32 in this 2004 proceeding is a direct contradiction. This aspect of the witness' 2004 testimony and written 1999 evaluation raised substantial issues of the witness' intent and cast insurmountable doubt on the witness' credibility. The lack of consistency in opinion and the ambiguity created by the 2004 testimony of conduct having occurred from pre-termination to post-termination are resolved in favor of Mr. Merica. Mr. Merica's competence as a teacher, his teaching skills, classroom management, and student discipline, as evaluated and determined by Principal Griffin, for the 1998-1999 school year, ending May to June 1999, is the more substantial, reliable, and persuasive indicator of his past performance and competence as a professional teacher during the preceding 1998-1999 school year. Debora Bragdon, Secretary to Principals Payne and Griffin Debora Bragdon testified that during the 1999-2000 school year (ending May to June 2000), Mr. Merica came into the administrative office a minimum of once and "sometimes" twice a day, depending upon the day. According to Secretary Bragdon: Mr. Merica and Principal Griffin had discussions in the principal's office a minimum of once and sometimes twice a day throughout the entire school year. Secretary Bragdon could not recall the subject matter discussed nor did she recall hearing Principal Griffin's voice at any time during the alleged daily office discussions. Mr. Merica's voice, however, she heard stating that "Mr. Merica would be screaming so loud that I could hear him clearly." However, she could not recall a word or phrase spoken by Mr. Merica. Secretary Bragdon did not enter the principal's office when Mr. Merica and Principal Griffin were having their daily conferences. Secretary Bragdon surmised, from the tone of Mr. Merica's voice only, that Principal Griffin was in danger. Secretary Bragdon further testified that during those daily conferences she would buzz Principal Griffin on the intercom asking if she needed assistance, and Principal Griffin repeatedly assured her that "she did not need assistance." Principal Griffin did not corroborate or confirm Secretary Bragdon’s testimony on the issue "once and sometimes twice a day throughout the entire school year she had discussions with Mr. Merica in her office." Any reasonable consideration of Secretary Bragdon's above recollection requires acceptance of the fact that a minimum of 180 (once a day) to a maximum of 360 (sometimes twice a day) conferences occurred in Principal Griffin's office during the 1999-2000 school year between Principal Griffin and Mr. Merica. The intended inference that during each daily office conference, whether 180 times or more, Mr. Merica was always screaming at Principal Griffin while she sat silently in her office is rejected. Secretary Bragdon's exaggerated testimony lacks any appreciable degree of reasonableness, reliability or credibility. Her entire testimony failed to produce a firm or a precise belief as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established, and the Commissioner failed to prove through this witness that Mr. Merica was confrontational and argumentative with Principal Griffin during unspecified conferences while in her office. Negative Statements Continuing, Secretary Bragdon testified, unconvincingly, regarding unidentified sounds she overheard on the intercom system: rom the sounds I overheard on the intercom system when Mr. Merica called the administrative office for help with control of his students,-not all the time but sometimes you could hear disorder, confusion, kids maybe not under control. (Emphasis added) From unidentified sounds she allegedly overheard on the intercom, Secretary Bragdon concluded that the sounds she heard were "disorder," and, from that, she inferred that the "kids were maybe not under control" in Mr. Merica's class. The intended inference that Mr. Merica's "student behavior management and student control" was not effective at unspecified times, alluded to by this testimony, is rejected for want of reasonable credibility. Secretary Bragdon's testimony in findings 33, 34, and 35 consisted of exaggerated and speculative conjectures. As such, her testimony was not substantial in specifics nor competent in knowledge to establish as fact the allegations testified to in findings 33, 34, and 35 hereinabove. Secretary Bragdon was secretary to both Principal Payne and Principal Griffin, but there is no record evidence of the school year the alleged intercom activities she purported to have overheard, and of which she testified, occurred. The Amended Administrative Complaint alleged misconduct during the period 1994 through 1999 (1999 ending December 31, 1999), not throughout 1999-2000. The ambiguity regarding the time period the alleged conduct occurred is resolved in favor of Mr. Merica. Subversive Statements Secretary Bragdon also testified about a personal conversation between her and Mr. Merica "shortly after the Oklahoma City bombing."4 Although she could not remember the day, month or year, she specifically recalled: I was in the cafeteria getting coffee and Neil was also in the cafeteria. He brought his children in there to have breakfast. And he was up at the same table that I was and he basically just said that, you know, - - everybody was basically talking about it and I don't know word for word, but basically what he said was it would be good if we could do something like that here, but we just have to make sure the administration are in the building. This statement, if true, demonstrated, at its worst, bad taste on behalf of Mr. Merica. When considered within the context (everybody was talking-about it), circumstances (just after the news report of the occurrence), and the location (at a table in the cafeteria) with everyone talking, the alleged statement does not evidence a manifested "subversive" intent of Mr. Merica, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Sectary Bragdon's demeanor, attitude, and manner of responding to questions seemed calculated to provide little light on the substantive facts of the situation, but rather an exaggerated version of the nature and circumstances of the incidents. I find the testimony of Secretary Bragdon unworthy of reliance upon as a true foundation to support findings of fact as to the matters testified to hereinabove. Negative Attitude Toward Administration Statements Cynthia Blake, a DEES attendant at Foster from 1985 to 2002, testified regarding "statements" allegedly made by Mr. Merica that demonstrated his negative attitude (state of mind) toward the school administration. When asked the following question: "[W]hat comments were made or what comments have you overheard that would support your belief that Mr. Merica had a negative attitude about the administration," Ms. Blake gave the following answer: Well, there was a lot and sometimes he would just walk away. He did not want to hear it. He would walk behind me, say it again, and would say, you know, be careful or whatever and it never changed. At this one given time, we was just outside and I was watching some kids, I think, and he came up and they was painting the school and he just said that ought to get all the kids out of the school and blow the school up and leave the administration in the school. During her earlier deposition, Ms. Blake was asked: "[W]hat comments were made or what comments have you overheard that would support your belief that Mr. Merica had a negative attitude about the administration?" As seen below, her response then differed from her present testimony. Q. Do you remember a situation where Mr. Merica said something about blowing up the school? A. Yes. Q. Can you tell me about that? A. Well, we at some point always told Neil, you know, to you know, you'd better calm down because you never, you know, people -- the teachers and -- I mean the administration -- you have to just watch yourself. There are certain things you just can't say and probably in a joking way, but it was a lot of stuff going on at the time. The schools had been with firearms and up in Columbine and different situations, so probably it was in a -- I don't know what to say -- but he just spoke of we need to get all the kids about and leave the administration in and blow up the school. Q. Do you remember saying that it was probably in a joking manner back when your deposition was taken? A. Well, basically when Neil spoke about things, he laughed about it, so at the time, like I said, there was so much going on between the news and that, I would never know anymore. Q. All right. So he might have though it was funny, but you didn't think it was funny; is that fair? A. No, sir. The testimony of Ms. Blake, mirroring the testimony of Secretary Bragdon, demonstrated bad taste on behalf of Mr. Merica. When subject to cross-examination about the statement or other aspects of her prior testimony, Ms. Blake became vague and uncertain about her prior versions and was inconsistent on matters that seriously undermined her credibility. Consideration of the situation and circumstances when Mr. Merica made the alleged statement supports a reasonable inference that Mr. Merica's statement was a crude and boorish attempt at making a joke, not in good taste, but nonetheless a joke. The Commissioner did not prove by the above testimony that Mr. Merica was hostile and subversive or intended his comment as derogatory and disrespectful toward his principal as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Physical Restraint and Classroom Management Allegations Pat Drennan, assistant principal at Foster, by her admission was primarily responsible for the school's educational curriculum. In her "educational curriculum" capacity, Ms. Drennan assisted teachers, students, and parents in curriculum matters and assisted teachers in discipline in the classroom, student testing, and student grades. She was unable to recall the year and date, but she recalled she had been in her position as assistant principal for four years, approximately 1998 through January 2004. When asked about the Board's policy regarding an educator's physical restraint of students, Ms. Drennan responded that her "understanding" of the Board's policy was: [B]asically teachers are not to restrain students unless they have been trained-- unless they have ACT training they can not bring a child down on the ground or anything. She did not know whether Mr. Merica was ACT trained or not at all times pertinent and at the time of her testimony. No writing in the record speaks to this issue, and no predicate was laid to show that the witness was in a position to know the Board's policy. This witness stated her "understanding" of the applicable rule. A finding of fact that a violation of a penal statute or rule occurred cannot be based upon loose interpretations and problematic evidence, but on evidence as substantial as the penalty for violation of such statue or rule. The testimonial evidence given by this witness failed to establish the "rule." Thus, her opinion regarding violation of a rule she does not know, lacks a foundation upon which a reasonable degree of reliability will support. Ms. Drennan recalled one occasion on which (no evidence of the month and year) on which she instructed Mr. Merica "not to restrain a student she 'thought' he had restrained." She recalled making one general suggestion (not explained) to Mr. Merica regarding classroom behavior management, adding, but "he did not have to do it." Ms. Drennan did not know whether during his last year at Foster (1999-2000) Mr. Merica taught the entire year. When asked if she knew why Mr. Merica left Foster she answered: [I]n my mind, the situation was that he no longer was able to control himself and the class--the management of the class. No evidence of record speaks to the issue of a standard of classroom management from which to evaluate Mr. Merica's conduct. To demonstrate this issue the Commissioner's reliance on witnesses who could but state their "understanding" from various and dubious vantage points, failed to prove what was required of Mr. Merica and the specific conduct that fell below the required standards. The intended inference to be drawn from the above testimony of Foster's assistant principal, that Mr. Merica was "unable to control himself" and "unable to manage his class" and thus incompetent, is rejected for a lack of personal knowledge on behalf of the witness and evidence of an objective standard from which to evaluate "control" and class "management" by a teacher. The Commissioner failed to establish, by the testimony of Ms. Drennan, that Mr. Merica was unable to control himself and unable to manage his class and, thus, demonstrated incompetence, during the (unspecified) period inferred by Ms. Drennan's testimony, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Ms. Drennan testified, unconvincingly, about hearsay from another teacher, Ms. Parson, who told her, "for information only." According to Ms. Drennan: Ms. Paula Parson, a teacher who did not want anything done about it but for information only, told her she was apprehensive about Mr. Merica bringing her lunch and giving her unwanted attention. Paula Parson was not called to testify. The intended inference of unwanted attention is not accepted by the undersigned. The Commissioner failed to prove by the uncorroborated hearsay testimony of Ms. Drennan that Mr. Merica sexually harassed several different co-workers, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Code of Conduct and Rules of Professional Responsibility When asked if she was familiar with the Code of Conduct and the Rules of Professional Responsibility, Ms. Drennan again, unconvincingly, testified: I think yes, basically, the rule that deals with personal conduct that seriously reduces an educator's effectiveness in the school district,--when someone coming into the district-I would want to look at previous-- what had happened previously with the person and I would think they would be ineffective; I would find them ineffective in the fact if they were not open to interaction with faculty and staff in an appropriate, professional way; They are ineffective if they don't know how to deal with children in the proper way. If they couldn't tell me that they could do a management plan--have one before they walked in. I would find them ineffective if they were not--didn't have the right tools for teaching, basically, and those tools are many. Besides a degree, it would be how you get along with people, how open you are to learning new things, and that type of thing. There were no incidents of Mr. Merica being insubordinate or confrontational with Principal Payne witnessed by Ms. Drennan. This witness presented no evidence that she had personal knowledge of Mr. Merica's classroom management skills or the lack thereof. Her "opinions" about what conduct would be inappropriate and what conduct that would seriously reduce an educator's effectiveness (and competence) in the school district are her "opinions" and nothing more. The "right tools for teaching, basically, and those tools are many," standard coming from an assistant principal does not establish an objective and acceptable standard by which to evaluate a teacher's competence as a professional teacher. Viewed most favorably, the "opinions" of Ms. Drennan are not appropriate, objective standards by which to determine whether the professional conduct of a fellow teacher fell below the Code of Conduct and/or violated the Rules of Professional Responsibility. The Commissioner failed to prove, by the testimony of Ms. Drennan, that during the period starting approximately in 1998 and continuing through December 1999 Mr. Merica engaged in conduct that fell below the Code of Conduct and/or violated the Rules of Professional Responsibility as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Confrontations with Principal Griffin Ms. Drennan testified that at some point in time (of which she was not sure and unable to identify) her office was located next door to Principal Griffin's office, and she would "intentionally" leave her door open. According to Ms. Drennan, by leaving her door ajar she "could overhear and 'tell from the tone of the voice'--when someone was loud and confrontational like that [sic] you just never know and I just worried that there could be something else happening." Asked what she meant by "loud and confrontational," Ms. Drennan responded: Well, anger. Obviously, the man was angry when he was in there sometimes. I'm not saying every time, but the times that we're talking about like that, he was angry and anger sometimes can lead to other things, so . . . Ms. Drennan purportedly could overhear Mr. Merica speaking with her door open, but she gave no testimony of what, if anything, she overheard Mr. Merica say. Ms. Drennan's testimony, regarding loud talking by Mr. Merica toward Principal Griffin, inferring his state of mind as being emotionally out of control while conferencing with his principal, is speculative conjecture. There is no record evidence that this witness observed nor personally confirmed with Principal Griffin that Mr. Merica was, in fact, angry with Principal Griffin on each of those "sometimes" occasions she heard "someone was loud." This witness did not observe nor subsequently confirm with Principal Griffin that Mr. Merica pointed his finger her face, during those unspecified occasions when she sometimes left her office door ajar and sometimes heard someone was loud, as alleged in the Amended Administrative complaint. Secretary Bragdon recalled Mr. Merica yelling “everyday all the time,” and Ms. Drennan contradicts that testimony recalling he was loud and angry, but, qualifying that statement, she added she was “not saying every time [he was in the office].” The testimony of both witnesses, considered separately and together, failed to produced a firm belief, without hesitancy, as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established. Refusal of Failure to Comply with Requests and Instructions When asked, Ms. Drennan could not provide testimony based on personal knowledge or personal observation of any failure or the refusal by Mr. Merica to comply with an identified request or instruction given by either Principal Payne or Principal Griffin. When asked, Ms. Drennan could not provide testimony based on personal knowledge or personal observation of Mr. Merica having made derogatory and/or disrespectful remarks about Principals Payne or Griffin in her presence. Ms. Drennan's opinion that Mr. Merica deviated from her "understanding" of the principles contained in the Code of Conduct and Rules of Professional Responsibility standards were speculative and insufficient to establish as fact that Mr. Merica deviated from or violated the Code of Conduct and the Rules of Professional Responsibility. The Commissioner failed through this witness to establish any violation or any deviation from standards found in the Code of Conduct and the Rules of Professional Responsibility by Mr. Merica. Ms. Drennan failed to establish an objective, ascertainable standard of professional level of effective teacher behavior and teacher classroom management for SLD and IP students. Her testimony and the intended inferences regarding Mr. Merica's alleged ineffective and unprofessional student behavior, teaching, classroom control, and student management is incompetent to establish as fact that Mr. Merica deviated from clearly, established professional standards as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Ms. Drennan testified as did other co-workers who were present that Mr. Merica's had occasional disruptive verbal conduct in faculty and staff meetings and that during collegiate discussions he often demonstrated an argumentative attitude. The Commissioner proved, through the testimony of Ms. Drennan and other witnesses who were present and testified, that at one or more (unspecified) faculty and/or staff meetings that Mr. Merica occasionally engaged in disruptive verbal conduct