The Issue Whether Respondent, Latunya Gibbs ("Respondent" or "Gibbs"), committed the violations as alleged in the Administrative Complaint; and, if so, what is the appropriate penalty.
Findings Of Fact Petitioner, BCSB, is located at 600 Southeast Third Avenue, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. BCSB is in charge of the Broward County School District ("the District"). Robert W. Runcie is the Superintendent of BCSB. The Superintendent is statutorily obligated to recommend the placement of school personnel and to require observance with all laws, rules, and regulations. He is authorized to report and enforce any violation thereof, together with recommending the appropriate disciplinary action against instructional personnel employed by the Board. Gibbs is employed by BCSB as a teacher pursuant to a Professional Services Contract, issued in accordance with section 1012.33(3)(a), Florida Statutes. She was first hired by BCSB on August 24, 1993. Gibbs holds a Florida Educator's Certificate in Elementary Education. The Superintendent recommended that Gibbs be terminated from her employment with BCSB. On October 2, 2018, the Board adopted the Superintendent's recommendation. BCSB provided all notice and process that was due as it pertains to the investigation and procedural requirements through the Board's adoption of the Superintendent's recommendation for termination. Gibbs was assigned as a teacher at MLE for school years 2015-16, 2016-17, and 2017-18. In 2015-16, Gibbs was assigned to teach second grade. On September 2, 2015, she was placed on administrative reassignment due to a personnel investigation. She remained on administrative reassignment for the remainder of the school year. During the 2016-17 school year, Gibbs was assigned to teach third grade at MLE. Gibbs had 18 students in her class. On May 24, 2017, Gibbs received notice of an investigation into an allegation that she falsified records pertaining to student evaluations and achievements for promotion to the fourth grade. These records included student assessments for the Benchmark Assessment System and third grade Portfolios. On June 19, 2017, Gibbs received notice that the investigation was expanded to include an allegation that she submitted falsified documents to utilize FMLA leave and that she falsified a training certificate. Fabricated BAS Assessments The District uses the Fountas & Pinnell Benchmark Assessment Systems ("BAS"). It is used to determine a student's independent, instructional, and frustration reading levels. BAS assessments are conducted one-on-one by the teacher. In part 1 of the assessment, the student reads aloud and talks about the system's leveled fiction and nonfiction books, while the teacher observes and notes the reader's behaviors on constructed forms. In part 2, the teacher conducts a Comprehension Conversation. There is an optional part 3, which uses a reading prompt to elicit student response to the text. BAS assessments are done for all students in grade levels Kindergarten through 3, and for those students in grades 4 and 5 who score a one or two on the Florida Standards Assessment ("FSA"). For BAS, there are three assessment periods each school year. The District deadline for the third assessment period was May 26, 2017. MLE set an earlier internal deadline for its teachers of May 19, 2017, to insure that the District deadline would be met. On May 11, 2017, Gibbs was provided with a substitute so she could have the opportunity to complete BAS assessments. After school on Friday, May 12, 2017, there was a Response to Intervention ("RTI") meeting at MLE. Gibbs told Marlen Veliz ("Veliz"), MLE's Principal, that she had completed the BAS assessments for two of her 18 students. Gibbs stated that she was confident that she would be able to complete all student assessments by the May 19 deadline, and that she did not need a substitute for an additional day. Gibbs was at school on Monday, May 15, 2017, but then was absent for an extended period. She was absent on May 16 through 19, and 22 through 24. Principal Velez asked Ms. Shamequia Wright ("Wright"), a third grade teacher and union steward, and Ms. Hend Hafez ("Hafez"), an MLE Literacy Coach, to help assess Gibbs' students. On Thursday, May 18, 2017, Wright and Mr. Lawrence Hennequin ("Hennequin"), third grade team lead, entered Gibbs' classroom to look for the students' BAS folders. They could not find the BAS folders, and only found blank scoring sheets. They held up a BAS folder and asked the students where they could find the folders. The students informed Hennequin and Wright that they had never seen the folders. Hennequin and Wright left Gibbs' classroom to get their own materials so they could start assessing students. Wright proceeded to assess Gibbs' students on May 19 and May 22., 2017 On May 23, 2017, Hafez was asked to gather the BAS assessments that Wright had completed. Wright told Hafez that the assessments were on the round table in Gibbs' classroom. Hafez collected the BAS materials from the round table in Gibbs' classroom and provided them to the office. Upon trying to enter the BAS scores into the BASIS system, it was discovered that Gibbs had entered all of the students' scores on May 15, 2017. In order to have done this, Gibbs would have had to complete assessments for 16 students on that day. Principal Veliz knew this was an impossible task and, therefore, questioned the validity of the scores. Principal Veliz asked the District for a review. By May 26, 2017, the office had received all of the protocols--the student BAS folders containing the data for all three of the assessment periods--from all of the third grade teachers with the exception of Gibbs. The Assistant Principal, Joan Rosa ("Rosa"), made an announcement over the P.A. reminding all of the teachers who had not submitted their protocols to do so prior to 3:00 p.m. Gibbs never brought any of the protocols for any of the three assessment periods to the office. On May 26, 2017, Mildred Grimaldo ("Grimaldo"), Director of Literacy from the District, went to MLE to conduct a review and reassess Gibbs' students. The team conducted a reassessment of five students. Hafez reassessed the remaining students. It was found that the scores entered in BASIS on May 15, 2017, by Gibbs did not align with the reassessments completed by Grimaldo's team or Hafez. Of the 18 students in Gibbs' class, only six scored a three or above on the FSA. Six students scored a two and five students scored a one. One student was absent. Gibbs was scheduled for mandatory BAS training on January 13, 2017, but she did not attend. Gibbs received a verbal reprimand for missing the training. Gibbs received training as part of a calibration conversation that took place on April 4, 2017. The Literacy Coach also had previously shared (November 2016) a link to a Brainshark presentation, which included suggested best practices from Fountas & Pinnell and those implemented in the District. Gibbs did not review the Brainshark presentation. Incomplete Portfolios and Falsified Promotion Testing Section 1008.25(5)(b), Florida Statutes, and Board Policy 6000.1 indicate that any student in third grade who does not meet the reading promotion criteria, which is a two or higher on the FSA, can be promoted to fourth grade based on good cause promotion criteria. The good cause promotion criteria consists of the completion and passing of a third grade Portfolio as an alternative to a passing FSA score. All third grade teachers are required to have their students complete the third grade Portfolio. Student Portfolios are based on work completed by the students in connection with what they are being taught by the teacher. The teachers are to teach the State standards. The Portfolios gauge students' mastery of the reading information standards, reading literature standards, and language standards. There are eight cycles that were put together by the District to help teachers teach the reading information standards, reading literature standards, and language standards. Each cycle has certain tasks that students must complete. The tasks are to be graded by the teachers and kept as part of the Portfolios. The grade is based on a four point system, with one being the worst and four being the best. If a student does not score a three out of four on a particular standard, the student is then given an additional passage and multiple choice test. The student must receive at least a 70% on the multiple choice test to show proficiency in the standard. Scores for the Portfolio tasks as well as the multiple choice test, if necessary, are recorded on a form entitled Third Grade Assessment Portfolio: Cumulative Student Record Form ("Portfolio Record Form"). MLE had an in-house deadline of May 1, 2017, to submit all Portfolios along with the summary sheets. The District's deadline was May 5, 2017. On May 1, 2017, Gibbs emailed Hafez asking for assistance finishing the last tasks for the Portfolios. Principal Veliz received Gibbs' Portfolio Record Form and Portfolios on or about May 4, 2017. Veliz must sign each Portfolio Record Form. She also reviews the Portfolios. Veliz noticed that Gibbs' Portfolio Record Form indicated a perfect score, four out of four, for every one of her 18 students. Additionally, even though every student allegedly received a perfect score, Gibbs also had a score for the multiple choice test for every standard for every student. Had a student actually received a perfect score on the tasks, the multiple choice test would have been unnecessary. This raised a red flag for Veliz. Based on the concerns, Veliz asked Hafez and Rosa to bring her Gibbs' box of Portfolios. The box was sealed, almost completely, with duct tape. As a team, Veliz, Hafez, and Rosa opened Gibbs' Portfolio box. They spot checked a few of the students' work and noticed significant discrepancies in what Gibbs recorded and the student product. Hafez and Rosa were asked to review all of Gibbs' students' Portfolios. It took a week to review all of the Portfolios. The team found errors that included, but were not limited to: incorrect grading; the sample answer was provided (i.e., the teacher answer key); missing tasks; missing test items; task given multiple times despite mastery of the task; blank or incomplete tasks; discrepancy in time frame of dates; items done as homework as opposed to class work; missing multiple choice sheets; and the inclusion of non-summative task items. Veliz reached out to Ms. Nicole Mancini, Director of Elementary Learning, to have someone from the District rescore the Portfolios. Dr. Teri Acquavita and Ms. Shellie Gory ("Gory"), supervisors for the District, conducted a District review. There were discrepancies between the District review and Gibbs' grading. On May 9, 2017, Veliz emailed Gibbs requesting her monthly data along with the alternative portfolio multiple-choice assessments. Gibbs submitted the monthly data. Gibbs did not submit the multiple-choice alternative data, and has never submitted the multiple-choice data. However, on that same day, Gibbs sent two of her students to Hafez asking for copies of the multiple-choice tests. Gibbs told all of the parents that their students would be promoted. Unfortunately, five of Gibbs' students scored a one on the FSA. The Portfolios should have been