accompanied by an argumentative attitude. Derogatory and/or Disrespectful Remarks About Principal Shelley Opila worked as a PI and ESE teacher at Foster from August 1996 to July 2001. When asked to give an example of "bashing the principal," Ms. Opila testified that during (unspecified) faculty meetings, Mr. Merica would often state: "Oh, that will never work," in response to unspecified matters under discussion. There is no record evidence of the situation or circumstances of the particular subject matter under discussions when this witness overheard the statement. Viewed most favorably, the isolated statement, "Oh, that will never work," is a personal opinion and, as such, does not evidence a manifest intent by Mr. Merica to make derogatory statements about the Foster administration as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Ms. Opila testified that she overheard Mr. Merica several times voice his personal opinions "[t]hat you have to be blonde or a female," and "It's who you know to be a principal." Without evidence of the situational circumstances when the statement was made, Ms. Opila assumed that Mr. Merica was referring to one or both, Principal Payne and/or Principal Griffin. There was no corroboration from either Principal Payne or Principal Griffin that Ms. Opila conveyed her concerns to either of them regarding Mr. Merica's alleged derogatory and/or disrespectful remarks. Viewed most favorably, the general statement "You have to be blond or a female," could have been a true statement if the record evidence established the color of Principal Payne and Principal Griffin's hair during their respective tenure as principal. The record evidence, however, does not. As reflected in the record, the testimony of this witness does not evidence a specific intent of Mr. Merica to make derogatory comments about Principal Griffin or Principal Payne. The record evidence reflects that approximately 120 educational personnel worked at Foster during the time in question and among that number only five or six were males. The reference to "blond and female to be principal" applied equally to approximately 100 females at Foster who, if they were not at the time the opinion statement was made, were capable of being blond and also capable of being a principal. Neither Principal Payne nor Principal Griffin testified regarding their respective hair colors during times pertinent to when the alleged statements were made by Mr. Merica, and the undersigned did not notice and can not recall with any certainty, the hair color of each of the twenty-plus female witnesses who testified in the proceeding. With the presence of more than 100 other females at Foster, and no evidence of the hair color of the principals at any time, an inexplicable ambiguity of "intent" is here presented. The ambiguity is resolved in favor of Mr. Merica. The Commissioner failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, through the testimony of Ms. Opila, that Mr. Merica intended to, and did specifically, make the derogatory comments about Principal Payne and/or Principal Griffin by the "blond [hair color] to be principal" statement as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Mr. Merica's Students Performance Ellen Lipari was a teacher of third and fourth grade PI students with various physical ailments and/or traumatic brain impairments from the 1992-1993 school year to approximately the 1997-1998 school year. She taught forth grade PI students during the same five-year period Mr. Merica taught first grade PI students. According to Ms. Lipari: [U]nder the pull-out school board policy in effect during that time, Mr. Merica would pull out and send his kindergarten and first grade level PI students to her third and fourth grade level classes. At some unspecified period during the five-year time period, she and Mr. Merica switched grade levels, Ms. Lipari moved down and taught the kindergarten and first grade level PI students, and Mr. Merica moved up and taught the third and fourth grade level PI students. After the switch, she would send her kindergarten and first grade level PI students to his third and fourth grade level classes. According to Ms. Lipari, during the 1997-1998 school year she had many opportunities to observe students Mr. Merica taught when they were thereafter assigned to her class. During that year, she personally observed Mr. Merica's teaching methodologies, his classroom management methods, and his in- class teaching conduct and style. Ms. Lipari described her impressions, gained from close, extended, daily and weekly contact, of his classroom control and management skills and his teaching skills of PI students with various physical ailments and traumatic brain impairments as: Well, you know, he was a very technically-he was technically doing his job, but there was a lot of humanized things that you do with younger children to try to get them to learn to read and those kinds of things that primarily he did not do. He was mostly teaching out of the textbook and trying to teach very specific things and not doing the kinds of things and that's why we decided it would be better if I moved down so that I could do more mothering and maternal type activities and maybe the older children would respond better to having a man teacher. Alleged Complaint from an Unidentified Mother Ms. Lipari moved down to teach the kindergarten and first grade level PI students, and to provide what she described as "mothering and maternal type activities," in keeping with the stated policy and goal of Principle Griffin as chief of the Foster administration. As a male teacher, Mr. Merica could not provide "mothering and maternal type activities to first grade level PI students," and it was not established that "mothering and maternal type activities" were requirements of all teachers, male and female, by this policy. During an unspecified period after she moved down to teach the kindergarten and first grade level PI students, unidentified parents of her former kindergarten and first grade student(s) called her complaining to her about the differences in the curriculum used to teach their children who were then in third or fourth grade levels under Mr. Merica. According to Ms. Lipari, some unidentified parents of PI students complained to her that "their former kindergarten and first grade children had been allowed to do certain things, like watch TV programs to which they had become accustomed." Based upon complaints from parent(s) she could not identify, Ms. Lipari reached conclusions and, based upon those conclusions, offered her opinion: I personally did not see any educational benefit to students watching TV because our kids [PI] are at least developmentally delayed, if not mentally handicapped, as well as being physically impaired because those children are primarily mentally impaired. Most of our children's IQs go maybe up to 70-75, so the kind of math that you would do in The Price is Right [TV program] would not be valid for those age level of children. During her years of working with Mr. Merica and observing Mr. Merica's teaching methodologies, his classroom management, and his in class teaching conduct, she never once personally observed Mr. Merica's students watching TV programs. Ms. Lipari's recollection of one phone call and her failure to identify the parent(s), who were so concerned about their children that they personally called Ms. Lipari, fairly detracted from the weight and believability of her testimony rendering it unreliable to establish facts alleged therein. Her testimony was further diminished by the lack of corroborating testimony from other witnesses. Ms. Lipari's testimony failed to produce a firm belief, without hesitancy, as to the truth of the allegation sought to be established. Ms. Lipari's opinion regarding educational benefits derived from watching a TV program, based upon the hearsay of unnamed parent(s), failed to prove, such activity actually occurred, or if it did occur, failed to prove that Mr. Merica’s use of such methods and skills were ineffective teaching methods and deviated from the Code of Ethics or Standards of Competent Professional Performance standards as alleged in the Amended Administrative Compliant. IPE Preparation and Assistance Ms. Lipari testified that she assisted Mr. Merica, on unspecified occasions, by "explaining the particulars of an IEP and the mechanics of writing an IEP." According to Ms. Lipari: [F]or every student with an IEP, the teacher, parent and therapist [another teacher] agree on goals and objectives that in their collective determination can be achieved by the child during the forthcoming school year. The IEP is a joint collaborative endeavor requiring discussions, disagreements, compromises and finally an acceptable document; subject to subsequent modifications. Ms. Lipari gave her personal belief that: [T]he teacher(s) has to find different ways of handling their PI students' problems because each child is different, according to their disability, according to their ability to write or not be able to write. Some PI children cannot write at all. Some PI children cannot speak at all. Therefore, the teacher has to find some ways to show that the child can read. Because he can't read out loud to the teacher, the teacher would find different methods that can used to show the student is making progress. IEPs are personalized crafted documents designed to address the perceived needs and method of instructions to address the need(s) of each handicapped student. The evidence of record does not speak to the issue of accepted standard(s) for writing an IEP nor is there evidence that Mr. Merica did not comply with accepted standards for writing an IEP. The Commissioner's reliance on Ms. Lipari's "belief" that Mr. Merica needed her assistance in writing one IEP, without more, failed to establish that Mr. Merica was incompetent in his professional teaching skills and/or in IEP writing and/or implementation skills. Viewed most favorably, Mr. Merica had five to six years of writing IEPs with other teachers and counselors before Ms. Lipari's offered assistance which she characterized as "explaining the particulars of an IEP and the mechanics of writing an IEP." The intended inference of this testimony requires first a belief that other teachers and counselors who had worked with Mr. Merica on IEPs during the preceding five years (1987-1992) either did not know "the particulars of an IEP and the mechanics of writing an IEP" or were unable or unwilling to recognize a need for "the mechanics of writing an IEP" and to offer and suggest methods of improvement to Mr. Merica, to include Principal Payne who worked with Mr. Merica for almost 10 years. The testimony of this witness was not corroborated. The testimony of Ms. Lipari failed to include essential details that are central to the facts sought to be established and, thus, failed to produce any belief of conviction as to the truth of allegations sought to be established. The testimony of Ms. Lipari also failed to demonstrate a single refusal by Mr. Merica to accept and implement one positive necessary suggestion that was, in fact, made by Ms. Lipari to Mr. Merica relating to teaching students with IEPs. This testimony failed to establish the existence of, the beginning of, or the continuation of, a demonstration of professional teaching incompetence as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Physical Restraint and Control of Unruly Male Students Ms. Lipari recalled one occasion an unidentified male student in her class was unruly in the hall. During the time her male student was being unruly, Mr. Merica came along with his class. He asked her if he could be of help with her unruly student and according to her, without waiting for her to reply, physically restrained her unruly male student. No evidence of record establishes an injury to any unruly male student that resulted from the physical restraint by Mr. Merica. This testimony demonstrated that on one occasion Mr. Merica restrained one unruly male student in the hallway who was in Ms. Lipari's class. This evidence also demonstrated that PI and SLD students were routinely unruly in the hallways and elsewhere in the school, when Ms. Lipari was the teacher in control and in charge as well as when Mr. Merica was the teacher in control and in charge of a class. This evidence also demonstrated the propensity of young male students to react to female teachers and to male teachers in a different manner. Ms. Lipari's testimony regarding unruly conduct of students, in the hallways when Mr. Merica was the teacher in charge, does not evidence his lack of ability to control and manage his unruly students, as alleged in the Amend Administrative Complaint. This testimony does establish as fact that Mr. Merica restrained an unruly male student during a period when his ATC certification was expired. This technical violation of ATC certification by Mr. Merica is accompanied by the fact that the unruly student was unhurt; other PI students were not harmed; and Ms. Lipari, a female, who provided "mothering and maternal type activities," was rendered assistance by a male co-worker, in keeping with the school's policy, according to Ms. Lipari, of having a male teacher in charge of the older and larger male PI students. Ms. Lipari further testified that on one unspecified occasion when she was present in the school hall, Mr. Merica's class was "very loud and unruly." This is the same witness whose class had an unruly male student in the hall when Mr. Merica restrained him. According to Ms. Lipari, during Mr. Merica's loud and unruly class in the hall incident, her class was under her supervision and her volunteer, an unnamed "grandmother," who was assisting her with her class on that unspecified date. According to Ms. Lipari, she and the grandmother observed Mr. Merica: [M]oving from the front of his class line to the back of his class line, swinging his arms back and forth for his unruly students to get in line and stay in line; but, he was not swinging his arms at his students or in their faces. "Grandmother(s)" are community volunteers who come in to assist teachers with PI and SLD students. According to the witness, the objective of grandmother assistants is to provide a soothing and calming presence in the classrooms. Assuming the intended inference to be drawn from this vague, non-explicit, testimony was to demonstrate Mr. Merica's inability to control his class and his unprofessional conduct in the presence of an unidentified member of the community, it failed. The testimony in finding 70 above was not corroborated by other witnesses and was sufficiently vague so as to cause doubt and raise substantial issues of credibility. Viewed most favorably, the above testimony failed to produce a firm belief of the truth of the allegations sought to be established. The Commissioner failed to prove, through the testimony of this witness, that Mr. Merica's conduct was inappropriate or unprofessional in any manner toward his students in the hall at some unspecified period or in the presence of a member of the public/community as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Negative Feelings About School Administration Ms. Lipari acknowledged that Mr. Merica was a very outspoken person on all issues he addressed. From that observation she went on to testify about an incident in the teacher's lounge when she overheard him make the statement: "[n]o woman was going to tell him what to do." From overhearing that part of a single statement at some unidentified time and without providing the circumstances and context in which the alleged statement was made, Ms. Lipari assumed she knew how Mr. Merica felt about Principal Payne, Principal Griffin and, in general "all females." Based on her assumptions, Ms. Lipari concluded Mr. Merica's statement was specifically intended to be derogatory about a particular unnamed principal. She further assumed the statement "no woman was going to tell him what to do" included her. Based upon those assumptions, she inferred Mr. Merica was speaking first, in a negative fashion; second, he was speaking about all women in general; and third, he was speaking about Principal Griffin in particular. Ms. Lipari's testimony regarding Mr. Merica's general opinion statement "no woman was going to tell him what to do," without establishing the context, situation, and/or circumstances at the time the statement was made failed to establish anything other than the statement was made. To this non-specific and ambiguous testimony, any number of meanings can reasonably be attributed, including his private and personal relationships with women in his past. Testimony of this isolated statement is not competent to establish a manifested intent on behalf of Mr. Merica to be disrespectful toward Principal Griffin or Principal Payne or women in general. The testimony in finding 72 was not placed in a situational circumstance that would have enabled the undersigned to render an objective evaluation. The alleged out-of-context statement is not competent to establish as fact allegations that Mr. Merica intentionally made derogatory and disrespectful statements about Principal Griffin and other female co-workers as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. IEP Preparation and Principal Griffin/Mr. Merica Relationship Linda Thomas was an ESE specialist at Foster from 1997 through 2002. Her duties included giving suggestions for curriculum or classroom management, assisting teachers with paperwork, and assisting resource teachers as needed. The usual method of contact would originate from a principal who would call Ms. Thomas and request her to lend assistance to a specific teacher. Answering the open-ended question, "what caused her concern about the Principal Griffin-Teacher Merica relationship," Ms. Thomas, without providing the year or month, answered: In my opinion, I don't believe that Mr. Merica had much respect for Ms. Griffin- -that he demonstrated that in the school setting. A number of times I overheard him say things such as that he would be around longer than she would. He was frequently making comments in faculty meetings just in general about the leadership and the administration in the school and his dissatisfaction with it. Ms. Thomas' testimony confirmed testimony of others that Mr. Merica often spoke out in faculty and staff meetings. Her opinion regarding what she "believed" to be Mr. Merica's opinion about the administrative leadership, even if true, was based on the alleged "frequency of unspecified comments," and her opinion that "I don't believe that Mr. Merica had much respect for Ms. Griffin--that he demonstrated that in the school setting," failed to establish as fact any allegation contained in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Answering the question regarding Mr. Merica's preparation for IEP meetings, and without identifying the number of IEP meetings she attended with Mr. Merica during the 1994 through 1999 period in question, Ms. Thomas stated: I believed preparation was very minimal. There was not -- he was not always ready. Most of his IEPs were all the same. Yet, it's -- an IEP is an individual education plan which is written specifically for each child, so every child in your class should not have the same thing written for them. Regarding his preparation of IEPs during the five-year period from 1994 to 1999, and without evidence of the number of IEP prepared by Mr. Merica and/or the number of occasions she personally inspected one or more of those IEPs, Ms. Thomas concluded that "[f]requently he wasn't prepared." This witness’ "belief" was not a "belief" based upon personal knowledge or facts. Though she believed "most of his IEPs--frequently not prepared," there is no evidence of record that she had personal knowledge or had occasion to review the content of an IEP prepared by Mr. Merica upon which to base her "belief," and, without more, her belief is speculative. Ms. Thomas was not qualified as an expert on IEPs and her personal "beliefs" and opinions regarding unidentified IEPs that she may or may not have reviewed, is lacking in preciseness to produce a firm belief as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established. As such, Ms. Thomas' testimony is not competent to corroborate and does not corroborate or support Ms. Lipari's testimony purporting to support the allegation that Mr. Merica's preparation of IEPs "in the school year of 1994- 1995 evidenced his ineffective teaching performance and demonstrated the beginning of his alleged incompetence that allegedly continued undiminished until not later than the end of the 1999 calendar year," as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. The Commissioner failed through the testimony of Ms. Thomas to establish as fact or to prove that Mr. Merica initially or began to demonstrate an inability, refusal, improper, or any other negative aspect of his professional teaching responsibilities at any time during the 1994-1995 school year. Ms. Thomas testified of overhearing statements made by Mr. Merica of which she shortly thereafter made the following written notation dated August 12, 1999: This morning at bus arrival time Mr. Merica left his students unsupervised to go into the clinic to talk with the nurse. His conversation consisted of suggestions that the clinic should have cell phones that could be used at home. He also commented that he should talk to the television reporters who were outside to let them know how the county runs things. He came in and out of the clinic at least 3 times in a 10 minute time span and made these comments in the presence of staff and at least one student. Ms. Thomas' testimony and her subsequent written notation regarding a conversation consisting of "suggestions" that the clinic should have cell phones and that Mr. Merica "should talk to the television reporters who were outside," if true, were suggestions and nothing more. The witness did not know why or for what reason Mr. Merica entered the clinic. The identification of the staff member (other than herself) or identification of the unnamed student alleged to have been present and presumably overheard Mr. Merica's suggestions are not in the record. The witness' testimony demonstrated a distinct lack of a specific memory of the facts at issue to which she testified. The testimony in findings 77 through 80 failed to establish a firm belief without hesitancy as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established. Classroom Visits and Observations Ms. Thomas testified that over an unidentified three- year period she visited and observed Mr. Merica teaching his PI class approximately ten times with each visit lasting ten to 30 minutes. Ms. Thomas' visits and observations were neither made at the request of the principal nor were they made after notice was given to Mr. Merica. She did, however, make note of a single incident outside the school cafeteria, apparently for future reference and not to help a fellow teacher; but of the ten visits she made to observe and presumably help a fellow teacher, she made no written notations evidencing the dates of her visits and observations, at or near the time of each visit. Her alleged visits to Mr. Merica's class, without specifying the reasons for her visits, were more or less one co-worker visiting another co-worker; if, in fact, those ten, undocumented visits actually occurred. Documents Prepared Critical of Mr. Merica's Performance Ms. Thomas did, however, within a 45-day period, prepare seven documents, each critical of either Mr. Merica's conduct or professional teaching methods, and purportedly gave a copy of each document to Principal Griffin. The seven documents prepared by Ms. Thomas were all dated over a three-month period (August 11, 1999 to October 27, 1999), when from evidence of record, Foster administration was preparing to recommend to the Board termination of Mr. Merica's contract employment with the county. Ms. Thomas dated her first document August 11, 1999. She dated her six additional documents Augusts 12, October 19, 20, 21, 25, and 27, 1999. The seven documents prepared by Ms. Thomas did not include any of the alleged ten visits she made over the three-year (from 1997 through August 11, 1999) observation period of Mr. Merica to which she testified from long past memory in Finding of Fact 81 hereinabove. No other witness, including Mr. Merica, corroborated Ms. Thomas' alleged ten visits to Mr. Merica's class. I find the lack of documentation and the witness' lack of recall ability regarding specifics that occurred more than four years past an insurmountable barrier in accepting the witness' testimony as creditable on those significant points sought to be established. When asked on cross-examination whether Principal Griffin requested her to prepare the two August 1999 documents and the five October 1999 documents, Ms. Thomas suffered a sudden lapse of memory. When asked about each document individually, Ms. Thomas gave answers of either "I don't remember," "I couldn't say for sure" or "I couldn't guarantee." The seven documents prepared by Ms. Thomas in August and October 1999 contained alleged statements made by Mr. Merica, some personal observations, a prepared historical statement beginning with her first meeting with Mr. Merica in 1996 throughout 1997 and 1999, and hearsay statements from several students that were not recorded at or near the time they were made. The witness' failed memory, coupled with her inability to recall if she was asked by her principal to prepare those seven documents within such a short time span, rendered suspect and unreliable both the author and the content of her seven documents. The witness was defensive, evasive, and reluctant on significant points, evidenced by her lack of memory and confusion regarding who made the request and for what purpose she wrote seven different documents in a short time period. Her answers were not forthright and this aspect of her testimony raised insurmountable issues regarding her credibility. The testimony of Ms. Thomas lacked sufficient reliability, due to her uncertainty, to produce a firm belief in the mind of the undersigned as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established. Classroom Management by Mr. Merica Compared to Classroom Management by Other Teachers When asked about problems regarding classroom management Mr. Merica had with his PI classes as "compared with class room management problems of other teachers," Ms. Thomas answered "[t]here are children in most classes who present behavior problems." Her memory was better on this issue and she recalled observing a few instances with two or three students creating problems in Mr. Merica's class. However, she did not identify the "other teachers" to whom she compared Mr. Merica nor did the witness establish "the other teachers" class room management standards. I find the witness' testimony was intentionally slanted to exaggerate the nature of Mr. Merica's classroom management without providing specific incidents from which an objective evaluation could have been made. The Commissioner failed, through the testimony of Ms. Thomas, to prove allegations that Mr. Merica demonstrated incompetence as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint, by evidence that he had "more" behavior problems in his ESE and PI classes than other unidentified ESE and PI teachers similarly situated. Classroom Management by Mr. Merica as Compared to Classroom Management by New Teachers with Less Teaching Experience Ms. Thomas testified, unconvincingly, that after Mr. Merica left Foster in 2000, new unidentified teachers came in and taught self-contained SLD classes with acceptable classroom management style. With improved memory on this issue, Ms. Thomas recalled that she observed the new teachers' classroom management style but could not remember if she documented classroom management problems observed with the new teachers, as she had with Mr. Merica. Assuming the intended purpose of this particular testimony was to demonstrate an appreciable difference between Mr. Merica's classroom management skills and teaching methods, after years of experience, to the classroom management skills and teaching methods of new teachers with much less experience, it failed. The testimony of Ms. Thomas regarding the issue of her comparison of class management and teaching skills of Mr. Merica to those of new unidentified teachers, including documents she prepared, those referred to, and the alleged acts therein, whether used for comparison or not, occurred beyond the 1994 through 1999 time period alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint or some comparable pleading. On that basis, this testimony of Ms. Thomas must be, and is, rejected in toto. It is a basic tenet of common law pleading that "the allegata and probata must correspond and agree." See Rose v. State, 507 So. 2d 630 (Fla. 5th DCA 1987). The documents Ms. Thomas prepared and the testimony she presented herein above in findings 78 through 85 failed to establish as fact that on those occasions Ms. Thomas observed Mr. Merica, he failed to perform to professional expectations as a competent teacher as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Statements Made to Principal Griffin's Daughter Tamiko Council believed, but was not certain, that she was a DEEDS attendant at Foster the 1997 to the 1999 or the 2000 school year. She testified that during a (unspecified) summer school session, Principal Griffin's daughter had been introduced to her earlier in the day but she was unable to give the date of the incident. As she recalled, she and Principal Griffin's daughter were coming from the bus ramp in route to the cafeteria when Mr. Merica noticed Principal Griffin's daughter and, in her presence, said to the child: You need to tell your mom to quit worrying about teachers around the school. She needs to focus more on what the children are doing. Later that day Principal Griffin called Ms. Council into her office and made inquiry regarding the incident, as told her by her daughter, and Ms. Council confirmed the incident had occurred. Mr. Merica acknowledged making a statement to Principal Griffin's daughter. The Commissioner proved that Mr. Merica made a statement to the daughter of Principal Griffin. The appropriateness of a teacher stating his opinion to a young person who was a student attending a Hillsborough County school was inappropriate. However, the statement alone, under the above circumstances, does not demonstrate a "failure to protect student[s] attending for educational purposes from harmful conditions." There is no evidence of record offered to demonstrate that Principal Griffin's daughter, after the comments by Mr. Merica, "experienced harmful conditions to her educational purposes," during the summer she was at the school of which her mother was principal. Pamela Wilkins was a teacher of educable mentally handicapped students at Foster for a five-year period from 1993 to 1998. During the three-year period of approximately 1995 through 1998, Ms. Wilkins was an ESE specialist. Harassment and Unreasonable Interference with Co-workers Ms. Wilkins testified regarding an incident that allegedly occurred when she asked Mr. Merica into her office for an unspecified discussion. Ms. Wilkins did not remember the school year or the month the incident of which she testified occurred nor did she remember the situational circumstances, the context or the issue over which she and Mr. Merica had their alleged discussion and subsequent disagreement. With no memory of any specifics as to why she would ask him into her room, Ms. Wilkins only recalled Mr. Merica’s discussion with her that she characterized as "his getting upset and her saying nothing." Ms. Wilkins did not know why she invited him into her office, but emphasized her "only reason" for inviting "him into her office would have been to discuss an ESE issue." There is no record evidence regarding the ESE issue of such importance that this witness called Mr. Merica into her office for a discussion of an issue she does not recall, when her "only" time calling him into her office was so memorable. Having established her ability to ”call Mr. Merica into her office" for reasons unknown to her, this witness then testified about some purported disagreement between she and Mr. Merica. Even assuming the alleged disagreement occurred and was, in fact, over an ESE issue between she and Mr. Merica during their single discussion the witness testified: I really don't recall the entire situation. The main thing 'is just his response.' We were talking about--obviously it was ESE issues and he ended up getting upset, and I was on one side of the desk and he was on the other side. He ended up leaning over the desk and was in my face. His veins in his neck were bulging and kind of trembling and just was yelling at me and I was completely stunned and shocked the way he had responded and so I really did not say anything else at that time. The testimony of Ms. Wilkins evidenced her characterization of one party's reaction to an alleged disagreement over an alleged and unidentified ESE issue. Absence evidence of the context, circumstances, and the ESE issue that precipitated the purported disagreement between co- workers, the record contains no basis upon which to determine with reasonable certainty the appropriateness of one party's alleged reaction to the other party's input during a collegiate disagreement. The referenced reaction, even if accepted as factually true, absent evidence of the issue, context and circumstances, failed to clearly and convincingly establish an unprofessional, hostile behavior on behalf of Mr. Merica toward a co-worker, Mr. Wilkins, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. The witness' apparent stunned and shocked reaction to a co-workers' disagreement with her over an unidentified ESE issue was not so unprofessional and shocking, at the time of occurrence, to compel Ms. Wilkins to report such shocking disagreement to the school administration. It was not of such importance, at that time, to prompt Ms. Wilkins to document her shocking outrage for future reference and possible investigation by proper school authorities. Ms. Thomas' lack of recall of the circumstances to an incident to which she was a major participant, and the record evidence of scant circumstances surrounding the alleged one-party reaction to a two-party discussion and alleged violent disagreement, created an insurmountable credibility gap in her testimony. Based on the foregone, it is found that the testimony of this witness lacks credibility. This testimony is rejected because it is wholly unreliable regarding the truth of the allegations sought to be established. The testimony of Ms. Wilkins in findings 90, 91, 92 and 93, hereinabove, absent record evidence of the issue which caused the alleged disagreement between colleagues, is sufficiently vague and imprecise that it failed to establish a firm belief, without hesitation, of the truth of the allegations sought to be established. The alleged conduct by one party over an unidentified issue during a mutual disagreement between colleagues does not establish unprofessional conduct or a violation of established standard of professional protocol. The Commissioner failed, through the testimony of Ms. Wilkins, to prove that Mr. Merica, while in Ms. Wilkins' office engaged in conduct that was unprofessional, belligerent, hostile, confrontational, and subversive in the workplace toward his co- worker as alleged in the Amended Administration Complaint. Sexual Harassing Statements Made in Presence of Child Evelyn Tait, at all times material, was the administrative data processor at Foster. Before her promotion to administrative data processor, she was a teacher's aide for a few years. Ms. Tait is the sister of Secretary Bragdon. Ms. Tait first qualified her testimony stating that she "believed but was not certain," that the Investigation Manager for the Board (Michael Saia) came to her and asked her if she would write a statement about Mr. Merica. In her effort to comply with the request of the Board's investigator, and on October 2, 2001, Ms. Tait wrote the following document purporting to detail a "forgotten and previously unreported incident" that allegedly occurred, some three years earlier, in 1999. Ms. Tait's efforts to comply with the request of the Board Investigator resulted in Ms. Tait writing the following October 2, 2001, addendum to her 1999 written statement: On August 27, 1999, I wrote a statement regarding Mr. Neil Merica. The statement that I wrote was true and accurate [sic] as I recall. However, I would like to add a time that I was out in the pickup area picking up my son from school. I was in my care [sic] and Mr. MERICA came over to my window and made a commet [sic] regarding to what was under my shirt. I was made to feel very uncomfortable, and was inappropriately addressed [sic] from a teacher to a pa [sic] and also to a parent of a child in this school. Back in August 27, 1999, Ms. Tait wrote: To Whom It May Concern: I am writing this letter to you regarding the actions of Mr. Neil Merica that I have observed. I am a paraprofessional at Foster Elementary School and have only been employed as a permanent employee since the beginning of this school year.