used as good cause promotion criteria for those students, but they were too deficient. The students were promoted and placed into intervention programs the following year. Falsified Test Administrator Certificate School year 2016-17 was the first year that the FSA was to be given to students via computer. All MLE teachers were directed by Veliz to complete a Test Administrators' ("TA") Certification Course from American Institutes for Research ("AIR"). The FSA was given on April 27 and 28, 2017. On February 7, 2017, the school was scheduled to take an infrastructure practice test to make sure the school's system had the capacity to handle the testing by computers. On February 6, 2017, Gibbs received assistance from School Counselor, Ms. Gigi McIntire ("McIntire"), and the Micro-Tech, Mr. Osvaldo Hernandez ("Hernandez"), to create her password and receive a link for the infrastructure practice test. Gibbs' class did not take the infrastructure test. On February 8, 2017, Veliz met with Gibbs to discuss the fact that her class had not completed the infrastructure test and the importance of practicing with her students prior to the FSA. During the meeting, Gibbs claimed that she had not been given the link and she had not received the password until the very end because Hernandez had helped all other teachers and left her for last. This was not true, however, because Gibbs received her password and the link on February 6, 2017. Gibbs submitted a TA Certificate on March 13, 2017, which had her name handwritten on it and which did not state a date of completion of the course. The certificate looked as though it was a screen shot from the computer. The certificates that were submitted by all other teachers looked different. They had their names typed on the certificate and the date that the course was completed. Gibbs was supposed to have her students practice taking the test on a computer. The expectation was that students would have done this multiple times before having to take the FSA. On April 24, 2017, Veliz approached some third grade students and asked them how their computer practice test was going. Several students from Gibbs' class stated that they had not practiced yet because their teacher did not know how to log in. Students from other classes stated that they had practiced several times. This alarmed Veliz. Veliz asked McIntire to provide copies of all the TA Certificates. Veliz saw that the only certificate with a name handwritten in was that of Gibbs. Veliz contacted the AIR Help Desk. Mr. Anthony Nembhard ("Nembhard") confirmed that Gibbs had only used her password to log in on February 6, 2017, and had not logged in at any other time. Nembhard provided Veliz with Case No. 545991, and showed Veliz how to print a report indicating that Gibbs had not completed the course. It was uncovered that a teacher could scroll through the course without actually taking it and get to a "Congratulations!" page that looked like what Gibbs had submitted as her certificate. A screen shot of this page could be printed out. On April 25, 2017, Veliz went into Gibbs' classroom with Hernandez to assist students in practicing prior to the test. None of the students had any idea how to log in, did not know which browser to use, and every single one of them indicated that it was their first time accessing this practice test. The students were confused and did not know how to log in. This student confusion took place in the presence of Gibbs, Hernandez, and Veliz. When Gibbs was asked if she had her students do the practice test, Gibbs indicated she had done everything she needed to do. Gibbs' defense, that her printer was not functioning properly to print a complete TA Certificate, is not credible. Gibbs apparently printed a TA Certificate in which everything printed perfectly, except her name, which she handwrote. She offered no explanation for failing to provide instruction to her students on how to utilize the computer so they would be ready to take the FSA. Falsified FMLA Certification of Healthcare Provider Gibbs sought and was granted Family Medical Leave Act ("FMLA") intermittent leave in 2012. Gibbs reapplied for FMLA intermittent leave every year thereafter from 2013 to 2015, and was approved by Ms. Marjorie Fletcher ("Fletcher") of the BCSB Leaves Department on each instance. Gibbs submitted a FMLA certificate of healthcare provider form from ARNP Princy Bhat-Bhardwaj ("ARNP Princy"), certifying Gibbs' need for another FMLA leave for the period of November 15, 2015, to November 15, 2016. ARNP Princy is employed by Metcare, Gibbs' primary medical care provider. The frequency and duration section of the form on paragraph 11 were left blank. In order to process Gibbs' leave request, Fletcher faxed this form back to Metcare to request that it fill in the frequency and duration section of the form. The form was faxed back to Fletcher with the frequency and duration section of the form filled in. However, Fletcher noticed that the beginning and ending dates of the certification on paragraph nine, as well as the date of the signature on the bottom of the form, were whited out and written over. Fletcher called Metcare to verify their fax number which was fax-stamped at the top of the form. A person at Metcare could not verify the phone number listed on the top of the form. ARNP Princy confirmed to Fletcher that the handwritten portion of the date of the signature was not her handwriting. ARNP Princy also confirmed that the beginning and ending dates of the certification on paragraph nine of the form was not her handwriting. ARNP Princy testified that if she signs a form, it is her practice to date the form at the same time. According to ARNP Princy, Metcare's procedure for filling out and executing FMLA certifications is directed by the patient. In some instances, they fill out and execute FMLA certifications and directly send it to a patient's employer. In other instances, the form is handed back to the patient to submit to their employer. Gibbs submitted another FMLA certificate of healthcare provider from ARNP Princy, certifying Gibbs' need for another FMLA leave for January 29, 2016, to June 10, 2016. On May 23, 2017, legal counsel for Metcare, confirmed to the Leaves Department that it had not completed a FMLA certificate for Gibbs since January 2015. It is evident that one or more FMLA forms submitted on behalf of Gibbs were falsified. However, no evidence was presented that the documents were altered by Gibbs or that they were ever in her possession prior to their submission by someone to the Leaves Department. Although no one other than Gibbs would seemingly have a motive to modify these forms, Gibbs denied falsifying them. While Fletcher certainly had a legitimate basis to question the validity of these forms, there was insufficient evidence to demonstrate that Gibbs knowingly submitted false information to secure ongoing intermittent leave. Prior Discipline Gibbs has prior disciplinary actions consisting of two verbal reprimands and several corrective actions (i.e., summary memoranda). She received a verbal reprimand on January 27, 2017, for failing to attend the scheduled Professional Learning Community on BAS at McNab Elementary on January 13, 2017. She received another verbal reprimand on December 11, 2017, for intentionally exposing a student to unnecessary embarrassment or disparagement. Gibbs received received summary memos concerning: the need to attend all scheduled afternoon meetings; the need to promote positive interactions with students; the need to be punctual; the need to follow procedures and protocols for drills; the need to instruct for an entire period; the need to closely monitor and track student progress; the need to adhere to timelines and complete school-wide assessments in a timely manner; the need to understand standards; for sending a grammatically incorrect letter to a parent; for lack of intervention with behavior issues in the classroom; for intentionally exposing students to embarrassment with references to boyfriends and girlfriends; the need the adhere to timelines and complete school-wide assessments in a timely manner; and the need to use guided reading during the reading block. On September 2, 2015, Gibbs was placed on administrative reassignment due to a personnel investigation. She remained on administrative reassignment for the remainder of the school year. The personnel investigation involved two issues. One issue was about conduct that occurred during the 2014-15 school year when she was assigned to Walker Elementary as a VPK teacher. The alleged conduct was that she charged parents a fee if their child was picked up late from VPK and that she planned on charging a fee for the end of school graduation ceremony. The other issue was for conduct that occurred during the 2015-16 school year. It was alleged that on August 26, 2015, she pushed a student out of the classroom and pinched his back. Based on these two incidents, the Education Practices Commission issued a letter of reprimand to Gibbs, which is part of her BCSB personnel file. Ultimate Findings of Fact The evidentiary record overwhelmingly reveals a pattern by Gibbs of misconduct, gross insubordination, incompetence, willful neglect of duty, and violation of school board policies. The evidentiary record amply supports suspension without pay and termination of her employment for just cause.
Conclusions For Petitioner: Denise Marie Heekin, Esquire Ranjiv Sondhi, Esquire Bryant Miller Olive, P.A. One Southeast Third Avenue, Suite 2200 Miami, Florida 33131 For Respondent: Robert F. McKee, Esquire Robert F. McKee, P.A. 1718 East Seventh Avenue, Suite 301 Tampa, Florida 33675
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that Petitioner, Broward County School Board, enter a final order upholding Respondent's suspension without pay and termination for just cause. DONE AND ENTERED this 6th day of March, 2020, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S MARY LI CREASY 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 6th day of March, 2020. COPIES FURNISHED: Robert F. McKee, Esquire Robert F. McKee, P.A. 1718 East Seventh Avenue, Suite 301 Tampa, Florida 33675 (eServed) Denise Marie Heekin, Esquire Bryant Miller Olive, P.A. One Southeast Third Avenue, Suite 2200 Miami, Florida 33131 (eServed) Ranjiv Sondhi, Esquire Bryant Miller Olive, P.A. One Southeast Third Avenue, Suite 2200 Miami, Florida 33131 (eServed) Katherine A. Heffner, Esquire Robert F. McKee, P.A. 1718 East 7th Avenue, Suite 301 Tampa, Florida 33605 (eServed) Robert W. Runcie, Superintendent Broward County School Board 600 Southeast Third Avenue, 10th Floor Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301 Matthew Mears, General Counsel Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1244 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 (eServed) Richard Corcoran, Commissioner of Education Department of Education Turlington Building, Suite 1514 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 (eServed)
The Issue Whether Respondent engaged in the conduct alleged in the Notice of Specific Charges? If so, whether such conduct provides the School Board of Dade County, Florida, with just or proper cause to take disciplinary action against him? If so, what specific disciplinary action should be taken?