[1999] On several occasions, I have seen Mr. Merica screaming at a student with his face being very close to theirs. The child on each occasion looked very scared. Since I am such a new employee at the school, I am not familiar with the discipline procedures of the instructors, but being a parent of an eight year old, I know that the behavior that I have seen him display with the students is very uncalled for. As a parent, I would be very upset if I thought for once that a teacher was yelling at my child in such a manner. I have also witnessed Mr. Merica when he was upset for one reason or another with the administration. He sometimes appears to be out of control, saying things that are unnecessary. I am writing this letter for documentation of what I have observed and for the welfare of the children involved. I am requesting that my name not be revealed to Mr. Merica because being "a smoker", I am in contact with him daily. I am afraid of retaliation from him if he were to find out. Sincerely, Signed by Evelyn B. Tait /s/ The two documents signed by Ms. Tait, and her explanations when questioned, evidenced not truth, but rather confusion caused by this witness' attempt to comply with the request by Mr. Saia, in preparation for her testimony at this hearing. The truth and accuracy of the documents as well as Ms. Tait's understanding, explanation, and lack of credibility regarding these two documents are best demonstrated by her cross-examination: Q. Would you look back at number exhibit 23 again? You wrote that statement on October 2, 2001; is that correct? A. Um-hum. Q. And the first sentence says: "On August 27, 1999 I wrote a statement regarding Mr. Merica." (as read) Were you referring the Exhibit 22? A. I think I was --- Q. All right. You were referring to the other statement when you write that? A. I think I was. Q. I want you to take your time and made sure. That one is dated August 27th, 1999; correct? A. Yes. This happened on two separate occasions. Q. That's what we're going to get to in a minute if you'll let me walk you through this. A. Yeah, it did. Q. You go on to state that you gave a statement back in August '99 and everything you said in that was true, but you want to add something. And what you want to add is this incident that happened at the pickup circle: correct? A. Yes, sir. Q. How long ago had that incident happened at the pickup circle? A. What do you mean, how long ago? Q. How long prior to the time when you wrote this statement? A. I would say probably close to the date that it was signed. Q. Okay. So the incident at the circle would have been close to October 2001? A. I don't remember the dates sir. I don't remember the dates that I wrote the statements. I don't remember the dated. Q. Al right. The incident at the circle -- did you complain about it when it happened? A. Yes, I did. Q. Who did you complain to? A. I went and obviously told the principal's secretary again. I don’t' know who I would complain to. I'm just not going to -- you know, I wasn't out to get Mr. Merica in trouble. Q. I'm not suggesting that -- A. I was just --- Q. I'm not suggesting that you were. [Witnesses instructed by the undersign to answer the question asked by counsel without editorializing] Q. All right. Let's walk back through it. An incident happened at the pickup circle; correct? A. Um-hum. Q. And at some point after that incident, you reported the incident to someone; is that correct? A. It was immediately. Q. Immediately? That day? A. Yes. Q. All right. You got out of your car when you picked up your child? A. No. It wasn't immediately that day. It was -- like I said, the principal's secretary is my sister, so I probably reported it that afternoon. Q. After you picked up your child? A. Um--hum. Q. Is that a "yes"? A. Yes, sir. Q. All right. You took your child home? A. Yes. Q. And then went back to the school to report it? A. No. I probably called her on the telephone. Q. All right. You've said "probably a number of times. Do you -- A. I called her on the -- I don't remember. I'm sorry. I don't remember. You know, I don't remember when it was placed, to be honest with you. I don't remember exactly when it was reported, how it was reported. I don't remember. Q. All right. Did anyone ask you to write a statement about the incident that occurred at the pickup area? A. I don't remember that, either. I guess someone must have asked me to write a statement or I wouldn't have written one. Q. And when you say you wrote one, you're talking about Exhibit 23; correct? A. I wrote this statement as well. Q. Is there another statement besides Exhibit 23 that addresses the incident that allegedly occurred at the pickup circle at the school? A. No. It's this one. Q. So to your knowledge that is the only statement that you made; correct? You made that statement a couple of years after the incident occurred; correct? A. That would be 10-02 -- I mean, 01. Q. All right. A. August 27th is the first statement. Q. Of '99; correct? A. Right. Q. So here we are a couple of years later in 2001 and you're making a statement for the first time about the traffic circle incident; correct? A. Right. Q. That's the only statement that you're written about that? A. Yes. I am very sorry. This is very confusing to me. I wrote statement when they were reported -- you know, when I reported them. I don't remember dates. We're taking how many years ago and I apologize you know. Q. Could it be, ma'am that the first time that you reported the incident that occurred at the traffic circle was around October 2001 when you wrote this statement? A. Yes. When subjected to cross-examination about her two written statements, her confusions, and her lack of personal knowledge of specific details of the alleged curb-side incident, Ms. Tait contradicted her entire testimony as reflected in findings 96, 97, and 98 above, to include the two documents she authored. It is apparent that Ms. Tait's preparation for this hearing, at a minimum included writing a statement three years after the alleged occurrence. It is also reasonable to infer that Ms. Tait's testimony and her 1999 and 2001 documents were an attempt to exaggerate "negative personal conduct on behalf of Mr. Merica" in a decided attempt to appease her employer. Ms. Tait's entire testimony hereinabove, lacks credibility and failed to produce a belief to the undersigned as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established therein. Sexual Harassment of Co-workers Allegations Kelley Kolinsky (f/k/a Toms), a self-employed Occupational Therapist (OT) since 1998, worked at Foster for two and one-half years, doing evaluations and arranging treatment protocol for ESE children. As an OT, she recalled one pre-K evaluation she covered for Kathy Prado, Ph.D., another occupational therapist. Though she tried to recall the persons present at the meeting, she was unable to do so. She recalled an unnamed parent and a unnamed male who were also present. Ms. Kolinsky testified that she was not going to cover any more meetings at Foster. When asked why? Ms. Kolinsky answered: I don't know exactly. It's been like -- I don’t' even know how long, but I just remember being uncomfortable with -- I don't even remember if it was comments or notes, looks, whatever, but something like with the male teacher that was present at the meeting. But it's been so long that I really can't give any more specifics. When asked if during the meeting there was anything of a sexual nature, Ms. Kolinsky replied: I can't say. I mean, I remember I was uncomfortable, but I don't remember specifically now. The Commissioner, by the uncertainty of Ms. Kolinsky's testimony, failed to establish as fact that during the 1994-1999 school years, Mr. Merica sexually harassed a co-worker by making inappropriate comments to Ms. Kolinsky, an occupational therapist, in the presence of other colleagues and/or in the presence of a parent as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Kara Twohy was an ESE teacher at Foster from December 1996 through 2000. Ms. Twohy first met Mr. Merica when she was a teacher-intern in an EMH class at Foster during the 1995-1996 school year. Ms. Twohy testified that Mr. Merica made her "feel uncomfortable" giving as an example the following incident: He would do things like put his arms around me. One thing I can remember is he said I had an ink spot on the back of my shirt and he was attempting to rub it off. He would come -- and this is afterwards when I became a teacher -- he would come to the classroom and he brought a rose at one time, and he was constantly -- whether I was at art or I was in the classroom, he was constantly visiting the classroom. I can remember an incident where I was really ill and he came to an assembly and brought me some tissues. All in all, it just made me very uncomfortable. When she was "really ill," Mr. Merica brought her tissues and once gave her a rose. Bringing tissues to one's colleague when the colleague was "really ill" may have been either an appropriate or an inappropriate gesture. However, the act itself does not prove it was sexual harassment. According to Ms. Twohy, she initially expressed her uncomfortable feelings to other unnamed co-workers and Principal Griffin, but not to Mr. Merica. When she told Principal Griffin about her uncomfortable feelings around Mr. Merica, she testified that Principal Griffin said to her: "there's nothing really that anyone could do, but to start writing everything down. So I began writing them down." There is no evidence of record that Principal Griffin initiated an administrative investigation into the "uncomfortable incidents" related to her by the young teacher, Ms. Twohy. It is, thus, reasonable to infer, and I so infer that at the time and under the circumstances, Principal Griffin did not consider that Ms. Twohy's "uncomfortable" feelings resulting from Mr. Merica's attention to have been "sexual harassment" as that term is generally understood when placed in the above situational context. According to Ms. Twohy, after she told Mr. Merica that his presence, his attention, and his conduct made her feel uncomfortable, she recalled he apologized: There was in incident that occurred between him and my aide at the time who was Adele Morris, and basically she told him to leave me alone and he said well, I'm a big girl so I should be able to tell him myself. And he approached me the following day, I believe, after the confrontation and asked me if he made me feel uncomfortable, and I told him yes, he did. I felt very uncomfortable around him and he did apologize and say that he was sorry for making me feel uncomfortable. As a employee of the Board, Ms. Twohy knew the Board’s sexual harassment policy requirement of reporting harassment to the school's administration. She followed the policy by reporting her uncomfortable feelings and concerns to Principal Griffin. When Ms. Twohy informed Mr. Merica that his attention and conduct made her uncomfortable, he immediately discontinued all contact and apologized to her. If, as the Commissioner argued, Mr. Merica sexually harassed Ms. Twohy during the time above-stated, she followed protocol and reported the matter to her principal. There is no evidence of record that the principal of Foster initiated or requested an investigation by the School Board and a determination of whether or not Mr. Merica committed the alleged sexual harassment. If the matter was not properly investigated and determined by the Board to have been sexual harassment when it occurred, it will not be determined to be sexual harassment now by the undersigned based solely upon the unconvincing testimony of Ms. Twohy. The Commissioner failed to establish as fact, by findings 96 through 103 hereinabove, that Mr. Merica sexually harassed Ms. Twohy, a co-worker and sexually harassed Ms. Kolinsky, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Compliant. Kim Kimpton, via her video-taped testimony, was convincing and unequivocal in her response to the question, "[D]o you consider Mr. Merica's action(s) towards you to be sexual harassment? "No, not specifically." The "actions toward you" referred to what was described by the Commissioner as unwanted attention, several instances of on school-property encounters and off school-property encounters, to include buying lunch for her on one or more occasion, giving her presents, and thereafter writing a letter of apology. The Commissioner failed to prove by the evidence of record that during the 1998-1999 school year, Mr. Merica sexually harassed Ms. Kimpton, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. I find that the Commissioner failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Merica sexually harassed any present or past female member of Foster's administration as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. SLD Student's Version of Classroom Management and Student Control Patricia Rumlin, mother of Jarmaal Rumlin, a 15-year- old SLD student witness who, at the time of the hearing, was in ninth grade, accompanied him at the hearing. When asked, Jarmaal remembered he had been a student in Mr. Merica's class for his fourth and fifth grade school years (1997-1999 school years), but he did not remember the specific school years. During the period Jarmaal was a Foster student, the Board was operating under the self-contained class policy, and Jarmaal was in Mr. Merica's self-contained class throughout the school day. When asked the open-ended question, "[W]hat about the incident when the kids were kicking a ball in the classroom?" Jarmaal gave the following, incomplete, confused, response: We was [sic] playing in the class. Takela kicked the ball to the back of the room and she went to go get it and he trapped us in the back of the room and we bust out and we ran down to the PE field. When asked "[D]id Mr. Merica ever come into any contact or anything with Takela?" Jarmaal, again confused, answered: No. He just holding in the back of the room. [sic] Holding her and she was trying to run and trying to grab her. She was going to fight back, until she got loose and ran. When asked, "[W]hy did you not mention or report this incident to other teachers, the principal [1997-1998/Payne and 1998-1999/Griffin] or the Board’s investigator?" (1999 to 2003) Jarmaal answered: "They didn't talk to me." Jarmaal's above testimony, did not corroborate the testimony of another witness who stated: "Ms. Teresa Joslyn entered a room and found Mr. Merica seated on a couch holding Jarmaal by the arm and yelling in his face and that Ms. Joslyn took him by the hand and stood him up and Principal Griffin came into the room and observed those actions," as argued by the Commissioner in its post-hearing submittal. Jarmaal admitted that "kids in his class misbehaved in class, played kickball and got up and walked around when they were not suppose to." When asked if he liked Mr. Merica, Jarmaal answered "[N]o." When asked if he learned anything in Mr. Merica's class Jarmaal answered, "I didn't learn nothing [sic]." When asked if he wanted Mr. Merica as his teacher again, Jarmaal, answered, "[N]o I don't Mr. Merica as my teacher again." Testimony from other teachers at Foster established that SLD students were, if not daily, most certainly, routinely unruly in their classes and in hallways. Jarmaal's testimony seemed rehearsed, but he was confused about the facts critical to the situation of which he testified. The witness' inability to recall and his manner of testifying raised substantial issues of the witness' credibility primarily because of his seemingly rehearsed responses and confused factual response, often mixing several parts of separate incidents. Through the testimony of Jarmaal, a SLD student, the Commissioner failed to demonstrate and prove by example that: (1) Mr. Merica engaged in inappropriate discipline, (2) he failed to engage in meaningful teaching methods, (3) he lacked professional classroom control and management of his SLD class, and (4) he was incompetent as a teacher, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. I find the SLD students' reply he did not "like" Mr. Merica an insufficient foundation from which to infer that the SLD student did not "respect" Mr. Merica as a teacher. Tawnya Clark, mother of Demetrie White, another 15- year-old SLD student, accompanied him in the hearing. Demetrie only remembered attending Foster. He did not remember the years he attended Foster (1997-1998/Principal Payne and 1998- 1999/Principal Griffin). He did not remember the grades he was in when he was attending Foster. He did not remember the class (fourth and fifth grades) he was in when Mr. Merica was his teacher. When asked "[I]n what ways Mr. Merica would get upset?" Demetrie, hesitantly, gave the following response: When like students get like up out of they seat and walk around the classroom and talk to other students, he'd get mad then and then after that he'd like -- Jonathan he would be like getting up out of his seat and talk to me, Eldrid and another friend who go to my school and he would like grab Jonathan, try to twist his wrist and then slam him on the ground and then Jonathan would be like, Get up off me. And then that's when like he would like flip. He would try to get up off the ground, Jonathan. That is when he tried to grab Mr. Merica's neck. That's it. Demetrie admitted that the kids would get up and walk around in class when they were not supposed to do so. He admitted that Jonathan tried to grab Mr. Merica's neck. He remembered a female teacher's aide but he did not remember her name or whether she was black or white. As with Jarmaal, Demetrie remembered Mr. Merica yelling at students when they were acting up. He remembered Mr. Merica yelling in the faces of students. Demetrie, like Jarmaal, said he did not like Mr. Merica, "he didn't learn nothing" and he "didn't want Mr. Merica as his teacher again." Utter confusion permeated Demetrie’s understanding of the questions asked of him and his seemingly rehearsed answers to those questions. I find the SLD student's reply that he did not "like" Mr. Merica an insufficient foundation from which to infer the SLD student did not "respect" Mr. Merica as a teacher. Viewed most favorably, the testimonies of these two very large young boys consisted of a confused misunderstanding of questions asked of them and their rehearsed answers. The testimony of these two young boys established that at times, Mr. Merica yelled at them and, on occasion, restrained them for his personal defense and/or to regain classroom control when they were acting out of control, being disobedient, playing kickball in the class room, and yelling at each other and at him. The situational circumstances of the separate incidents to which the witnesses testified occurred four or five years earlier. These two SLD students were confused, and their testimony consisted of a mixture and intermingling of critical factual portions of two separate incidents into one continuous dialogue. From their individual and collective testimony, the appropriateness or inappropriateness of Mr. Merica's conduct, in an attempt to control and manage his SLD class, cannot be determined with a reasonable degree of certainty to produce a firm belief as to the allegations in the Amended Administrative Complaint. The ambiguity created by the testimony of Jarmaal and Demetrie relating to a specific portion of their testimony related to a specific incident is decided in favor of Mr. Merica. The Commissioner proved that Mr. Merica "restrained" Takela, a student in his SLD class, by holding her arm. The Commissioner proved that Mr. Merica "restrained” Jonathan, a student in his class, by holding the wrist and arm of Jonathan. Based upon the testimony of these two young SLD students, assuming accuracy and truth, Mr. Merica’s physical restraining actions were, given the circumstances and situation at the time of physical restraints, appropriate for the defense of his person and for the protection of other students in the class. Disagreement Over IEP Content and Student Control In 1995 Ms. Teresa Joslyn began teaching at Foster Elementary as an EMH teacher. She affirmed other witnesses' testimonies that Mr. Merica was loud and argumentatively disruptive during staff and faculty meetings. Ms. Joslyn, however, gave unconvincing testimony regarding one IEP meeting she attended with Mr. Merica, but she could not provide the month or school year the IEP meeting occurred. According to Ms. Joslyn, during this IEP meeting an unnamed parent wanted unspecified items included in her unnamed child’s IEP, and Mr. Merica, the teacher, was apparently of the opinion that those items desired by this parent were not necessary. The IEP in question was not entered into evidence. When asked whose opinion determined the make up of the IEP, Ms. Joslyn replied, "[t]he case manager, who is generally the teacher [Mr. Merica in this instance]-- the person that serves the child the most.” During this particular IEP meeting, and with no evidence, or personal knowledge of the specific IEP items under discussion, Ms. Joslyn never the less concluded an unspecified position maintained by Mr. Merica was unreasonable and, by implication, unprofessional, and the position taken by the unidentified parent was reasonable. Ms. Joslyn's testimony is not credible, competent or of substantial weight to support a firm belief of the truth of the allegations sought to be established. Ms. Joslyn, without giving the year or month, remembered occasions when she would visit Mr. Merica’s classroom. According to Ms. Joslyn: On the occasion(s) when I would enter Mr. Merica's room, oftentimes I did not find him engaged in active teaching. There were times when I would walk in and he was--there was a game on the computer that he was playing or he'd be reading the newspaper or magazine at his desk. The aides -- the children would --have may or may not have worksheets on their desks and the aides seemed to be the ones that were more engaged with the children. Ms. Joslyn testified again, unconvincingly, about one incident she remembered, but she was unable to provide the month or year, when she heard a "kind of ruckus and loud voices." She remembered hearing an unnamed child's voice and Mr. Merica's voice, but she did not hear the words being spoken by either person. She supposedly entered the room and saw Mr. Merica seated on a couch holding Jarmaal (Rumlin) by the arm and Jarmaal trying to resist and get up. Continuing, she also remembered that Mr. Merica was agitated, upset, and yelling, and the child was also yelling. Ms. Joslyn specifically recalled that while she was "taking Jarmaal by the hand and Merica letting