Findings Of Fact Based upon the evidence received at the formal hearing, the factual stipulations of the parties, and the record as a whole, the following Findings of Fact are made: The School Board is responsible for the operation, control and supervision of all public schools (grades K through 12) in Dade County, Florida. At all times material to the instant case, Respondent was an annual contract employee of the School Board occupying a paraprofessional position. He currently is under suspension as a result of the incident described in the Notice of Specific Charges. Respondent's employment with the School Board began on October 2, 1987, when he was hired as a part-time custodian and assigned to Hialeah Middle School (HMS). He remained a part-time custodian at HMS until 1989, when he became a teacher aide at the school. He was a teacher aide at HMS from 1989 to 1992. In 1992, he filled a teacher assistant position at the school. He stayed in that position until he was administratively reassigned in April of 1994, following the incident which led to the initiation of the instant disciplinary proceeding. As a teacher assistant at HMS during the 1993-94 school year, Respondent was a member of a collective bargaining unit represented by the United Teachers of Dade (UTD) and covered by a collective bargaining agreement between the School Board and UTD, effective July 1, 1991, through June 30, 1994 (UTD Contract). 2/ Article IV of the UTD Contract addressed the subject of "employer rights." Section 1 of Article IV provided, in part, that the School Board had the exclusive right to suspend, dismiss or terminate employees "for just cause." Article XIX of the UTD Contract addressed the subject of "employee rights and due process." Section 2 of Article XIX provided, in part, that "[d]ismissals and suspensions shall be effected in accordance with applicable Florida statutes, including the Administrative Procedures Act (APA)." Article VII of the UTD Contract addressed the subject of a "safe learning environment." Section 1, paragraph A, of Article VII provided as follows: A safe and orderly learning environment is a major priority of the parties. Such an environment requires that disruptive b havior be dealt with safely, fairly, consis- tently and in a manner which incorporates progressive disciplinary measures specified in the Code of Student Conduct. Section 1, paragraph B, of Article VII provided, as follows: Rules governing discipline are set forth in the Code of Student Conduct, School Board Rules, and Procedures for Promoting and Main- taining a Safe Learning Environment and, by reference, are made a part of this Contract. Guideline No. 4 of the School Board's Procedures for Promoting and Maintaining a Safe Learning Environment (School Board's Procedures), which were incorporated by reference in Section 1, paragraph B, of Article VII of the UTD Contract, addresses the subject of "child abuse" and provides, in part, as follows: CURRENT LAW AND/OR PRACTICE Section 415.504, Florida Statutes, requires mandatory reporting of all cases of child abuse. This statute applies to suspected or confirmed reports against any person, regard- less of occupation, who is alleged to be involved or any person who is alleged to have committed any act of child abuse. School personnel are not exempted from mandatory reporting of child abuse even when a fellow employee is suspected or confirmed as the abuser. WHEN IN DOUBT, REPORT ... CHILD ABUSE Child abuse is defined to include harm or threatened harm to a child's health or wel- fare and/or willful or negligent acts which result in: neglect; malnutrition; sexual abuse; physical injury; mental injury; or failure to provide sustenance, clothing, shelter, or medical treatment. Any person, including, but not limited to, physician, nurse, teacher, social worker, or employee of a public or private facility serving children, who has reason to believe that a child has been a subject of child abuse, shall report this information as indicated in the procedures outlined in this guideline. Knowing and willful failure to report sus- pected or confirmed abuse, and knowing and willful prevention of another from making such a report, is a crime punishable by up to two months in jail and up to a $500 fine, Sections 775.082 and 775.083, Florida Statutes, and may be subject to disciplinary action of Dade County Public Schools. It is suggested that once a report is made, the principal or appropriate school administrator be notified. PROCEDURES . . . SCHOOL RELATED CHILD ABUSE REPORTING . . . Anyone aware of suspected or confirmed child abuse committed by School Board employees acting in their official capacity, shall immediately make a report to the principal or designee who shall immediately make a report to the Dade County Public Schools Police and the Region Office. Reasonable Force and Child Abuse. In some instances, a need may exist to differentiate between reasonable force and child abuse. Florida Statute 232.27 provides that: Subject to law and to the rules of the district school board, each teacher or other member of the staff of any school shall have such authority for the control and discipline of students as may be assigned by the princi- pal or designee and shall keep good order in the classroom and in other places in which the teacher or other staff member is assigned to be in charge of students... Florida Statute 232.275 provides that: ...Except in the case of excessive force or cruel and unusual punishment, a teacher or other staff member, a principal or designee, or a bus driver shall not be civilly or criminally liable for any action carried out in conformity with the state board and district school board rules regarding the control, discipline, suspension, and expulsion of students... An administrator must report to Dade County Public Schools Police and the Region Office all cases involving Board Employees where: excessive physical force or physical contact that was used was greater than necessary use of unauthorized physical action results in injury to a student corporal punishment is administered to a student Guideline No. 5 of the School Board's Procedures addresses the subject of "illnesses and injuries to students" and provides, in part, as follows: CURRENT LAW AND/OR PRACTICE All employees responsible for supervision of students and student activities are to take precautions to protect the life, health, and safety of every student in an effort to reduce or eliminate accidents, injuries, and illnesses. . . . Guideline No. 9 of the School Board's Procedures addresses the subject of "corporal punishment" and provides as follows: CURRENT LAW AND/OR PRACTICE Corporal punishment is prohibited in the Dade County Public Schools. This prohibition extends to parents or guardians on school grounds. Corporal punishment is physical force or physical contact applied to the body as punishment. Section 228.041(27), Florida Statutes, defines corporal punishment as: ... the moderate use of physical force or physical contact by a teacher or principal as may be necessary to maintain discipline or to enforce school rules. However, the term "corporal punishment" does not include the use of such reasonable force by a teacher or principal as may be necessary to protect himself or other students from disruptive students. The use of physical restraint techniques in accordance with School Board Rule 6Gx13-6A-1.331 (Special Programs and Procedures and . . . . the Contract Between the Dade County Public Schools and United Teachers of Dade is not corporal punishment. Prior to March 10, 1994, Respondent was aware of the School Board's rules prohibiting the use of corporal punishment and requiring employees to report cases of suspected or actual child abuse. Section 1, paragraph D, of Article VII of the UTD Contract provided, in part, as follows: The parties recognize the potential for difficult circumstances and problems related to the use of corporal punishment. Accordingly, the parties agree that such punishment shall be prohibited as a disciplinary option, and further agree to act affirmatively in continuing to identify and implement more effective alter- natives for dealing with student behavior. "Physical restraint" was the subject of Section 3 of Article VII of the UTD Contract, which provided as follows: There are instances where exceptional students exhibit behaviors that are disruptive to the learning environment and pose a threat to the safety of persons or property. Exceptional students enrolled in pro- grams for the emotionally handicapped, severely emotionally disturbed, and autistic, because of the nature of their disability, may on occasion experience impaired impulse control of such severity that use of physical restraint is necessary to prevent such students from inflicting harm to self and/or others, or from causing damage to property. Students enrolled in other exceptional student education programs may also display behaviors that require the use of restraint. The purpose of physical restraint is to prevent injury to persons or destruction of property. It is not to be used to "teach the child a lesson" or as punishment. Subject to available funding, teachers or paraprofess- ionals shall, upon request, be afforded an opportunity to learn physical restraint techniques. Strategies for the prevention of aggressive behavior shall be utilized on an ongoing basis. However, when a explosive event occurs without warning and is of such degree that there is imminent risk to persons or property, the use of physical restraint techniques is authorized for such circumstances. Physical restraint refers to the use of physical intervention techniques designed to restrict the movement of a student in an effort to de-escalate aggressive behavior. In order to promote a safe learning environment, the district has authorized for implementation specific physical restraint procedures to be used in programs for the emotionally handicapped, severely emotionally disturbed, and autistic. These specific procedures may also be used with other exceptional students when it is indicated on the student's Individualized Education Program (IEP). These procedures include, but are not limited to, holding and escape techniques which, when implemented, prevent injury to students and staff or prevent serious damage to property. Specific physical restraint procedures may also be approved for use with other specific student populations upon mutual agreement of the parties and would be reviewed on an annual basis. The Board shall provide for the training of instructional and support staff in physical restraint techniques as well as strategies for prevention of aggressive behavior. Training manuals developed for this purpose are, by reference, incorporated and made a part of this agreement. Physical restraint techniques provided in training programs approved by the Board are authorized and, when utilized in accor- dance with the training provided and these guidelines, shall not constitute grounds for disciplinary action. If a teacher is not trained in the use of approved physical restraint procedures and is faced with an emergency, the teacher is authorized to employ the moderate use of physical force or physical contact as may be necessary to maintain discipline or to enforce School