go of Jarmaal's arm at which point the principal came into the room and asked Mr. Merica to come into her office." According to Ms. Joslyn, both "the Principal" (Griffin) and Jarmaal were actively involved in this arm holding incident. Principal Griffin did not corroborate Ms. Joslyn's vague and non-specific memory of an undated arm holding incident. Jarmaal was not asked about this specific incident nor did he corroborate Ms. Joslyn's testimony. No other witness called by the Commissioner gave corroborating testimony in support of Ms. Joslyn’s testimony. This is critical to the credibility determination in this proceeding since allegations of inappropriate conduct in his professional relations with children are specifically alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint and form the bases, in part, to support the allegation of professional incompetence. I find that Ms. Joslyn's vague, non-specific testimony, without corroboration of the other alleged participants to establish the context, circumstances, and time, raised substantial issues of her credibility. Her testimony and credibility was further diminished by the lack of corroborating evidence from other witnesses who were allegedly involved. The testimony contained in findings 128 and 129 hereinabove is rejected for its lack of credibility. I find that the Commissioner failed to prove, through the testimony of Ms. Joslyn, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica was not engaged in active teaching and that on unidentified occasions he was playing computer games or reading a newspaper or magazine while some unidentified staff taught his class and failed to prove that Mr. Merica engaged in inappropriate conduct by "holding Jarmaal by the hand and Merica letting go of Jarmaal's arm at which point the principal came into the room and asked Mr. Merica to come into her office." The Commissioner has failed to prove that Mr. Merica was incompetent, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Debbie Maronic, physical education teacher at Foster, gave repetitive testimony affirming the fact that Mr. Merica was loud, often disruptive, and sometimes argumentative with colleagues at staff and faculty meetings. Ms. Maronic also testified of having heard "numerous stories about how Mr. Merica behaved inappropriately to other female staff members at meetings or in the hallway or other places," without recalling any one of those numerous stories. Ms. Maronic admitted that she heard her information, not from Kelly and Kim Rivenburg, the females alleged to have been recipients of inappropriate conduct, but from second-hand people. The hearsay upon hearsay summary testimony of "stories" Ms. Maronic heard regarding inappropriate conduct toward females is not competent to establish a finding of fact. The testimony of Ms. Maronic is rejected in toto by the undersigned. When the testimony of Ms. Kolinsky, Ms. Twohy, and Ms. Kimpton, that they were not sexually harassed by Mr. Merica, is juxtaposed to the hearsay upon hearsay testimony of Ms. Maronic that Mr. Merica "behaved inappropriately to other female staff members," a pattern of gossip, moving from witness to witness presented by the Commissioner, emerges for which there is no defense and very little, if any, truth to be objectively determined. The uncorroborated testimony of this witness lack credibility and is rejected. The Commissioner failed to prove, through the testimony of Ms. Maronic, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica engaged in unprofessional conduct, inappropriate conduct, and/or sexually harassed female co-workers as alleged in the Administrative Complaint. Ms. Maronic testified, again unconvincingly, concerning a throwing incident in the school cafeteria in 1999, she did not observe and therefore could not provide situational circumstances surrounding this incident. According to Ms. Maronic, as she walked by she could see Mr. Merica out in the hallway very upset and yelling very loudly at very close proximity to the unidentified students. Ms. Maronic testified that she was not "comfortable" witnessing that situation and would not leave the area until an administrator came. Nothing in her testimony identified the administrator who allegedly came so she could leave; she knew nothing, who, what, where, when or why, about the incident, though so "uncomfortable," she believed her presence was required. She neither attempted to record this "uncomfortable" incident for future reference nor did she report the matter directly to the school administration. This testimony was not internally consistent and the character of this witness' testimony, as well as the witness' demeanor, did exaggerate the nature or circumstances of the incident. The testimony of this witness lacks precise explicitness to produce a belief as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established. The Commissioner failed to establish as fact through the testimony of Ms. Maronic that, at some unspecified time in 1999, Mr. Merica's student behavior management was inappropriate or that Mr. Merica demonstrated professional incompetence as alleged in the Amended Administrative Compliant. Professional Assistance Offered by Resource Teachers Virginia King, with over 21 years of teaching experience, held the position of Hillsborough County, Area IV, administrative resource teacher (ART) since 1981. Ms. King's primary duty was to provide support and training for teachers of ESE. Her three-part support and training program consisted of: (1) teacher evaluation followed by (2) teacher assistance and concluded with (3) specific training for the teacher. Ms. King was not qualified as an expert. Based solely upon her experience, Ms. King opined that--"dealing with student behavior issues are [sic] challenging to teachers and most difficult for teachers in emotionally handicapped full time programs,” as was Mr. Merica. She further opined that "both SLD and ESE classes have behavior issues; but, in full-time ESE classes, student behavior control is most difficult for teachers regarding overall classroom control and classroom management, as compared to full-time programs where teachers of PI classes classroom control and management is least difficult." Ms. King testified that in her 21 years of teaching experience, many ESE teachers have difficulty with classroom behavior and management issues, and the training of teachers of those students is ongoing training in the Hillsborough County school system that never ceases. She is of the opinion that yelling in students' faces is unreasonable and physically restraining a student is "never" justified. Ms. King's opinion regarding physical restraint of a student is "never" justified conflicts with the statutory authority of teacher(s) to remove disrespectful, violent, uncontrollable or disruptive students from classes when appropriate, to include physical restraint, as provided in Subsection 1003.32(1)(j), Florida Statutes (2003). The Commissioner did not introduce evidence of physical restraints standards adopted by the Board of Education. The opinion of Ms. King is contrary to the statute and disregarded for all purposes in this proceeding. Proffered Evaluation and Assistance Offered to Respondent During the 1999-2000 school year, Principal Griffin requested that Ms. King visit Foster to evaluate, assist, train, and help Mr. Merica with his SLD class. According to Ms. King (without giving the year and month), she made two visits to Mr. Merica's class. She testified only about her initial visit that took place during the morning class session. When she returned for a second visit, the school administration had removed Mr. Merica from his teaching position. This one visit by Ms. King was the first step of her three-part support and training program, i.e. teacher evaluation. There was no teacher assistance and specific training offered to Mr. Merica by Ms. King. When asked to give her "general impression" of Mr. Merica's professional ability and competence to teach SLD students after just one visit, Ms. King replied: Well, in our interview I was a little surprised because I didn't really -- he has a background in SLD so he had a lot of knowledge of SLD and how to teach children with learning disabilities, addressing their different learning styles and I was actually able to observe that in class. It was a math class and I thought that he did a very nice job of addressing the student's individual needs, and that's a difficult thing to do because they're all so different and they were all at different math levels and I did see that he was able to use different teaching techniques all in one lesson. He did mention to me that -- well, I knew that there were behavior problems and I did see behavior problems and that did happen after the lesson in the transition period. The children were unruly and not really doing, you know -- you could tell that there was a lack of control was obvious. But at this particular time, the children had been really fairly well-behaved and he had mentioned to me that I should come back in the afternoon -- because this was a morning visit -- that I should come back in the afternoon so that I could see their true behavior which he said was truly out of control. Through the testimony of Ms. King, the Commissioner, clearly and convincingly, proved to the undersigned that during the 1999-2000 school year, Mr. Merica's competence as a professional teacher of children with learning disabilities ("the children had been really fairly well-behaved") was the same as and/or equal to competence as a professional teacher in the classroom of other teachers of children with learning disabilities whom the witness had observed. Conversely, the Commissioner failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, through the testimony of this witness that Mr. Merica demonstrated "incompetence" in his classroom teaching skills or that his classroom student behavior management was ineffective. The Commissioner failed to prove that Mr. Merica utilized ineffective lesson plans and ineffective classroom behavioral management plans. The Commissioner failed to prove that Mr. Merica failed to keep students academically engaged in class and that he failed to control his students and/or gain their respect as the manager of the class, as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. The Commissioner failed to establish as fact, through Ms. King's testimony regarding her single classroom visit, that Foster administration, by and through Principal Griffin, offered Mr. Merica meaningful, professional, constructive help and assistance program plan that he intentionally disregarded and that he failed and refused to accept and implement the suggested offering of assistance as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. The record evidence does not specify whether Ms. King's one visit occurred during the school year of 1998- 1999 or the school year of 1999-2000. This omission creates an ambiguity between the year 1999 (alleged in the complaint) and the year 2000 (the year beyond the time alleged in the complaint). The ambiguity is resolved in favor of Mr. Merica. The testimony in findings of fact 139 and 140 is incompetent and irrelevant to establish as fact allegations contained in the Amended Administrative Complaint. The Commissioner presented testimony of Sue Hindman. Ms. Hindman, with over 27 years of teaching experience and at all times material, was an ART and an ESE supervisor for Area II, in Hillsborough County. Model Classroom Observation Prior to and in Preparation for Termination by the Hillsborough County School Board Near the end of the 1999-2000 school year, Principal Griffin called Ms. Hindman and requested her to do a model classroom observation of Mr. Merica's class. A "model classroom observation" consisted of Ms. Hindman's selecting another classroom and SLD teacher (the model) in the same or similar position of the teacher (Mr. Merica) to be observed. The teacher (Mr. Merica) being observed, along with Ms. Hindman, would then visit the "model" SLD class to observe how the classroom itself was arranged and how the lessons were presented to SLD students. Based on the teacher's personal observation, and with the help and assistance of Ms. Hindman, the teacher (Mr. Merica) would then modify and model his/her classroom arrangement, classroom behavior management, SLD students' lesson planning and presentation, and other educational matters involved with teaching SLD students to that observed in the model classroom. After a reasonable period of adjustment, the ART would return to evaluate the "results of implemented changes" made after the model classroom. On October 8, 1999, after observing Mr. Merica's classroom, his teaching, his student control and classroom management, and after observation of the model SLD teacher and classroom, Ms. Hindman made unspecified suggestions for improvement to Mr. Merica. After she made her suggestions for improvement, Ms. Hindman returned to observe whether her unspecified, suggested improvements had been accepted and put into effect by Mr. Merica, and, if so, to document what results were observed. Ms. Hindman documented improvements she noted in Mr. Merica's class on her return visit as follows: The new behavior rules were typed clearly and colorfully. The post-it-notes [tickets] were being used to reward positive [student] behavior. Instructions was hampered by inappropriate student behaviors. On October 18, 1999, Ms. Hindman made a second follow-up visit to observe the progress of her earlier unspecified suggestions. During this second return visit, Ms. Hindman made additional unspecified suggestions for improvement. Ms. Hindman returned to observe whether her second suggested improvement had been put into place and if so, the effect and impact of her second suggestions. Ms. Hindman documented improvements observed in Mr. Merica's classroom management and student control and professional teaching competency on her second return visit as follows: Student behavior was better. Students responded to the LLP redirections. They also responded to the additional tickets given for good behavior. More positive comments were made when students were on task. Student behavior will improve as teacher consistency improves. The more aggressive students are getting, all the attention (and tickets) while the good students tend to be neglected. Curriculum must now become a priority. Your students really settle down while working on assignments and seem eager to accomplish tasks. Capitalize on that momentum! On October 26, 1999, Ms. Hindman made a third return visit to observe Mr. Merica's implementation of her earlier suggestions. During this visit, Ms. Hindman made additional suggestions for improvement and documented improvements she observed in Mr. Merica's classroom teaching and classroom management and student control as follows: Reading groups began today using a sequential program. Math groups began learning higher skills plus using manipulative. Individual work folders were used for seatwork. Through the testimony and corroborating documentation of Ms. Hindman, the Commissioner proved, clearly and convincingly, that as late as October 26, 1999, Mr. Merica accepted and implemented constructive criticism and assistance from those administrators whose positions required giving such constructive criticism and assistance. The Commissioner failed to prove, through the testimony of Ms. Hindman, as it did through the testimony of Ms. King, allegations that Mr. Merica intentionally disregarded and failed and refused to accept and implement the suggested offering of assistance. The undisputed testimony of Ms. Hindman clearly demonstrated that when given constructive professional assistance, a reasonable opportunity to implement the constructive assistance, and an objective evaluation thereafter, Mr. Merica was amenable and put into practice professional assistance and suggestions that proved to be helpful. He responded positively by implementing suggestions made by Ms. Hindman and to those made by Ms. King. During each return visit by Ms. Hindman, Mr. Merica demonstrated continued improvement in his professional ability as a SLD teacher. I find that through the testimony and resulting documentation of three separate occasions of Ms. Hindman rendering professional help and assistance and Mr. Merica's positive response thereto established as fact that the competence of Mr. Merica was not diminished so as to impair his effectiveness as a teacher in the Hillsborough County school system as of October 26, 1999.5 Petitioner's Presence Outside His Classroom, His Teaching, and Classroom Management Mr. Merica presented the undisputed testimony of Mary Evans-Bauman, a DEEDS Attendant who worked with over 15 teachers during her employment at Foster. From January through July of the 1997-1998 school year, Ms. Evans-Bauman was assigned and did work with Mr. Merica in his self-contained PI class. She did not work with Mr. Merica during any period he was teaching a SLD class. According to Ms. Evans-Bauman, Mr. Merica did not leave his classroom more often than any of the other 15 teachers with whom she worked during her employment at Foster. Based upon her daily observations, Ms. Evans-Bauman opined that Mr. Merica's PI students respected him, and she did not observe any problems with his classroom management. She denied observing Mr. Merica playing video games or reading newspapers when he should have been teaching. She testified that she never observed Mr. Merica exhibiting out-of-control behavior or imposing inappropriate discipline on students in his PI class. She acknowledged that PI students, because of their restricted physical mobility, were less likely to become disruptive and unruly because of their physical limitations. Mr. Merica presented the testimony of Carolyn Mobley. Ms. Mobley worked 21 years at Foster as a teacher's aide and as a DEES attendant. During her extended tenure at Foster, she worked with approximately ten different teachers, including Mr. Merica. Ms. Mobley began working with Mr. Merica during the 1998-1999 school year, the first year he taught a PI class with Ms. Payne as principal. She continued working with Mr. Merica when Principal Griffin moved him to an SLD class during the 1999-2000 school year. According to Ms. Mobley, she worked with Mr. Merica continuously, five days per week for seven and one- half hours per day, for two consecutive years. Based upon her continuous presence in Mr. Merica's classrooms, she had abundant opportunities to observe Mr. Merica's interactions with students in both his PI and SLD classes; she answered the question of how she would characterize his relationship with his students as follows: I would say he didn't have no problems that I would consider problems because I have kids and I wouldn't want nobody to mistreat mine, and I'm a fair person. On the mistreating kids in any way question, Ms. Mobley answered: No. He always seemed to be generosity [sic]. He would always treat them with respect and do the things most teachers wouldn't do, I would say. On what kind of things he would do that other teacher wouldn't do, Ms. Mobley answered: Well, you know, sometimes if they didn't have their lunch and they wanted something, then he would treat them to it, you know. On Fridays when they had free time, he would give it to them out of the cafeteria. Answering the question whether she observed Mr. Merica being off task--off his teaching duties during the time that you were the aide in the PI class, i.e. reading a newspaper during the time when he should have been teaching or playing computer games during the time he should have been teaching, Ms. Mobley answered: "No." Answering the question whether Mr. Merica would leave the classroom and leave the aides to take care of the kids, Mr. Mobley answered: No, because if he left the classroom, he would say, "I'm going to the office," run some papers or basically we knew where each other was. We always knew. Answering