Board Rules 6Gx13-5D-1.07 and 1.08. The appropriate use of these procedures shall not constitute a violation of the corporal punishment policy (Board Rule 6Gx13-5D-1.07). The use of physical restraint techniques shall be discussed as part of the Individualized Educational Program (IEP) review development process. The Local Education Agency (LEA) representative, at the initial IEP meeting and/or annual review, shall provide notifica- tion to parents of physical restraint proced- ures. When parents or surrogates are not present at the meeting, written notification to them regarding the use of physical restraint will be provided. For an exceptional student enrolled in a program other than for the emotionally handicapped, severely emotionally disturbed or autistic, a recommendation for the use of board-approved physical restraint procedures must be made by the multi-disciplinary team (M-Team) and be documented on the student's IEP form before the use of such procedures may be authorized. The use of physical restraint must be documented as a part of the Student Case Management (SCM) System. Instructional or support staff who utilize physical restraint techniques shall complete the SCM Student Services Form to record student case information regarding each incident. Direct- ions shall be provided to instructional and support staff to assist them in completing the appropriate form. In accordance with Section 3 of Article VII of the UTD Contract, the School Board offered (and continues to offer) a Safe Physical Management Crisis Intervention Training Program (SPM Training Program) for its instructional and non-instructional staff assigned to work with emotionally handicapped, severely emotionally disturbed, and autistic students in order to train these employees in the use of School Board-authorized and approved physical restraint techniques and strategies. Participants in the School Board's SPM Training Program are given training manuals to review and study. According to one of these training manuals, Petitioner's Exhibit 3, the philosophy of SPM is as follows: Utilizing Safe Physical Management tech- niques in the classroom requires that non- physical intervention be used whenever possible to manage behavior. It is also expected that an on-going behavior management system is in place in the classroom to rein- force appropriate behaviors and control inappropriate ones. Physical management techniques may be used when the student is endangering himself, others, or property. They are not used to "punish" the child for misbehavior. Additionally, the philosophy of SPM includes the following major concepts. Emphasis on Safety- Techniques utilized in SPM consider the safety of the client and staff first. In a school setting, techniques that ensure physical safety of students and staff are important. Realize that Students can be Aggressive- SPM accepts the fact that some students need to be physically managed. The techniques used are based on the premise that students will at times eventually force physical inter- vention. That is, the student will do some- thing that you cannot ignore or manage using non-physical interventions. Least-Restrictive- SPM techniques move from least restrictive (providing minimal physical control) to more restrictive (providing maximum control). At all times, the least-restrictive technique that can control the student is used. Limitations- SPM techniques have limit- ations. They cannot handle every explosive situation. There are times when the best situation is not to intervene physically. There are times when SPM Techniques are neither appropriate or feasible. Assistance- SPM techniques advocate the use of assistance. Most techniques work best with two or more people and often, the best decision initially is to get help from other staff members. 3/ Professionalism- The focus of SPM techniques is to assist in the maintenance of a safe learning environment. SPM provides the district approved terminology for the documentation of physical intervention by the professional staff. This training manual also contains, among other things, the following information and instructions concerning the management of an "explosive event:" To effectively manage explosive (out-of- control) situations it is important to conceptualize them as: Angry/Aggressive- No matter how the incident begins, it is an expression of anger on the part of the student. Time-Limited/Temporary- Explosive incid- ents are angry, with the most dominant charact- eristics being a loss of physical control by the student. They are time-limited and even though they seem endless, the student will eventually calm down. Behaviorally Sequential- The behaviors exhibited by the student follow a pattern with behaviors typical each period (see Appendix B). Physical management techniques are not designed to end the explosive episode abruptly. Rather they are designed to safely manage the situation from beginning to end. As a result, the student may cont- inue to engage in aggressive acts, but managed appropriately, the risk of injury to persons or equipment is minimized. During the incident, only the amount of force necessary to prevent injury is utilized, and as the child exhibits more control a less restrictive hold may be used. Planning for explosive incidents is an important part of their prevention. Assessing the student, the environment and available staff is critical before physical intervention occurs. During the event, professional staff must be aware of both the verbal and non-verbal messages they give to students. It is important to indicate concern, expectation for change, and your interest in solving the problem. It is not the time to list sanctions, discuss potential punishments, or respond to personally abusive comments. After the incident ends, the staff involved should allow the student to withdraw and provide calm, brief verbal statements. Now is the time to communicate understanding, and to help the student identify ways this sequence of events can be prevented in the future. Another of the training manuals given to participants in the School Board's SPM Training Program, Petitioner's Exhibit 4, states the following regarding the importance of the child's safety in dealing with "explosive behavior:" Youth service workers and teachers are charged with a caretaking responsibility. As such they assume the natural role of adults to protect or safeguard the young. The Safe Physical Management Crisis Intervention Training Program has as its fundamental pur- pose the safe resolution of explosive behavior. This safety premise holds the adult responsible for insuring the safety of the youth. While the charge of guaranteeing youth safety during a crisis may appear in some way to jeopardize the safety of the intervening adult, in reality it keeps the adult from stepping into harm's way. Entering an explosive situation with a cognitive and physical focus of client safety allows for the management of the behavior and avoids the traps that attempting to eliminate the behavior present. When the purpose of the intervening staff is controlled by self preservation, their reaction to the acting out youth can easily become antagonistic. Such reactions promote escalation and a greater potential for harm. By keeping the youth safe, we provide a higher degree of safety for ourselves. . . . Intervention methods must be safe for both youth and adults; client/student safety however, is primary. At a minimum we shall do no harm. Physical intervention must be safe and, ideally, present minimal risk of accidental injury. . . . The intervention design of the safe physical management program is based upon the principle of social policy known as the "least restric- tive alternative." In many areas this principle has been reduced to the regulatory phrase, "passive restraint." In action, passive restraint refers to an intervention that utilizes the least amount of force necessary to safely control the situation. Student/youth safety is paramount. The SPM intervention philosophy requires that inter- vention personnel hold the safety of the student before their own. This premise, while sometimes raising the eyebrows of staff in training, ironically keeps the intervening staff safer than would an approach which holds staff well-being as primary. This training manual also contains, among other things, the following list of the "physical principles" of SPM: Proximity- safety is enhanced if physical space is understood as both a prompt and/or a deterrence to be used in the management of misbehavior. Location/positioning- safety is enhanced if intervention staff understand that the "face to face" position during intervention is considered the "attack/danger" zone. Evasion/deflection- safety is enhanced by evading or deflecting force rather than by opposing it. Balance- Safety is enhanced if intervention staff understand the principle of homeostasis- the nature of organisms to remain in a state of balance. Neutralization- Safety is enhanced if inter- vention staff understand the principle of managing an explosive event, rather than eliminating explosive behavior. In addition, this training manual describes and illustrates various physical positions and techniques used in SPM, including the "pivot and parry," an "evasion/deflection" technique which is described in the manual as follows: This combination of upper and lower body movement allows the staff to effectively evade and deflect any force that is directed at him/her. The pivot (usually 1/4 turn of one foot) is accomplished by leaving the weight on the foot which is on the side on which the blow or punch is delivered and moving the other foot toward the rear. The ending posture or stance should be the leading/trailing foot position previously described. This movement allows the blow or punch to go by the indivi- dual. This is the bull fighter move that allows the charging bull to pass on the side. Here, we are evading force rather than opposing it. The parry is a deflection of the force- i.e., the blow or punch. While both arms are used the primary parry is employed using the arm that is on the same side as the blow or punch. This arm is raised in an "L" configuration with the forearm vertical and upper arm on a horizontal pla[ne]. As the blow or punch is delivered the forearm is moved across to deflect the incoming force. This is not a blocking motion but, rather, a motion which simply redirects the force away from its target. The second arm is also used by making a similar "L" configuration with the hand being placed a approximately chin level. Again, the purpose is deflection. When the pivot and parry is employed correctly it places the staff in a position to move in and control the attacker, or to escape the danger by fleeing the situation. School Board staff receiving SPM training are also taught that, if during an "explosive event" they find themselves lying on the floor on their back being kicked by a student, they may raise a leg or arm to create a barrier to protect other, more sensitive, parts of their body. It is imperative that staff, in applying SPM principles, techniques, and strategies, exercise sound professional judgment. In determining how to deal with an "explosive event," which often begins abruptly, staff must consider the particular circumstances with which they are confronted. If they have had prior dealings with the student involved in the incident, they should draw upon these prior dealings and attempt to anticipate the student's actions. Respondent successfully completed a SPM training course offered by the School Board prior to March 10, 1994. 4/ Through its exceptional student education department, HMS offers special programs of instruction for various types of exceptional students, including those who are autistic. 5/ It is not uncommon for autistic students to engage in "acting out behavior" (such as screaming, yelling, punching, kicking and throwing objects). To enable its employees who work with autistic students to better understand these students and to deal with them more effectively, the School Board provides these employees with various written materials, including the Autism Orientation Manual, Petitioner's Exhibit 7, which contains the following statement regarding SPM: These procedures should conform to methods approved by the Dade County Public Schools which are described and demonstrated in struc- tured training sessions required for teachers and paraprofessionals working with autistic students. When using physical restraint, it is important to document what is being done. Written permission from parents or guardians is required. Physical restraint should not be used unless positive reinforcement methods have been utilized and the student is presenting potential harm to self and/or others. Evelyn Diaz Loper is now, and was at all times material to the instant case, an assistant principal at HMS responsible for the overall operation of the school's exceptional student education department, including the supervision of those School Board employees assigned to the department. On March 10, 1994, Respondent and Morgan Tharpe were among the employees under Loper's supervision. Tharpe was a teacher (with continuing contract status) who taught a class of autistic students at HMS. There were less than ten students in his class. M.A. was one of these students. M.A. was one month shy of his fourteenth birthday. He was quite strong for his age and had a history of engaging in "acting out behavior" in school. Respondent worked on a "one-to-one" basis with F.T., another student in Tharpe's class. During the second period on March 10, 1994, M.A., F.T. and the other students in Tharpe's class were in shop teacher Gerald Merkerson's classroom. They were supposed to be working on their woodworking projects. In addition to Tharpe's students and Merkerson, Respondent and two other School Board employees occupying paraprofessional positions (Eli Velazquez and Clara Smith), along with L.E., an HMS student in the school's regular education program, were in Merkerson's classroom. M.A. wanted to watch television in the classroom and not work on his project. Merkerson, however, refused to allow M.A. to watch television. M.A. thereupon began to engage in "acting out behavior." Among other things, he threw a metal file and wood in Merkerson's direction. (Merkerson was not hit by any of these thrown objects.) Merkerson and Velazquez took action to restrain M.A. Merkerson grabbed M.A.'s left arm, while Velazquez grabbed M.A.'s right arm. 6/ The two then attempted to lead M.A. away from the area of the classroom where M.A. was positioned. M.A. resisted their efforts. Unlike Respondent, Velazquez had not yet been trained in SPM. Moreover, he was not supposed to be in Merkerson's classroom. Accordingly, Velazquez let go of M.A.'s arm and Respondent attempted to take over for him. M.A., however, bit Respondent on the arm. The bite broke Respondent's skin. Velazquez came to Respondent's assistance and helped Respondent remove himself from the fray. After tending to his wound, Respondent rejoined Velazquez and assisted him in attempting to restrain M.A. Merkerson was no longer holding on to M.A. He had let go after a cut on his hand had reopened and started to bleed. M.A. was on his knees on the floor being restrained by Respondent and Velazquez when Tharpe walked into classroom. Tharpe instructed Respondent and Velazquez to let go of M.A. Respondent and Velazquez followed Tharpe's instructions, notwithstanding that M.A. had not yet calmed down and was still engaging in "acting out behavior." Tharpe walked toward M.A. When Tharpe was approximately two feet away from M.A., M.A. kicked Tharpe in the area of his groin. Tharpe screamed out in pain. M.A.'s actions prompted Velazquez to again attempt to restrain M.A. He grabbed both of M.A.'s arms, but was not able to hold on securely because both he and M.A. were dripping with sweat. M.A. struggled with Velazquez and tried to scratch and bite him. As Velazquez and M.A. were on their knees, face-to-face face, struggling with one another, Tharpe approached M.A. from behind and struck M.A. in the area of the upper back with a relatively thin, rectangular-shaped piece of wood approximately one foot to two meters long and two to three inches wide. 7/ Velazquez released M.A. after Tharpe delivered this blow. M.A. then started crawling towards Tharpe and tried to scratch and bite him. In an effort to ward off M.A.'s attack, Tharpe, who at 235 pounds was substantially larger than M.A., hit M.A. on the back at least two more times with the piece of wood he was holding in his hand. These additional blows were not delivered with full force. The three or more blows that Tharpe delivered produced bruises on M.A.'s back. The marks remained visible for approximately seven to ten days. In delivering these blows, Tharpe used more force than was reasonably necessary to effectively and safely deal with M.A.'s "acting out behavior" and he acted in a manner that was inconsistent with the SPM training he had received. Respondent had witnessed Tharpe's actions and recognized that Tharpe had acted improperly. Nonetheless, contrary to the requirements of Guideline No. 4 of the School Board's Procedures (of which Respondent was aware), Respondent did not report the incident to Loper (who was at school that day) or any other School Board administrator within a reasonable period of time following the incident. Neither did any of the other HMS staff members who had been in the classroom at the time of the incident advise Loper, on March 10, 1994, of what had happened. Although Tharpe's actions were inappropriate, they were effective. After Tharpe delivered his final blow, M.A. stopped crawling toward him. M.A. continued to scream, however, and, after a while, he started to crawl toward Respondent. In an effort to prevent M.A. from coming any closer, Respondent swung his foot in M.A.'s direction and made contact with M.A. 8/ Respondent kicked M.A. approximately five or six times, but M.A. continued coming at him. When Respondent started to become visibly upset with M.A., Velazquez intervened by positioning himself between Respondent and M.A. and pushing Respondent out of the way. Respondent did not kick M.A. as hard as he could have. 9/ Nonetheless, in kicking M.A., he used more force than was reasonably necessary to effectively and safely deal with M.A.'s "acting out behavior" and he acted in a physically aggressive manner that was inconsistent with the SPM training he had received. 10/ M.A. eventually calmed down and returned to Tharpe's classroom. Tharpe telephoned M.A.'s mother, L.A.H., that day (March 10, 1994), but he did not mention to her during their conversation anything about what had happened in Merkerson's classroom during second period. He simply told L.A.H. that she needed to supply him with more medication for M.A. Following the conclusion of the school day, M.A. went home by school bus. L.A.H. met him at the bus stop and greeted him with a hug. She was unaware, at the time, that anything unusual or out of the ordinary had occurred in school that day. M.A. pulled away from his mother when she hugged him and said, "Mom, boo-boo." 11/ L.A.H. then pulled up M.A.'s shirt and saw four bruises about "three fingers wide" on M.A.'s back that had not been there that morning when she had helped M.A. get dressed for school. M.A. also had a scratch on his forehead that L.A.H. had never seen before and a bump on his head. The following morning (March 11, 1994), L.A.H., accompanied by M.A. and M.A.'s father (L.A.H.'s former husband), met with Loper and William Jones, the principal of HMS. L.A.H. showed Loper and Jones the bruises on M.A.'s back and the scratch on his forehead and expressed her belief that M.A. had sustained these injuries at school the previous day. Loper thereupon contacted Merkerson and asked him if anything had occurred in his classroom the day before that may have resulted in injury to M.A. In view of Merkerson's response to her inquiry, Loper asked him to fill out a Student Case Management Referral Form (SCM Form). A SCM Form must be filled out whenever a student has been physically restrained. Loper had not previously received a completed SCM Form indicating that physical force had been used against M.A. in Merkerson's classroom the day before. On the SCM Form that he filled out at Loper's request, Merkerson stated the following: [M.A.] became irate and upset because he was not allowed to watch Barney on television. He became combatant and began to throw stools and wooden objects at the teachers and paraprofessionals. Upon being subdued to reduce the danger that he posed to myself and others he bit Juan Alejo on his right forearm, kicked Mr. Tharpe in the groin area and hit his right arm with his balsa wood project. The student poses a serious safety hazard in the technology education shop class. [M.A.] was also self destructive and scratched himself on the left temple. Although Merkerson did not mention in his written report that, in subduing M.A., Tharpe had hit M.A. with a piece of wood and Respondent had kicked M.A., the School Board ultimately found out about Tharpe's and Respondent's unseemly and inappropriate behavior during the incident. On November 2, 1994, a conference for the record was held concerning Respondent's involvement in the incident. At the conference, Respondent admitted that he had kicked M.A. during the incident. By letter dated November 3, 1994, the principal of HMS recommended to Frank de Varona, the Regional Superintendent (for Region I Operations) "the termination of [Respondent] from all employment in Dade County Public Schools." By letter dated January 13, 1995, the School Board's Superintendent of Schools notified Respondent that he was recommending that the School Board suspend Respondent and initiate a dismissal proceeding against him. The School Board took such recommended action at its January 25, 1995, meeting. Respondent thereafter requested a formal hearing on the matter.
Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered sustaining Respondent's suspension and dismissing him as an employee of the School Board of Dade County, Florida. DONE and ENTERED in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, this 25th day of April, 1996. STUART M. LERNER, Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 25th day of April, 1996.
The Issue Whether Respondent committed the actions set forth in the Notice of Charge of Misconduct in Office, dated December 18, 2013, and if so, whether these actions constitute just cause for suspension.