the questions whether Mr. Merica leaving the class occurred more often than other teachers, acting in an unprofessional way, being belligerent, and being confrontational with students, Ms. Mobley answered each question "No." Answering the question whether there were more behavioral problems in the SLD class than in the PI class, Ms. Mobley answered: SLD kids do have a behavior, [sic] where PI kind is not as verbal word-wise--. Answering the compound question of Mr. Merica's interactions with students in the SLD class, acting in an unprofessional way to any of the kids, being belligerent with the children, being hostile with the children, and being confrontational with any of the children, Ms. Mobley answered: "No" to each question within the compound question. Answering the compound questions of whether Mr. Merica raised his voice toward the students; talked loud when he was close to a student, screamed, or yelled, Ms Mobley answered: I wouldn't say raise his voice, but he talked loud, like scream or yell- No. Well he always talked loud, so to me it was always a loud voice. He don't have a soft voice. He had a loud voice. Through the undisputed testimony of Ms. Mobley, Mr. Merica demonstrated that from the school year beginning in 1998 and ending in 1999 his teaching and student behavior management, as observed by Ms. Mobley, was not ineffective; that he did not frequently leave his own class with his aides; that he did not walk around campus, socialize, and/or monitor other teachers and their students; and, when in class, that he did not play video games on his computer, read newspapers, or review architectural designs, as alleged in the Administrative Complaint. Human Resources Manager's Testimony Based upon her Summary Reports of Letters and Reports Received From Staff The Commissioner presented, as a summary witness, the testimony of Janice Velez.6 Ms. Velez had over 30 years in the school system during which time she has occupied the positions of classroom teacher, teacher trainer, school-based administrator, and director of personnel services. For four years (1999-2003), she occupied the position of General Manager of Human Resources (HR) for the School Board. The Commissioner did not qualify Ms. Velez as an expert. As director of personnel services for the School Board, Ms. Velez receives information, via written reports from Foster administration, from individual teachers, from medical personnel, and from other sources regarding school personnel. Ms. Velez rarely, if ever, has personal knowledge of instructional personnel activities at the many schools in the county, before such activities are reported to her in written form through the chain of administrative protocol. It is noted that her reports in evidence are not sworn to or notarized by the person(s) with personal knowledge nor are they "tested" for accuracy by independent investigation by Ms. Velez. She accepts each report as factually accurate. It was against this background and based upon many such unspecified reports that Ms. Velez summarized and posted a letter to Mr. Merica reflecting her summarized version of those hearsay reports that the Commissioner asked Ms. Velez to "explain" the first sentence of her July 1, 1994, letter to Mr. Merica. The sentence counsel for the Commissioner asked for as an explanation read: "Some information has come to my attention that you and I need to discuss." To the question "explain what did you mean by that sentence," Ms. Velez answered with the following editorial: What he acknowledged, and I don't have the report in front of me, but I remember the student was a difficult child and he had -- what upset me and the reason I asked him about the ACT [Aggression Control Techniques] certified was that in the course of taking care of this child, had dragged her across the carpet or something and then other adults were present that assisted him in the process. That's when I asked him if had had been trained and he said no, he had never been scheduled. There is no evidence that tends to corroborate the hearsay evidence contained in Ms. Velez's July 1, 1994, letter to Mr. Merica. Ms. Velez did not possess personal knowledge of the information reflected in her letter. Consequently, her testimony regarding Mr. Merica's alleged response merely amounts to hearsay upon hearsay upon hearsay. There is no record evidence identifying the context and circumstances of "[w]hat he acknowledged” as testified to by Ms. Velez. The intended inference that Mr. Merica acknowledged-—“that in the course of taking care of this child, he dragged her across the carpet or something," was not corroborated by any "other adult present that assisted him." Mr. Merica's denial "that he dragged her across the carpet or something," even if unbelievable, does not prove the Commissioner's accusation contained in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Ms. Velez’s recollection explanation is an assumption and not fact (that he dragged a child and other students and adults were present). Based upon her assumption, Ms. Velez concluded that Mr. Merica acknowledged her assumption as fact. The assumption and conclusion of “acknowledgement” by Mr. Merica of that assumption is incompetent, not credible and insufficient to establish the incident as fact or to establish that Mr. Merica admitted and acknowledged her assumptions and her conclusions “that in the course of taking care of this child, he dragged her [a child] across the carpet or something and then other adults were present that assisted him in the process." Ms. Velez testified that she met with Mr. Merica on four separate occasions, the first meeting occurred on or about the first week in July 1994, during the period Ms. Payne was principal. At the time of her first meeting with Mr. Merica in July of 1994, Ms. Velez was not general manager of HR for the Board. The evidence of record does not establish Ms. Velez’s position in the school system in July 1994, other than she was a teacher assigned to personnel services. Continuing, Ms. Velez testified that during the first week in July 1994, she was “initially concerned” because Mr. Merica was not ACT certified. The Board's policy required each teacher to be ACT certified before engaging in physical restraint of students. In 1993 to 1994, Ms. Velez was a teacher assigned to personnel services, and the record evidence does not provide any authority for her to “meet with Mr. Merica” as a part of her duties in personnel services. There is no evidence of record that Principal Payne, who was principal and who did not corroborate this story, requested Ms. Velez’s involvement with her teachers, including Mr. Merica. Assuming Ms. Velez had authority to read Mr. Merica’s personnel file, why in 1994 did she only recall his restraint certification status? Principal Payne testified that she, and she alone, identified Mr. Merica's needs for improvement and provided him with useful suggestions that he incorporated and showed improvement. Principal Payne buttressed her testimony by giving Mr. Merica all "satisfactory" annual performance evaluations. Ms. Velez's testimony regarding any facet of Mr. Merica professional competence in the school year of 1994 to the contrary is not accepted by the undersigned as credible evidence. The Commissioner, through the testimonies of 21 witnesses, failed to produce clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Merica exhibited any indicia of professional incompetence in July of 1994. Through the testimony of Ms. Velez the Commissioner again affirmed other witnesses' testimony that Mr. Merica was not ACT certified at certain periods. However, the undisputed evidence demonstrated that Mr. Merica’s last year of ACT certification was the year of 1995 and not, as Ms. Velez mistakenly assumed in her testimony, 1994. The Commissioner failed in its attempt to establish 1994 as the beginning year of Mr. Merica's alleged incompetence through the above testimony by Ms. Velez. In 1999, Ms. Velez was appointed to the HR position. Six years before, in 1993, she was in personnel services. It was during the 1993-1994 period that the Commissioner sought through her testimony to prove Mr. Merica knowingly admitted and acknowledged that in July 1994 "he used excessive force or restrained a [unidentified] child inappropriately as reported by a parent [unidentified] to the police department and the school internal investigators." The bare hearsay "admission against interest" hearsay statements of unproven acts from unidentified hearsay sources is not corroborated and is rejected by the undersigned. Ms. Velez gave her explanation of meeting with Mr. Merica for a second time on August 12, 1999, which she later reduced to a letter dated September 24, 1999. In that letter Ms. Velez recited the purpose of the August 12, 1999, meeting-- "for discussion of an investigative report into coworker's allegation that during the summer he made threatening remarks against the school administration and comments made about Principal Griffin, i.e. "She dyed her hair blond to get her job, "I got rid of one principal; I'll get rid of her too," and "If she wants to go head-to-head, then I'll win." In her 1999 letter, Ms. Velez stated that Mr. Merica admitted making the alleged statements, explaining the statements were "hearsay" and because, as he viewed the situation, "others wanted to bring [him] down to their own misery levels." Her third meeting with Mr. Merica occurred in September of 1999. This meeting, she explained, was convened "for discussion of a letter of reprimand written by Principal Payne." (In February 1998, Principal Payne gave Mr. Merica a letter of reprimand citing him for having acted in an "unprofessional manner" with Pam Wilkins, an ESE coworker.) Later during that school year when she evaluated his overall professional teaching performance, Principal Payne gave Mr. Merica a "satisfactory" rating in every area, without comments, for the 1998-1999 school year. This meeting and the letter of reprimand concerned Mr. Merica's professional conduct on two separate incidents. Those two incidents were a faculty meeting disruption and a school improvement team and parent meeting. No testimony was elicited or given by Ms. Velez regarding the situational circumstances attendant to those two incidents. When asked her opinion of Mr. Merica's "attitude" toward her during this third meeting, Ms. Velez replied: I would say it ranged in the typical realm of employees. When they meet with me sometimes they're angry. He was in denial that the letter was warranted. He said he didn't perceive himself to have lost his temperament. He did not recall -- in one of the two incidents, someone said he banged his hand or fist on the table. I don't recall doing that. There were several letters that the principal also forwarded to me from colleagues and they said that he was out of control. He said, I'm not out of control. I have a loud voice. And basically he was in denial that the incident was as significant as the principal had alleged in her letter or reprimand. The fourth meeting between Ms. Velez and Mr. Merica occurred on October 1, 1999. Also present at the meeting were Carl Crosson, CTA representative, and Dr. David Binnie, assistant superintendent for HR. The purpose of this fourth meeting was to discuss a specific classroom incident that had occurred on or about September 23, 1999, where it was alleged that Mr. Merica retained five students in the classroom due to their misbehavior while the other students went to lunch with the paraprofessional. In her 1999 letter, in the first paragraph, Ms. Velez wrote her version of an incident she did not personally observe: During the timeout period, you asked these students to sit quietly in their desks, while you placed your own lunch in the microwave. When they began to dance about the room and to toss and roll a kickball among themselves, you summoned several times for assistance on the intercom. During this period, you stated you remained at your desk, although once you tried to kick the ball away and once you moved your elbows in an effort to keep a student from retrieving the ball that had rolled behind your chair. Another student subsequently hit you on the head with a folder, and you chased him briefly until he, at your direction put the folder down. You summoned additional times for assistance. Continuing with the second paragraph, Ms. Velez stated: As a result of your poor performance this year, and its negative impact on the quality and continuity of instruction for students assigned to you, your principal recommended that you be either administratively transferred or dismissed as a teacher. Actions on these recommendations was placed in abeyance since you asked for, and Dr. Binnie granted, additional time and assistance from school and district personnel for you to develop and implement a plan to appropriately regain control of and develop respect from your students. He provided you with three days of paid duty time and a month of implementation to accomplish this end. In her last paragraph, Ms. Velez stated: Dr. Binnie will review the effectiveness of your plan, your professional conduct at work, and your future employment status during a meeting scheduled for Monday, November 1, 1999, at 3:45 pm in the Human Resources conference room, 2nd floor of the School Administration Center, 901 East Kennedy Boulevard. Ms. Brenda Griffin, your principal, has also been invited to attend. Ms. Velez testified that the November 1, 1999, meeting never occurred, "due to an error where [sic] his address was not in the system correctly, he was not in attendance at the meeting. So, we rescheduled it for November 3rd." Considering Mr. Merica was an employee with 13 years of service and had met four times with administration within a six-month period (July through October 1999), the loss of his address--"his address was not in the system correctly"--by the Board becomes suspect. Continuing, Ms. Velez testified that: [O]n November 2nd her office received a call from Foster Elementary School regarding an incident in the hallway that teacher could hear Mr. Merica scream at a child and described that he was in their face and we removed Mr. Merica from teaching at that time for a continuing pattern of being unable to control his students and control his temperament, creating a dangerous situation for children. (emphasis added) No witness presented by the Commissioner testified to having observed the incident above described by Ms. Velez. When subjected to cross-examination, Ms. Velez reluctantly admitted that her intentional use of the term “creating a dangerous situation for children" was not an accurate statement. During all times (1999-2000) pertinent to matters herein above, the goal of Principal Griffin, via Ms. Velez and through the Board, was to terminate Mr. Merica's employment with the Board. Thus, the HR manager's intentional selection and use of the statutory phrase, “creating a dangerous situation for children," that she knew at the time to be an inaccurate statement, revealed her intent and thus seriously undermined her credibility. The witness' credibility and testimony were further diminished by the fact that at the time she knowingly made her "inaccurate statement," she was an active participant in, and thus fully aware of, the Board's engagement in the procedural protocol process of terminating Mr. Merica's contractual employment. Ms. Velez's knowing misrepresentation, that Mr. Merica's continuing pattern of being unable to control his students and control his temperament was "creating a dangerous situation for children," was biased and inaccurate. Ms. Velez's unconvincing explanation of her understanding of the factual basis for the School Board's removal of Mr. Merica from teaching at Foster was vague: [B]ased on a pattern of similar incidents, and this was at the end of that month of time to focus on how to become more effectively -- more effectively deal with children. When asked to clarify her inaccurate misrepresentation of whether or not Mr. Merica's conduct resulted in an unacceptable environment or created a dangerous situation for children, Ms. Velez stated: "[D]uring the five years Mr. Merica taught the PI student class [from 1992-1993 to 1998-1999], Mr. Merica’s conduct and teaching did not create an environment that was dangerous to the students in those classes." Ms. Velez further testified that "[T]the [Hillsborough County School] Board determined that it was during the 1999-20007 school year a pattern of similar incidents, and this was at the end of that month of time to focus on how to become more effectively -- more effectively deal with children, that Mr. Merica was creating an environment that was dangerous to the students in his classes." Ms. Velez did not identify incidents that occurred August 12, 1999, through December 31, 1999, separate and apart from incidents that occurred between January 1, through May 24, 2000; thus, there is no basis to determine whether alleged incidents occurred in 1999 or 2000. Her testimony included "essential and substantial facts in support of the allegation" having occurred in a timeframe (1999- 2000) not embraced in the 1994-1999 period (ending December 31, 1999) alleged in the Statement of Charges of the Amended Administrative Complaint. "[T]the allegata and probata must correspond and agree." This ambiguity is resolved in favor of Mr. Merica. On that basis the testimony of Ms. Velez in findings 183 through 186, hereinabove is rejected. The Commissioner did not prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that during the period between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica "created a pattern of similar incidents thus creating an environment that was dangerous to the students in his classes." Conversely, through the testimony of Ms. Velez, the Commissioner proved, clearly and convincingly, that "during the 1992-1993 through the 1998-1999," including the 1994 through 1999 period alleged in the complaint, Mr. Merica did not engage in a pattern of similar incidents that created a dangerous situation for children." Regarding the school year when allegedly Mr. Merica initially became or his teaching methods demonstrated incompetence, Ms. Velez demonstrated a lack of knowledge and lack of expertise by her following qualified answer: It was my feeling--my personal and professional feeling when I reviewed the file--that he had indicators of incompetence for quite some time, especially in his personal conduct. I am not an expert in curriculum. It's been a long time since I taught in the classroom. [emphasis added] But Mr. Merica's statement to me was he's the best teacher that was at Foster Elementary, and I had an opportunity to look at his lesson plans one afternoon when I went to meet with Ms. Griffin and although I haven't written them in years, there were no lesson plans. They were subjects. Math, math, math. Nothing to distinguish between the levels of his children. When I reviewed the record at Foster, his conduct that created an uncomfortable working environment for employees had been there a long time. The former principal, Ms. Payne, had dealt with it from time to time. It's my professional opinion that she put him in physically impaired so he had less opportunity to be inappropriate with children, and she began then to deal with his personal conduct issues. So to answer your question, I believe -- I don't know that -- I don't know when it began, but I don't think it surfaced his last assignment at Foster, but rather sometime prior to that. [emphasis added] Ms. Velez was unable to identify the school year Mr. Merica became, as she characterized, "incompetent in his personal conduct." Ms. Velez's personal feeling of incompetence is an inadequate standard by which to measure professional competence, to include one’s personal conduct. Ms. Velez did not know when, if at all, Mr. Merica's alleged professional incompetence, to include his alleged personal conduct, began. The evidence of record established