Findings Of Fact The Walton County School Board (School Board) is charged with the responsibility to operate, control, and supervise the public schools within the School District of Walton County, Florida. During the 2013-2014 school year, Ms. Harriet Hurley was a teacher at Walton Middle School. Ms. Hurley had earlier been a teacher in Georgia for eight years, had been employed in Walton County Schools in 1984 for a period of three years, and taught in Okaloosa County Schools for five years. She then returned to Walton County Schools where she has been ever since, for a career of over 30 years. In addition to her responsibilities as a teacher at Walton Middle School, Ms. Hurley assists in scheduling parent- teacher conferences for students at Walton Middle School. Ms. Hurley’s responsibilities in scheduling conferences are limited to a coordination function. She is not responsible for addressing the substance of the issues to be addressed in the conferences or becoming involved in attempting to resolve them. Principal Hope never asked Ms. Hurley to assume a role as a guidance counselor. Ms. Hurley is employed by the School Board. As a member of the School Board’s instructional staff, Ms. Hurley’s employment is subject to section 1012.33, Florida Statutes (2013), which provides that her employment will not be suspended or terminated except for “just cause.” As a teacher, Ms. Hurley is required to abide by all Florida Statutes which pertain to teachers, the Code of Ethics and the Principles of Conduct of the Education Profession in Florida, and the Policies and Procedures of the School Board of Walton County, Florida. Ms. Hurley is not the legal guardian of her granddaughter, B.C., who is a student at Walton Middle School. On November 20, 2013, Ms. Hurley’s granddaughter, B.C., approached her in the adult dining area about a group math assignment that was upsetting her. B.C. told Ms. Hurley that she had been told by her sixth-grade math teacher, Ms. Black, that her “high grade was gone” because of the failure of her group to complete a group math assignment. B.C. told Ms. Hurley that she blamed S.A., another student in her group, for their failure to complete the work. Ms. Hurley immediately left the adult dining area with her lunch only partially eaten and went with B.C. back to Ms. Black’s classroom. B.C. had been released for lunch a few minutes before the other students because she was an A/B Honor Roll student, so the other students were still in the classroom when Ms. Hurley arrived there. When Ms. Hurley and B.C. arrived at the classroom, the students were packing up their personal items in preparation for their release for lunch. Ms. Black testified in part: At that time, I think it was because the students leave five minutes early, A/B honor roll students. I don’t really want to go ahead and teach them anything, because they’re missing that opportunity to learn. At that time I get them to pack up and get their things together to leave for lunch. There was a high level of noise in the classroom. Ms. Black, in her first year as a teacher, was at her desk trying to help some students who did not understand something, and was in a verbal altercation with S.A., who was walking away from her. On November 20, 2013, S.A. was not a student in one of Ms. Hurley’s classes. Ms. Hurley addressed S.A., telling him that he should not talk to his teacher that way. Ms. Hurley told S.A. to “come here to me.” She was upset with S.A. and told him that he needed to stop playing around. In a loud and forceful tone of voice, she told him that he was not going to be the cause of a “straight A” student getting a bad grade and that he needed to concentrate on his schoolwork. She told him that she knew his mother, who worked at a KFC-Taco Bell restaurant in Miramar Beach, and that she would talk to his mother if necessary. S.A. denied that his mother worked at KFC, and Ms. Hurley restated that she knew that his mother did. The other students in the class heard Ms. Hurley’s disparagement and public discipline of S.A. The bell rang and Ms. Hurley and the students began to leave the classroom. S.A. was embarrassed and upset by the incident. Due to the fact that the students were already packing up their things to leave, and because Ms. Black had been in a verbal altercation with S.A., the actions of Ms. Hurley in Ms. Black’s class did not disrupt the students’ learning environment. Ms. Hurley’s actions were unnecessary. She might have comforted B.C., and encouraged B.C. and her parents to pursue the issue with Ms. Black. S.A. was not one of Ms. Hurley’s students and at the time she decided to go to Ms. Black’s class Ms. Hurley had not directly witnessed any behavior by S.A. that called for immediate correction. Even had it been appropriate for Respondent herself to take action based upon her granddaughter’s information, there was no emergency which required that Ms. Hurley intrude upon a colleague’s class and loudly berate S.A. in front of other students. She used her institutional privileges as a teacher to gain access to Ms. Black’s classroom in order to assist her granddaughter. As Ms. Black was leaving her classroom, she saw that S.A. was reluctantly moving toward the door and she noticed he was crying. She attempted to comfort him. Ms. Black then reported the incident to Mr. Jason Campbell, Assistant Principal, who was in the student lunch room. A few minutes later, S.A. also approached Mr. Campbell to report his version of the incident. Ms. Hurley returned to her lunch in the adult dining room. When Ms. Black came in to the dining room later, Ms. Hurley apologized to her for coming into her classroom. That evening, Ms. Hurley drove to Miramar Beach and went to dinner at the fast food restaurant where she knew Ms. A. worked. Ms. Hurley was one of Ms. A’s teachers when Ms. A. had been in the seventh grade, and the two were casual acquaintances. Ms. Hurley told Ms. A. what had happened that morning with S.A. and B.C. in their math group. Ms. Hurley told Ms. A. that she had “kind of stepped out and went into grandma mode” and had “gotten onto” (disciplined) S.A. Ms. Hurley relayed that she had told S.A. that she knew his mother and that if he did not improve his conduct, she was going to let his mother know about his behavior. During the course of the conversation, Ms. A. relayed that she was concerned about an incident involving a damaged globe from Mr. Price’s classroom, which was S.A.’s SPEAR classroom (“home room”). The following day, on November 21, 2013, Ms. Hurley removed S.A. from his first-period classroom. Neither Principal Hope nor Vice Principal Campbell authorized Ms. Hurley to remove S.A. from his first-period classroom on November 21, 2013. On November 21, 2013, Ms. Hurley contacted S.A.’s mother on the telephone on her own initiative and without the authority of Principal Hope or Vice Principal Campbell. Ms. Hurley called Ms. A. on the telephone with S.A. present. Ms. Hurley and Ms. A. talked about the incident involving S.A. and the damaged globe from Mr. Price’s classroom. The telephone conversation had barely begun when Mr. Hope, upon learning that Ms. Hurley had gone to S.A.’s classroom and removed him from class, came into Ms. Hurley’s room and took S.A. back to Mr. Hope’s office. While the School Board alleged that Ms. Hurley and Ms. A. discussed the incident that happened in Ms. Black’s classroom the day before, this was not shown by the evidence. The allegation that Ms. Hurley was misusing her institutional privileges by engaging in the phone call may be correct, for Ms. Hurley was not authorized to discuss the substance of parent/teacher conferences, but was instead limited to scheduling responsibilities. The evidence did not show that the phone conversation was conducted for personal gain or advantage to Ms. Hurley, however. The School Board’s further argument that Ms. Hurley’s actions on November 21, 2013, reduced the ability of Principal Hope to efficiently perform his duties is also rejected. Assuming that Principal Hope could even be considered a “colleague” of Ms. Hurley’s, the evidence showed that he was able to efficiently “track down” S.A. with minimal effort. To the extent that Ms. Hurley’s actions on November 21, 2013, exceeded her “job description,” they could be corrected with a simple directive or memorandum, and in the absence of evidence that her actions were taken for her personal gain, they are not a just cause for discipline. Statements were taken from several students in Ms. Black’s math class regarding the incident on November 20th, which vary in detail, but taken as a whole corroborate the findings of fact above regarding the incident on November 20, 2013. No statement was taken from B.C., and neither party called B.C. as a witness at hearing. On December 2, 2013, Ms. Hurley met with Walton Middle School administration to discuss the events of November 20 and November 21, 2013. On December 17, 2013, Principal Tripp Hope issued a letter of reprimand advising Respondent that he would be recommending a 10-day suspension without pay to the Superintendent. On December 18, 2013, the Superintendent notified Respondent of her intention to recommend a 10-day suspension without pay. A Notice of Charge of Misconduct in Office, dated December 18, 2013, notified Respondent of the Petitioner’s intent to suspend her employment for 10 days without pay. (As stipulated by the parties.) Although the Notice of Charge of Misconduct in Office did not explicitly identify all rules that Ms. Hurley was charged with violating, the allegations of more specific rule violations were included in the Letter of Reprimand which was attached to the charge. Ms. Hurley was not prejudiced or hindered in the preparation of her defense by any lack of specificity in the charging documents. Ms. Hurley is substantially affected by the intended action of the School Board to suspend her employment without pay for ten days. The evidence did not show that Ms. Hurley failed to “value” the worth and dignity of every person, the pursuit of truth, devotion to excellence, acquisition of knowledge, or the nurture of democratic citizenship. The evidence did not show that Ms. Hurley did not strive for professional growth or did not “seek” to exercise the best professional judgment or integrity. The evidence did not show that Ms. Hurley did not “strive” to achieve or sustain the highest degree of ethical conduct. The evidence showed that by entering S.A.’s classroom and raising her voice in anger towards him in the presence of other students, Ms. Hurley failed to make reasonable effort to protect S.A. from conditions harmful to his learning or to his mental health. The evidence showed that any required discipline of S.A. should not have been administered by Ms. Hurley and so her actions were unnecessary. Her actions, which reduced S.A. to tears, exposed him to unnecessary embarrassment and disparagement. The evidence showed that in entering another teacher’s classroom to assist her granddaughter by disciplining S.A. when he was not even one of her students, Ms. Hurley used institutional privileges for personal gain or advantage. The evidence did not show that Ms. Hurley lacked integrity, high ideals, or human understanding or that she failed to “maintain or promote” those qualities. The evidence did not show that in entering Ms. Black’s classroom during the final minutes of the class, when the students were already packing up their things and preparing to go to lunch, Ms. Hurley engaged in behavior that disrupted the students’ learning environment. The evidence did not show that Ms. Hurley engaged in behavior that reduced her ability or her colleague’s ability to effectively perform duties. One might speculate as to whether Ms. Black’s ability to maintain control over her class in the future was undermined by Ms. Hurley’s aggressive intrusion, but Ms. Black did not testify that her ability to effectively perform was reduced and this was not otherwise shown. There was similarly no evidence offered to indicate that Ms. Hurley’s own effectiveness was reduced. Her actions were not taken in her own classroom, there was no evidence that she had any of Ms. Black’s students in her classes, or that her own students or the student body generally was even aware of her actions. The actions of Ms. Hurley on November 20, 2013, constitute misconduct in office. Her actions are just cause for suspension of her employment without pay. The School Board witnesses conceded that Ms. Hurley has never received “formal” counseling, and presented no documentary evidence that she had been counseled even informally. The School Board did present credible testimony from Principal Hope and Assistant Principal Campbell that Ms. Hurley had been informally counseled regarding raising her voice with students and for communication with her peers. The actions of Ms. Hurley on November 20, 2013, were not so serious as to justify a ten-day suspension, but do warrant suspension without pay for three calendar days.
The Issue Whether Respondent committed the violations alleged in the Notice of Specific Charges and, if so, what disciplinary action should be taken against her.
Findings Of Fact Based on the evidence adduced at hearing, and the record as a whole, the following findings of fact are made: The School Board is responsible for the operation, control and supervision of all public schools (grades K through 12) in Miami-Dade County, Florida (including, among others, Phillis Wheatley Elementary School (Phillis Wheatley) and Palm Springs Middle School (Palm Springs)), and for otherwise providing public instruction to school-aged children in the county. Respondent is now, and has been since October 1987, employed as a classroom teacher by the School Board. She holds a professional services contract. Respondent first taught for the School Board at Phillis Wheatley. In 1996, she moved to Palm Springs, where she remained until she was "assigned to a paid administrative placement at [the] Region Center I [effective October 4, 2007] pending the resolution of investigative case # N-85085" (referenced in paragraph 14 of the Notice of Specific Charges). Respondent has previously been disciplined by the School Board for using physical means to control student behavior. In 1992, following an investigation during which Respondent "admitted to placing tape on one student's mouth and telling the other to place the tape on his mouth" and "also admitted to hitting a student on the head with a dictionary and tapping another student on the hand with a ruler," she received the following "letter of reprimand" from her principal at Phillis Wheatley: On August 8, 1992, you were charged with conduct unbecoming a School Board employee and battery of students. You violated the Chapter 6B-1.01(3), Code of Ethics of the Education Profession in Florida, and Dade County School Board Rule 6Gx-13-4A-1.21, "Conduct Unbecoming a School Board Employee." The above infractions were substantiated by the Special Investigative Unit, Case No. 92-00946. You are directed to comply with the procedures outlined in the Chapter 6B- 1.01(3), Code of Ethics of the Education Profess[ion] in Florida, to refrain from demeaning students, punishing them by taping mouths, touching or taping students to discipline them or to demonstrate affection, and to conduct yourself in a professional manner. Any recurrence of the infractions will result in further disciplinary actions. In 1995, Respondent was reprimanded for striking a student with a stack of papers and received the following "Confirmation of Administrative Action" from the Phillis Wheatley principal: Please be advised that after a complete investigation of Case Number 95-12689 done by this administrator the following guidelines must be reviewed with this administrator. Review the faculty handbook pg 18, on Corporal Punishment. Review a copy of School Board Rule 6Gx4A-1.21, Employee Conduct, and Chapter 6B-1.01(3), Code of Ethics of the Education Profession in Florida. You are to refrain from touching or tapping students to discipline them and you must conduct yourself in a professional manner at all times. Any recurrence of this infraction will result in further disciplinary action. In 2004, after determining that Respondent had "acted inappropriately" when, in anger, she had "grabbed" a student by the "hair yanking [the student's] head backwards," the Palm Springs principal issued Respondent the following written reprimand: On December 11, 2003, you inappropriately disciplined (a) student(s) while waiting in front of the cafeteria. You violated the Contract between the Miami- Dade County Public Schools and the United Teachers of Dade, Article VIII, Section 1. [a]s well as School and Miami-Dade County School Board Rules, 6Gx13-5D-1.07, Corporal Punishment, and 6Gx13-5D-1.08, Code of Student Conduct. It is your responsibility as a classroom teacher to maintain control and discipline of students. However, it is imperative that you follow school and Miami-Dade County School Board rules in doing so. Rules governing student discipline a[re] outlined in the Code of Student Conduct, Board Rule 6Gx13-5D-1.08, faculty handbook, and Promoting and Maintain[ing] a Safe Learning Environment document, and are referenced in the United Teachers of Dade Contract, Article VII, Section I. You are directed immediately to refrain from using any physical means to affect student behavior. You are directed immediately to implement the appropriate procedures for dealing with inappropriate student behavior as stipulated in the documents above[]. The above infraction was substantiated by an Administrative Review, Case Number J08655. You are directed to refrain from using inappropriate procedures in the performance of your assigned duties. You are directed to implement immediately, approved procedures in the performance of your assigned duties. Any recurrences of the above infraction will result in further disciplinary action. As a School Board employee, Respondent is expected to conduct herself in accordance with School Board rules, including the aforementioned School Board Rules 6Gx13-4A-1.21 and 6Gx13- 5D-1.07. At all times material to the instant case, School Board Rule 6Gx13-4A-1.21I has provided as follows: Permanent Personnel RESPONSIBILITIES AND DUTIES Employee Conduct All persons employed by The School Board of Miami-Dade County, Florida are representatives of the Miami-Dade County Public Schools. As such, they are expected to conduct themselves, both in their employment and in the community, in a manner that will reflect credit upon themselves and the school system. Unseemly conduct or the use of abusive and/or profane language in the presence of students is expressly prohibited. At all times material to the instant case, School Board Rule 6Gx13-5D-1.07 has provided, in pertinent part, as follows: Corporal Punishment - Prohibited The administration of corporal punishment in Miami-Dade County Public Schools is strictly prohibited. Miami-Dade County Public Schools has implemented comprehensive programs for the alternative control of discipline. These programs include, but are not limited to, counseling, timeout rooms, in-school suspension centers, student mediation and conflict resolution, parental involvement, alternative education programs, and other forms of positive reinforcement. In addition, suspensions and/or expulsions are available as administrative disciplinary action depending upon the severity of the misconduct. Procedures are in place for students to make up any work missed while on suspension, or to participate in an alternative program if recommended for expulsion. As an instructional employee of the School Board, Respondent is a member of a collective bargaining unit represented by the United Teachers of Dade (UTD) and covered by a collective bargaining agreement between the School Board and UTD (UTD Contract). Article V of the UTD Contract addresses the subject of "[e]mployer [r]ights." Section 1 of Article V provides, in part, that the School Board has the exclusive right to suspend, dismiss or terminate bargaining unit employees "for just cause." Article VIII of the UTD Contract addresses the subject of "[s]afe learning environment." Section 1.D. of Article VIII provides as follows: The parties recognize the potential for difficult circumstances and problems related to the use of corporal punishment. Accordingly, the parties agree that such punishment shall be prohibited as a disciplinary option, and further agree to act affirmatively in continuing to identify and implement more effective alternatives for dealing with student behavior. The involvement of school-site personnel in developing such alternatives is critical to their potential for success. Article XXI of the UTD Contract addresses the subject of "[e]mployee [r]ights and [d]ue [p]rocess." Section 1.B.1.a. of Article XXI provides that "[a]ny member of the instructional staff may be suspended or dismissed at any time during the school year, provided that the charges against him/her are based upon Florida Statutes." Section 1.B.2. of Article XXI provides, in part, that "[d]ismissals and suspensions shall be effected in accordance with applicable Florida Statutes, including the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) " In the instant case, the School Board is seeking to dismiss Respondent based on conduct in which she allegedly engaged during the 2007-2008 school year. While assigned to Palm Springs during the 2007-2008 school year, Respondent taught three periods of language arts to sixth and seventh grade Spanish-speaking ESOL students. She also had responsibility for a sixth grade homeroom class. Y. L., J. T., and I. M. were sixth grade students at Palm Springs during the 2007-2008 school year. They each had Respondent for homeroom and language arts for a brief time during the beginning of that school year. At all material times during the 2007-2008 school year, Respondent understood that the School Board had a policy "strictly prohibit[ing]" the use of corporal punishment. Nonetheless, on more than one occasion during this time period, Respondent used physical means to redirect Y. L. She grabbed him by the hair and pulled him by the arm, hurting him in the process. She also "grabbed other students by their arms" to control their behavior. Respondent made threats to throw Y. L. and other students out the window if they did not behave. Although Respondent had no intention of carrying out these threats, Y. L. believed that the threats were real and that Respondent meant what she had said. On one occasion, Respondent opened a window, had Y. L. stand next to it, and told him that if he moved at all, she would toss him out the open window. As a disciplinary measure, Respondent had Y. L. pick up his wheel-equipped book bag (filled with textbooks and notebooks for all his classes) and hold it on top of his head for an extended period of time while he was standing in place. Y. L. felt some discomfort in his shoulder when he did this. Afraid of Respondent, Y. L. often "hid[] in the bathroom" at school instead of going to Respondent's classroom. On numerous occasions, Y. L.'s mother had to pick him up from school before the end of the school day because he had vomited. At home, Y. L. had trouble sleeping and refused to eat. He lost approximately 20 pounds (going from 100 pounds down to 80). Y. L. was not the only student that Respondent directed to stand with a filled book bag on his head. J. T. and I. M. were also issued such a directive by Respondent. It happened the first week of the school year on a day when the students remained in their homeroom classes until dismissal because of a power outage that left the school without lights and air conditioning for much of the day. Towards the end of the day (after power had been restored to the school), J. T. and I. M. were talking to one another when they were not supposed to. In response to their transgression, Respondent instructed them to stand in separate corners of the classroom and hold their book bags (which were similar to Y. L.'s) on top of their heads.2 The book bags remained on their heads for a substantial enough period of time to cause them to experience pain. 3 Y. L., J. T., I. M., and their parents complained to the Palm Springs administration about Respondent's disciplinary tactics. In response to Y. L.'s and his mother's complaints, one of the school's assistant principals, Niki Ruiz, interviewed "randomly selected" classmates of Y. L.'s. These students "corroborated what Y. [L.] was saying." On September 26, 2007, the matter was turned over to the School Board's General Investigative Unit (GIU) for investigation. Respondent was removed from the classroom and placed on alternative assignment pending the outcome of the investigation. Following the GIU investigation, the matter was referred to the School Board's Office of Professional Standards. There was a conference-for-the-record held on February 6, 2008, at which Respondent had the opportunity to tell her side of the story. In her remarks, she expressed a disdain for authority when she said, "I'm very professional but I don't stick to rules." The School Board's Superintendent of Schools recommended that the School Board suspend Respondent and initiate termination proceedings against her. The School Board took such action at its May 21, 2008, meeting.
Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is hereby RECOMMENDED that the School Board issue a final order sustaining Respondent's suspension and terminating her employment as a professional service contract teacher with the School Board for the reasons set forth above DONE AND ENTERED this 16th day of December, 2008, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S STUART M. LERNER 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 16th day of December, 2008.
The Issue The issue presented is whether Respondent's employment by the School Board should be terminated.