that the Board, as of January 13, 2000, had concluded its investigation and made a final determination that Mr. Merica was incompetent. Therefore, the Commissioner failed to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, through the summary testimony of Ms. Velez that Mr. Merica was or to began to become incompetent, as demonstrated by his professional teaching skills, at any time during the 1994 through 19997 period as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Violation of a penal statute or rule is not found on loose interpretations of the Human Resource Director with 31 total years of education experience and a Master's Degree in Education Administration, or based on problematic evidence. Evidence more objective and substantial of critical matters in issue should be as substantial as the consequences. Clear and convincing evidence is not present in this record nor established by testimony presented by this witness that Mr. Merica was incompetent, as demonstrated by his professional teaching skills, at any time during the 1994 through 1999 period as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Ms. Velez testified that teachers hired by contract (as was Mr. Merica), a veteran teacher, or a tenured teacher are required to be evaluated once annually by their principal, and the purpose of the principal's annual evaluation is for performance improvement. The testimony and documents prepared by Ms. Velez regarding a report from an unidentified mother about her unidentified child is unconfirmed, uncorroborated, incompetent, and thus insufficient to establish any purported facts of actual occurrence. Following protocol and to effectuate his contractual termination with the Board, on November 18, 1999, Ms. Velez submitted four of her letters, dated July 1, September 14 and 24, and October 20, 1999, to James A. Edgar, M.D., P.A., as the basis for her referral of Mr. Merica to Dr. Edgar for a psychiatric evaluation that was conducted by Dr. Edgar on November 18 and 23, 1999. Accepting as accurate and true the content of Ms. Velez's four letters and using those letters as the foundation of his examination, Dr. Edgar evaluated Mr. Merica. At the conclusion of his examination, Dr. Edgar opined that Mr. Merica did not have a diagnosable psychiatric disorder, either Axis I or Axis II, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th Ed.). According to Dr. Edgar, "None of the problems, as reflected in Ms. Velez's summary taken from non-notarized reports from unnamed third parties, makes him in and of themselves incapable of functioning as a teacher." He then goes on to qualify his opinion with a "[H]owever, taken together they 'could' make him very difficult to work with as part of a team effort.” Dr. Edgar's evaluation resulted in a qualified conclusion that Mr. Merica is aware of his actions but minimizes or denies the effect of those actions on others and thus rationalizes his verbal aggressive behavior as his "constitutional right" to express his opinion. From that position, Dr. Edgar reaches what appears to be the desired conclusion that: "Mr. Merica's current behavior does not appear to be an escalation of previous behavior just more of the same. I can not say whether he might become more aggressive or violent but I do believe his behavior will not improve." The attempt to lay a factual foundation that Mr. Merica's alleged incompetence was present in 1994 through the conclusiory testimony of Dr. Edgar failed for want of competence. The one line in Dr. Edgar's 1999 opinion that Mr. Merica's "behavior does not appear to be an escalation of previous behavior just more of the same," is insufficient in weight and substance to establish as fact and/or establish the basis from which to infer, and I do not infer, that in 1994, Mr. Merica demonstrated an "aggressive behavior," which demonstrated emotional "incompetence," and that behavior continued through 1999 as alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint. Respondent's Response to Allegations Mr. Merica presented the testimony of Janice Wilson who worked as a DEES attendant at Foster from 1992 through 1998. Ms. Wilson was Mr. Merica's DEES attendant during the 1997-1998 school year and worked all day, five days a week, with Mr. Merica in his classroom when he taught PI students. She was not his DEES attendant when Mr. Merica taught SLD students. For the six-year period, 1992-1998, Ms. Wilson was in Mr. Merica’s classroom daily. She had occasion to observe his teaching as she worked with Mr. Merica. Based on her six-year association, Ms. Wilson testified as follows: When asked how would she characterize his rapport with his students, she answered: "wonderful, wonderful." When asked did she have problems or concerns working with Mr. Merica, she answered: "none, none, whatsoever." When asked had she ever observed Mr. Merica mistreating, in any way, students, she answered: "No." When asked did she ever see him getting in the faces of any of his students, she answered: "None whatsoever." When asked if she had observed Mr. Merica screaming at his students, she answered: "No." When asked if she would have any problems working with Mr. Merica in the future, she answered: "I would work with him any day." Regarding Mr. Merica leaving his classroom, Ms. Wilson testified that: When Mr. Merica would leave the classroom, he has been called from the front office or any other classroom for computer. If the computer goes down, he was the man that they will find to fix the problem with the computer. That's the only time he would leave the classroom, when they request they need it. To the question other than his lunch time and his planning period, did you know of Mr. Merica just to get up from the classroom and go walk around, she answered: "Not at all." When asked did Mr. Merica socialize, she answer: "Not at all." When asked did she ever know of Mr. Merica to be unprofessional, belligerent, hostile or confrontational, she answered: "No." When asked did she ever observe Mr. Merica trying to subvert the administration, she answered: "No." When asked how his students reacted to Mr. Merica, Ms. Wilson replied: Oh, they were glad to see him every day. I mean, a lot of times they would be hungry before lunch, and Mr. Merica would go to Sam's that night before and have snacks in the classroom to make sure they have snacks to eat before they went to lunch. I mean, he was a wonderful teacher. Nobody could never ask of --and I mean, he was outnumbered as male teachers at the school. There was only two, you know, and I think he was a wonderful teacher. Presence Outside His Classroom When asked if she personally received calls for Mr. Merica to assist someone with their computers, Ms. Wilson answered: Yes. It comes over the intercom and he always asked, will you be okay for five or ten minutes? Let me see what's wrong with the computer and that's the only time he would leave the classroom. When asked if she knew "specifically" where Mr. Merica went on computer calls, Ms. Wilson answered: The school has changed a lot with teachers. A lot of the teachers has left. A lot of times he would go to like an autistic class which is down the hallway from us. He would go to the room next door to us to help with the computer. Now, with names I'm not familiar with the teachers because like I said, the school has changed a lot since I've been there and maybe those teachers are not even working there. He used to help Rita Airwood (ph.) a lot with the computer because she wasn't--she didn't know where the power button was. Most of the teachers there didn't know where the power was. A lot of us would, after school, when all the kids were gone, we would have him to teach how to work the computer and be on task when the next day come. So, therefore, a lot of the teachers would come to our classroom to let Neil show them were the computer--what screen you start on and all before the next day because a lot of times we would get worksheets. We didn't have workbooks. A lot of times we would get worksheets off the computer. So when I say names, it's a whole bunch of names I would have to go through. When asked, "[h]ow do you personally know, from viewing him going to that room--witness him go to where he said he was going?" Ms. Wilson answered: Because we have windows. The aisles run from east to west. We have -- and I'm looking out the door to make sure he gets to that classroom. A lot of times when he gets to that classroom, he'll either do this here, a thumbs up, and he's on his way back. According to Ms. Wilson, she always knew where Mr. Merica went when he left his class because he would tell her before leaving; i.e. "They want me in the front office." "I need to be here." He would not just walk out of the class. Though she did not follow him out the classroom, she testified: A lot of times I would be doing bathroom and he would say, "Hey, I'll be right back." He may go and get a cup of tea and he's right back there helping me in the bathroom, because normally I think we had -- at the time I worked with him, we maybe four to five wheelchairs, and a lot of times he would give me help with the boys, you know, and then I would do the young ladies. I would take the girls first and he would stand right outside the bathroom and wait with them if I said I needed him, he'll come inside and help me. Through the undisputed testimony of Ms. Wilson, Mr. Merica established those purposes for his frequent departures from his classroom; to assist other teachers with computer problems in their classrooms. Whether or not one agrees with the stated purposes Mr. Merica gave for being out of his classroom, that fact does not affirm the Commissioner’s allegation of unprofessional conduct by his frequent presence outside his classroom. When asked if he was called upon by the Administration to provide technical computer assistance to the teachers Mr. Merica replied: Very often. I would not fix a computer unless it was on my planning time, unless it was instructed by the administration office, by Ms. Pils or Mr. Drennan--Ms. Payne, I'm sorry--or Ms. Drennan--that they needed me and it was a real emergency and I would also make sure with my class that there was the kind of instruction that wasn't going to hurt me to be pulled out for a few minutes. Regarding ACT training and physical restraint of students, Mr. Merica admitted that he received ACT training and was certified only for the 1995 school year. He was aware of the policy requirement of annual ACT re-certification, but he elected not to be re-certified. Mr. Merica admitted physically restraining students on approximately three to five separate occasions during the period of 1995 to 1999. When questioned as to his understanding of physically restraining students when his ACT certification had expired, Mr. Merica responded: That is not my understanding. I think another ESE teacher touched upon it that if a person is about to harm themselves or others or harm you, where you really feel that they're going to physically harm themselves, another student or yourself, then you can restrain them because what you are trying to do is keep a dangerous situation from becoming more dangerous. Mr. Merica denied having classroom behavior problems during his tenure as a SLD resource teacher (1987-1988 through 1992-1993 school years) as well as during his tenure as a PI resource teacher. Mr. Merica admitted engaging in disruptive conduct when attending faculty and staff meetings. He characterized his disruptive actions as "tapping a pencil on the table or tapping his fingers on the table," but denied "pounding his shoe on the table." He matter-of-factly acknowledged making arguably argumentative comments when he agreed or disagreed with some things presented by the speaker with callous disregard that the speaker was speaking. I find that such callous disregard of rendering reasonable respect to the person speaking and those of his colleagues in attendance under the circumstances demonstrated unprofessional conduct by Mr. Merica. I further find Mr. Merica's ". . . constitutional right" justification for unprofessional conduct unconvincing. Mr. Merica acknowledged he has a loud voice and a strong personality, and he is sometimes loud, but not "always" loud as testified by co-workers. Mr. Merica testified that he got along and related very well to the PI and the SLD students in his classes, and he believed they related very well to him and none of his children came to him personally with a complaint. According to Mr. Merica, during his tenure at Foster, he never received a written document from a parent that said "we have a complaint." Mr. Merica opined that other than academic concerns-- normal academic concerns--when he asked for a conference with parents of his children, a few parents would come on conference nights because most of the parents of his kids knew him because he had been there for a while. Regarding Principal Griffin's decision to move him from his PI resource class to a regular SLD class, Mr. Merica recalled that before summer school of the 1998-1999 school year, Principal Griffin and he discussed the matter. His recollection of their discussion follows: She basically said --she looked at my record and said, "As far as discipline goes -- I know we have some other issues, but as far as discipline goes, you look like somebody who could handle that class because it's very difficult class with mostly boys and we'd like to see a man in there,"--and to be perfectly honest, I told her I just went through a divorce. I needed stability. I would prefer to stay in PI or I would like a transfer, and unfortunately at that time, the transfer period was over or they had a freeze. It was one or the other. I think they might have had budget problems and had a freeze at the time. It was one of the two reasons.--It's just that I needed that stability and I hadn't done -- I had done resource before, and I've done PI, which I felt really comfortable in, but hadn't done a full time SLD unit. Even though I was qualified to do it, I just didn't really feel comfortable going into another area after the domestic problems I was having at home. I went through a divorce, which was not an easy thing, during that summer. (emphasis supplied) Mr. Merica's recall of Principal Griffin's comment, "[w]e'd like to see a man in there," was corroborated by Ms. Lipari testimony that during the 1997-1998 school year she was moved down to teach kindergarten and first grade level PI students to provide "mothering and maternal type activities," and Mr. Merica was moved to third/fourth grade to teach older, larger male students. Mr. Merica gave the following reason for resigning as CTA representative in the spring of school year 1998-1999: I resigned because there was undue pressure from the principal [Principal Griffin] and they actually were putting some pressure on my child that was going to that school. Concerning his role as a resource teacher, Mr. Merica stated: As a resource teacher, I had to implement the IEP that was generated by either me or a teacher before me, describing the amount of pullout time, and pullout means that they were in a "regular education class" and they were pulled out for special services. What special services I generally gave them was either math or reading, but it could be social studies or science. Those were rare occasions. Most of them were math or reading. You pull them out for the amounted time specified by the IEP at the level that the IEP indicates, and when that period of time during the day is over, you send them back or you walk them back. In Hillsborough County they had some problems at that time with kids running off campus, so they recommended that we pick up our students and take them back to class. Administrative Leave and Observation of Model Class According to Mr. Merica, on or about August 12, 1999, he was assigned to the SLD class and his last day in that class was November 2, 1999, a total of 83 days before he was placed on administrative leave for five work days plus the weekend. Mr. Merica's assignment by Foster administration to Lake Magdalene was for him to observe a class at Lake Magdalene similar to his SLD class at Foster. After he sat in the Lake Magdalene class for approximately two hours, he spent the next few days sitting next to the principal's office trying to compile materials that would work for his SLD class. Mr. Merica concluded that the Lake Magdalene (SLD) class was not similar (as a model) to his Foster (SLD) class based on following reasons: I was working in an inner city school, this was a very rich, affluent area with totally different set of behavior problems. The makeup of the class was totally different. There were more girls. They were more [sic] white. It was just a totally different makeup. They were younger. And I sat in the classroom for about two hours and then I spent the next few days sitting next to the principal's office supposedly trying to compile materials that would work for my class. Lock Down Drill and Student Running Out of Classroom Responding to questions raised about the "lockdown drill" situation when students were observed running from the classroom onto the PE field, Mr. Merica testified he was given a walkie-talkie because the school intercom system was down. He did not receive notification of the lockdown drill via the walkie-talkie, and so he was not made aware of the scheduled lockdown drill. The evidence is undisputed that students that were seen by his co-workers running "about" the facility during the lockdown drill were not under the supervision of Mr. Merica at that time. The evidence demonstrated those kids were in their scheduled PE class under the supervision of the PE teacher, who put them in "time-outs" and sent them to Mr. Merica for their "time-outs" periods. Undisputed evidence demonstrated and it is found as fact that during this "time-out" period that the incident of students kicking the ball and playing in the classroom and being generally unruly and disobedient that Mr. Merica had justifiable cause to defend himself when a student put his/her hands around his neck and attempted to choke him. His testimony regarding the conduct of students in his class was corroborated, in part, by the testimony of two students, Jarmaal Rumlin and Demetrie White. Mr. Merica denied yelling at either Principal Payne or Principal Griffin. In defense of his voice volume, he characterized his discussions as "forceful," "assertive," and sometimes with a "loud voice." He described pointing of his finger as [u]nder normal conversation when some people use their hands, they might consider that pointing, were I was just, you know, just using my normal gestures of speaking, as far as I was concerned, and if I was pointing, it was only --again, it was not to be pointing at anybody. It might be, that's point number 1; that's point number 2; that's point number 3. Continuing, Mr. Merica said he never lost his temper at school with either principal, was never "out of control" with any students under his supervision, and never injured a student under his supervision. Mr. Merica's explanations for his finger-pointing and verbal barrages during conversations with authority figures evidenced a defensive attitude that did not lend itself to the appearance of a professional team player. Principal Payne did not testify that Mr. Merica pointed his finger in her face during their many meetings over the years. Principal Griffin's testimony of "pointing his finger in her face by Mr. Merica" was not accompanied by specific circumstances and situational context of the incidents. Accordingly, the appropriateness of such conduct, without evidence of each party's participation in the conversation and the specific circumstances and situational context at the time of occurrence, was not shown by the evidence of record to be, clearly and convincingly, inappropriate. Answering allegations of making derogatory or disrespectful remarks about Principal Payne or Principal Griffin, Mr. Merica replied: That's the eye of the beholder, but as far as I was concerned, I was just trying to make them a better person and there were some things that they were criticizing me about. I criticize people for things that I feel they have weaknesses too. So, you know, it's the eye of the beholder. Responding to Offered Assistance and Suggestions When asked if he had received assistance to help improve his classroom management techniques with regard to his regular SLD class, Mr. Merica replied: Yes. I always took suggestions and implemented every suggestion. Some things did work and some things did not work. You know, sometimes certain personalities -- certain things won't work and certain things will, but I certainly implemented every plan. Now, hey, I can even say this: some plans that I wasn't that good at and probably somebody else could have made it work -- maybe. But I know that some things I did that they implemented -- some things worked and some things didn't and I can even go further without trying to be editorializing that we learn from others. Some of the other teachers have suggestions --not just the ones from administration. There were some teachers that came up with some plans that worked for me. Mr. Merica's above recollection of receptivity and implementation of constructive assistance was confirmed through the undisputed testimony of Ms. Hindman, who on three separate occasions documented specific improvements she observed in Mr. Merica's classroom on each of her return visits. Use of Computer, Games, and Newspaper as Teaching Aids Answering those allegations regarding his use of video and computer games as teaching tools, Mr. Merica's undisputed response was: I said I never played them [video games] during instructional time. Students played them sometimes and it was part of the IEP. There were various video games. There was many of them and one they talked about a lot was the golf. But, you see, these kids have kinesthetic problems and we're trying to teach them how to manipulate the mouse, keyboards and other things. There was a racecar game that they used to use, plus it was good for their eye-hand coordination because they were kinesthetically challenged kids. They were in IEP. It was in the IEP that they were supposed to be kinesthetically challenged to whatever level they were to try to take them another year's worth. They didn't even call it grade level, but another year's worth of progress. They were approved, by the way. As far as I know, every game that I brought was approved by the school board or if it was not, nobody told me it was not. There was a list of computer software that you could use for kinesthetic(s), but the list was not always complete. There was also ones for learning and some of the software I even created myself and I made sure it was approved by the office before I even used it because I created it. I wrote it and I wanted to make sure that it was okay with them. But they were very, very, academic. Mine dealt more with reading and -- it never had any kinesthetic(s) in it at all. So mine was easy to approve. ---I knew the list, but again the list -- it even says it does not include all the new software. It does not include all the new software. There are ones that we know about. And the same thing with video list. They had a video list. They have a video list, but it also said under these circumstances, these are -- generally a "G" movie is approved, but you know -- the list was always being compiled. It was always new it always had a little thing in there like, we may be incomplete, check with your principal. Answering the question, "[w]hat is kinesthetic?" Mr. Merica stated: Kinesthetic is using hand-eye coordination. They are physically impaired kids. Some of them were trying -- they might even some kind of physical deformity or nerve damage or cerebral palsy and they were trying to get them to manipulate their hands. Mr. Merica's selections of newspapers, computer games, and specific TV programs as associative resource educational tools for his students were undeniably appropriate resource materials and activities related to learning goals for his students with various learning and physical disabilities. No witness for the Commissioner, including Principal Griffin, the ART, and the ESE specialists, testified to the contrary. Mr. Merica denied that he had sexually harassed his co-workers, and his denials were confirmed by the testimonies of the alleged victims who were called to testify by the Commissioner. He denied "being off task when in the classroom." He denied playing video games in class during teaching and instruction time. Mr. Merica's denials of essential elements in the Amended Administrative complaint, even if unbelievable, does not prove the accusations. The burden remains with the Commissioner. Answering the allegation of "reading the newspaper in class," Mr. Merica stated: If there was a current event and we were talking about current events or -- the kids even had papers at that time, so we have used the paper in an educational way in the school before. Answering the allegation of allowing his class to watch the television program, The Price is Right, Mr. Merica stated: That's a possibility, because at one time in PI, our kids were not going to the lunchroom. They were served lunch in the room. Well, that was a time where I was not present. It was the aides on attendance. It was their duty. That was my time. I have a duty-free lunch is what they call it. It's part of the contract. I didn't always take that time. They knew if they needed help, I would help. If there was some special function going on or something like that, I would not necessarily go to lunch. But as a general rule I did do lunch, and those kids were in the room and sometimes the TV was on and the news during lunch period. It was lunch period for the children, too. Mr. Merica added that he was not aware of any prohibition against putting the TV on during the children's lunch period. Answering his attorney's question why he placed a "Do you need a Sub?" note (the Board's Exhibit 62) in some but not all his co-workers mailboxes, Mr. Merica stated: That's self-explanatory. It says: "Do you need a sub? If so please call Mr. Merica at 985-0203. Do not call before 6:00 a.m., or, you will have to deal with me personally. Can you spell DEAD?" I put it in a few teachers' mailboxes--friends mainly--I'm not a sub. People know that. The people that I gave this to know that I was not a sub. It's obviously a joke. The joke means that I don't think its appropriate to call anybody before 6:00 a.m. in the morning, you know, to disturb their family.--- As far as I know, they wanted to have a new policy because the secretaries didn't want to have to deal with sub calls anymore. So they said to start calling the subs before 6:00 o'clock in the morning to make sure they get there, and by the way, it doesn't say--can you spell dead? That's a little inside pedagogy, whatever you want to call it. It's a little inside teaching joke. "I hope you can spell." Based on the situations and circumstances at the time he engaged in activities and conduct in findings 206 through 211 and findings 229 through 234, I find Mr. Merica's explanations were plausible, reasonable, and within a teacher's authority and obligation to be creative and innovative by providing one or more methods of training to attain specific individual educational goals, based upon the physical and/or mental limitations of students and in concert with the educational goals as stated in their respective IEPs. Realizing that Foster administration and the Board were in the process of terminating his employment contract at the next Board meeting, Mr. Merica wrote a November 2, 1999, memorandum to Dr. Binnie and Principal Griffin, suggesting that he be transferred (to another school) as an alternative solution. The request of transfer was denied. By letter of January 13, 2000, Dr. Earl Lennard, Superintendent, the Board, suspended Mr. Merica with pay until the Board meeting on January 18, 2000, at which point his contractual employment with the School Board was terminated. The School Board's annual renewal of Mr. Merica's yearly contract of employment during Principal Payne's tenure as principal of Foster provides a reasonable inference, and I so infer, that the 2000 termination of Mr. Merica's annual contractual employment was based primarily upon issues that were identified and raised by Principal Griffin during the mid-1998 through 2000 period when she, and not Ms. Payne, was principal at Foster. There is no evidence of record that Foster brought to the attention of the Board or that the Board considered allegations of or findings of professional misconduct that had occurred during the 1994 through 1998 time period when Ms. Payne was principal at Foster Elementary. Amended Administrative Complaint Material Allegations Paragraph 3(a) The material and relevant evidence proved, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica, at unspecified times, demonstrated heightened anger while conferencing with Principal Payne. The evidence proved clearly and convincingly that between 1998 and 1999,8 Mr. Merica yelled at Principal Griffin while conferencing with her as alleged in Paragraph 3(a) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. I do not find that Mr. Merica "pointed his finger in his principal's face and being emotionally out of control while conferencing with Principal Griffin." The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that Mr. Merica failed or refused to comply with specific requests or specific instructions given by Principal Payne during her tenure as principal at Foster during the period of 1994 through mid 1998 or that Mr. Merica refused to comply with specific requests or specific instructions given by Principal Griffin during her tenure from mid-1998 through 1999, as alleged in paragraph 3(b) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica made derogatory and/or disrespectful remarks specifically about Principal Payne or specifically about Principal Griffin to and in the presence of his co-workers as alleged in paragraph 3(c) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. Paragraph 4 The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica rejected constructive criticism and assistance from those whose positions required giving such constructive criticism and assistance as alleged in paragraph 4(a) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. To the contrary, the reliable evidence proved that between 1994 and 1999, specifically in the mid and latter part of the 1999 calendar year, Mr. Merica accepted and responded positively to constructive criticism and offers of assistance from those whose position required giving such constructive criticism and assistance. The material and relevant evidence proved, clearly and convincingly, that on unspecified dates between 1994 and 1999, Mr. Merica was disruptive at faculty meetings by speaking aloud; speaking to co-workers, sometimes argumentatively; and interrupting speakers when they were speaking during faculty meetings as alleged in paragraph 4(b) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica was disruptive at faculty meetings by banging on tables and by making subversive and derogatory statements about the administration, in the presence of students and parent and faculty as alleged in paragraph 4(b) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. Paragraph 5 The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that Mr. Merica sexually harassed a co-worker, Ms. Kolinsky, during February 1999 as alleged in paragraph 5(a) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999, Mr. Merica sexually harassed a co-worker, Ms. Kolinsky, an intern and teacher at Foster as alleged in paragraph 5(b) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica sexually harassed co-worker, K.R., a teacher at Foster Elementary as alleged in paragraph 5(c) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. Paragraph 6 The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica frequently left his class with his aides so that he could walk around campus, socialize, and/or monitor other teachers and their students as alleged in paragraph 6(a) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. The material evidence proved on those occasions, recalled by Mr. Merica and his DEES attendant who was an on-scene observer, that his absences from his classroom were for legitimate purposes within his obligations as a professional teacher in the Hillsborough County school system. The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica's use of alternative methods such as video games, newspapers, and other tools and equipment to teach his students were "ineffective teaching tools and student management" as alleged in paragraph 6(b) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. To the contrary, the undisputed evidence proved that Mr. Merica's use of other supportive, available, and permissible means and methods such as video games, newspapers, and other tools and equipment for stimulating his PI students' interest were effective teaching tools. The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, the factual basis to support allegations that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica (1) utilized ineffective lesson plans, (2) utilized ineffective behavioral management plans, (3) failed to keep students academically engaged, and (4) failed to control his students and/or gain their respect as the manager of the class as alleged in paragraph 6(c) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. Paragraph 7 The material and relevant evidence proved, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999 Mr. Merica restrained students without the required ACT certification as alleged in paragraph 7(a) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. The evidence proved that Mr. Merica restrained "unruly" students and restrained "a student" in defense of his personal safety and that of other students in the time-out class incident herein found. The material and relevant evidence proved, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999, Mr. Merica yelled in the faces of students as alleged, in part, in paragraph 7(b) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. Through the testimony of two students, Demetrie White and Jarmaal Rumlin, it is clear when Mr. Merica was yelling in their face(s) it was, in part, to be heard over their yelling at him and/or each other when they were kicking the ball and playing during time-out. The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999, within the circumstances and context of each encounter of record, Mr. Merica exhibited out-of-control or emotional forms of discipline as alleged, in part, in paragraph 7(b) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. The material and relevant evidence proved that between 1994 and 1999, Mr. Merica restrained one unruly large male ESE student that was not enrolled in his class without a request from the teacher who was responsible for the class, as alleged, in part, in paragraph 7(c) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. Paragraph 7(d) was withdrawn by the Commissioner. The material and relevant evidence failed to prove, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999, Mr. Merica's teaching and student behavior management was ineffective, including: frequently leaving his class with aides so that he could walk around campus, socialize, and/or monitor other teachers and their students. when in his class, frequently playing video games on his computer, reading a newspaper, or reviewing architectural designs. utilizing ineffective lesson plans and behavioral management plans, failing to keep students academically engaged, and failing to control his students and/or gain their respect as the manager of the class. The material and relevant evidence proved, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999, within the circumstances and context of each encounter of record, Mr. Merica restrained unruly students without the required ACT certification. The evidence demonstrated that in each proven encounter of unruly student restraint, Mr. Merica acted to protect the unruly student, other classmates, and, on two occasions, protect himself and another colleague. The material and relevant evidence proved, clearly and convincingly, that between 1994 and 1999, Mr. Merica restrained an unruly male student who was not enrolled in his class without waiting for the female teacher to ask for such assistance as alleged in paragraph 7(c) of the Amended Administrative Complaint. The evidence demonstrated and it is found that by restraining the unruly male student, Mr. Merica prevented possible potential injury to the unruly student, to the female teacher, to the grandmother volunteer, and to other students of both classes who were present in the hallway at the time of the incident. Paragraph 7(d), alleging inappropriate discipline of several students on or about September 23, 1999, was withdrawn by Petitioner. Paragraph 8 The Commissioner failed to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, allegations in paragraph 8 of the Amended Administrative Complaint that Respondent met with his principal and county employees to discuss and received letters of reprimand for each act alleged in paragraphs 1 through 7 of the Amended Administrative Compliant. Paragraph 9 The Commissioner proved, by clear and convincing evidence, that the Board terminated Respondent's contractual employment as a teacher with Hillsborough County in 2000. The burden of proof required to terminate a contract of employment is not the clear and convincing evidence burden of proof standard required to revoke a license. The Commissioner offered no documented proof, however, proving the Board's decision was based specifically on the allegations found in paragraph 9 of the Amended Administrative Complaint. There is no documented evidence of record that identifies the specific basis upon which the ultimate determination to terminate Mr. Merica's 2000 school year employment contract was made by the Board. The Commissioner did not prove, clearly and convincingly, by material and relevant evidence of record, the allegations that "[E]ffective September 22, 2000, the school board terminated Respondent's employment on charges on [sic] insubordination, persistent violation or willful refusal to obey laws or policies relating to the public schools, and failure to demonstrate competency relating to the instruction, evaluation and management of students in accordance with accepted standards," as alleged in paragraph 9 of the Amended Administrative Complaint.

Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Finding of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is: RECOMMENDED that the Commissioner of Education enter a final order finding Respondent, Neil Merica, in violation of Subsection 1012.795(1)(i), Florida Statutes (2003), and imposing the following penalties: Suspend Respondent's right of renewal of his teacher certificate and place Respondent on probation for a period of three years, to require successful completion of an anger management course and other such conditions as the Commissioner may specify upon re-application under existing requirements for certification by the State Board at the time the suspension expires. Impose a fine on Respondent in the amount of $1,000.00 for violation of Section 1012.795(1)(i), Florida Statutes (2003), to be paid prior to or at the time of re-application for certification, and other such conditions as the Commissioner may specify. DONE AND ENTERED this 31st day of March, 2005, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S FRED L. BUCKINE 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 31st day of March, 2005.

USC (1) 20 U.S.C 1401 Florida Laws (10) 1003.321012.011012.7951012.796120.51120.569120.57120.6890.80190.803
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