Findings Of Fact At all times material hereto, Respondent Robert F. Ward was employed by the School Board as a teacher and was assigned to Richmond Heights Middle School, pursuant to a professional service contract. Willie Harris was the principal of Richmond Heights from 1988 to 1995. During those years, Harris gave Respondent verbal directives to follow School Board rules concerning the discipline of students. As punishment, Respondent inappropriately used excessive writing and standing and inappropriately placed students outside the classroom. Each time Respondent was warned that he was violating School Board rules in his methods of disciplining students, he would stop using those methods for a while but would then return to those methods and be warned again. Harris found it necessary to counsel Respondent every year. Principal Harris learned that Respondent responded better to male authority figures than to female authority figures. He, therefore, gave Respondent directives himself or through male administrators. Mona Bethel Jackson became the principal of Richmond Heights in July 1997. On October 2, 1998, Denise Franze, a parent, submitted a written complaint to Principal Jackson concerning Respondent's behavior at the school's Open House because Respondent appeared to be a very angry person. He spent the entire time that he met with her and other parents complaining about the school. She requested that her child be transferred out of Respondent's class. Respondent wrote her a very insulting, unprofessional response letter. His letter did not reflect credit upon himself or the school system. On November 17, 1998, Respondent left his class unsupervised, and two students became involved in a fight. Respondent was directed to properly supervise his class and was directed not to place any students outside his class unsupervised. At a faculty meeting on January 13, 1999, Principal Jackson reviewed School Board policies prohibiting inappropriate language/teacher conduct. At a faculty meeting on February 16, 1999, Jackson reviewed School Board procedures regarding the supervision of students. On March 26, 1999, student D. L. was being disruptive. Respondent told her to go outside the classroom. Because it was raining, D. L. refused to leave. Respondent again ordered her to go outside and called her "dumb." He then left his class unsupervised to deliver a memorandum regarding D. L.'s behavior to the school administrators. An assistant principal directed Respondent not to leave his class unsupervised. On March 30, 1999, Respondent was inside his newly- assigned portable classroom, by himself, writing on the board. An assistant principal asked Respondent where his students were, and Respondent answered that he did not know. Some of Respondent's students were found outside the portable classroom unsupervised, and others were found in the auditorium also unsupervised. Also on March 30, Respondent used the words "hell" and "damn" while aggressively reprimanding D. L., shouting at her, and shaking his fingers in her face. Respondent was reminded that School Board rules prohibit unseemly conduct and the use of abusive and/or profane language in the presence of students. On April 1, 1999, a conference-for-the-record was conducted with Respondent to address his failure to supervise his class, his inappropriate reprimand of a student, his lack of emergency lesson plans, and related matters. As a result of the conference, Respondent was rated unsatisfactory in professional responsibilities and was provided with a prescription to address his deficiencies. The prescription was to be completed by June 16, 1999. If done properly, the prescription should have taken no more than three weeks to complete. At the conference, Respondent was also directed to follow school procedures for the removal of disruptive students from class, to not leave students unsupervised at any time, to not expose students to unnecessary embarrassment or disparagement, to prepare lesson plans each day, to replenish emergency lesson plans, and to exercise the best professional judgment and integrity. He was warned that failure to comply with these directives would be considered insubordination and could lead to further disciplinary action. Respondent was given a copy of the School Board's employee conduct rule and the Code of Ethics of the Education Profession in Florida. On April 22, 1999, Respondent failed to report to the media center at the conclusion of a teacher workshop as directed in writing prior to the workshop and, again, at the beginning of the workshop. Respondent's annual evaluation for the 1998/99 school year was unsatisfactory due to Respondent's deficiencies in the area of professional responsibility. On June 16, 1999, Respondent's prescriptive activities were deemed unacceptable because they were careless, sarcastic, and unprofessional. Respondent admits that the prescriptive work he turned in to Principal Jackson was inappropriate. Respondent did not take his prescriptive activities seriously and did not attempt to benefit from them. On June 18, Principal Jackson directed Respondent to re-do his prescriptive activities and turn them in by October 1, 1999. Because Respondent ended the school year in an unacceptable status, his salary was frozen and he was precluded from summer school employment. Respondent assigned two students to detentions to be served before school on September 15 and 16, 1999. The students arrived at approximately 7:15 a.m. both days. At 8:00 a.m., Respondent had not yet arrived to supervise them on either day. When the bell rang at 9:00 a.m. to begin the school day, Respondent was still not there. One child's grandmother, who was concerned about the children not being supervised, complained to the school administrators. September 20, 1999, was a teacher planning day. Respondent was not present during his assigned work hours, 8:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. An "all call" for him was made over the public address system at 9:28 a.m., which went throughout the school. Respondent did not respond. An assistant principal checked his classroom, but Respondent was not there. She was unable to locate his car in the parking lot, and he had not signed the attendance roster. When Respondent arrived at approximately 10:00 a.m., he told Principal Jackson that he was not in the building because he had stopped at Publix. At the final hearing, Respondent testified that he was probably in the wood shop working on a personal project during his work hours when the "all call" announcement was made for him. Respondent failed to complete his prescription by the October 1, 1999, deadline. A conference-for-the-record was held on that date to address parental complaints about Respondent. The complaints involved the unsupervised detentions, Respondent's requiring students to stand for almost two hours as punishment, and Respondent's requiring students to write essays as punishment. Parents also complained that Respondent punished the entire class when only one student misbehaved. Respondent admitted that he administered those punishments. Respondent was directed to refrain from having students write essays for punishment, to refrain from having students stand for punishment, to refrain from assigning detentions when students would not be supervised by Respondent, to not expose students to unnecessary embarrassment or disparagement, and to follow all directives previously given to him. Since Respondent was already on prescription and had failed to complete the prescriptive activities by the October 1 deadline, Principal Jackson directed Respondent to complete his prescription by January 26, 2000. Respondent was warned that failure to comply with the directives would be considered insubordination and could lead to further disciplinary action. He was again provided with a copy of the School Board's employee conduct rule. On October 13, 1999, a conference was held with Respondent to discuss complaints from three parents. The complaints were that Respondent did not give clear directions to the students, that he had humiliated a student, that he required students to write essays as punishment, and that he was assigning math as punishment to his social studies students. The parents complained that Respondent was using academics as punishment. Principal Jackson directed him to stop humiliating students, to stop intimidating students, and to provide in-class assistance. She also directed Respondent to stop assigning math and requiring students to write repetitive "lines" as punishment. She directed Respondent to correct his grading practices and to not retaliate against any students. Respondent was given copies of the letters from the parents. The math that was assigned by Respondent was not an appropriate assignment for a sixth-grade geography class. The interim progress reports Respondent gave to his students corroborate that Respondent was using essays as punishment. After the conference, Respondent informed secretarial staff that he would be absent the next day, which was the day of the school's open house. Teachers have a contractual requirement to attend the school's open house. Respondent was not absent as a result of an illness or an emergency; rather, he simply decided to take a personal holiday on that day. On October 19, 1999, Respondent responded to a parental complaint with a letter that was unprofessional, demeaning, and insulting. His letter did not reflect credit upon himself or the school system. On October 29, 1999, Respondent was directed to report for a conference-for-the-record in the School Board's Office of Professional Standards on November 4, 1999. On November 2, 1999, Respondent attended a round-table discussion with a counselor, the parents of a student, the student, and all of that student's teachers. Respondent was abrasive to the student, loud, and intimidating. The student, who was communicative and comfortable before Respondent arrived at the meeting, was uncomfortable and would not speak while Respondent was present. After Respondent arrived, the student "clammed up," and his eyes "teared up." The next day, the student's father brought a letter to school reciting what had happened at the meeting and requesting that the student be transferred out of Respondent's class. The father and Respondent encountered each other in the school office, and Respondent invited the father to his classroom. While there, Respondent asked the father which grade the father wanted him to change. The father was surprised at Respondent's offer and explained to Respondent that he only wanted his son to get the grades his son deserved. On November 4, 1999, Respondent requested to leave school for a dental emergency. Since his conference-for-the- record was scheduled for that day, an assistant principal directed Respondent to submit documentation from his dentist to her or to the principal's secretary. Respondent failed to follow this directive in a timely fashion. Respondent was subsequently directed to comply with all directives given by his immediate supervisors. At Respondent's request, the conference-for-the-record was re-scheduled for November 9, and Respondent was directed to attend. Respondent did not attend the November 9 conference, which was scheduled to discuss his non-compliance with site directives, his performance assessment, parental complaints, and student complaints. As a result of the conference-for-the- record, which consisted of a review of Respondent's file, Respondent was directed to comply with the Code of Ethics and the Principles of Professional Conduct of the Education Profession in Florida, to provide an educational environment free from harassment and intimidation for all students, to not intimidate staff and faculty members, to use sound professional judgment at all times, and to use specific grading practices. He was warned that non-compliance with these directives could lead to further disciplinary measures. Respondent was provided with another copy of the School Board's employee conduct rule, the Code of Ethics, and the School Board's violence in the workplace rule. On December 15, 1999, a conference-for-the-record was held with Respondent to review his performance assessments and future employment status. Respondent was reminded that he was in his second year of unacceptable performance status, which if not remedied, could lead to termination of his employment. He was also directed to comply with the directives previously given to him by the Office of Professional Standards. He was warned that non-compliance with the directives could result in disciplinary measures. Respondent failed to comply with his prescriptive activities by January 26, 2000. On February 7, 2000, at 3:39 p.m., Principal Jackson directed Respondent to submit his prescriptive activities directly to her within 24 hours. This directive was reasonable since the Principal had repeatedly directed Respondent to complete his prescriptive activities since April 1999. Respondent refused to sign that he had received a copy of the memorandum memorializing this directive even after being directed to sign it. On February 8 Respondent did not come to work. Another teacher gave Respondent's prescriptive activities to the principal's secretary after 5:00 p.m. The principal did not accept the activities because neither of her directives had been followed: the prescriptive activities were not given directly to her, and they were turned in late. On February 17, 2000, a conference-for-the-record was held with Respondent to address his non-compliance with prescriptive deadlines and to review his record and his future employment status. Respondent was reminded that if his deficiencies were not remedied, he could lose his job. Respondent was told that his failure to comply with the directives concerning his prescription was considered gross insubordination. Respondent was directed to place his prescriptive activities in the principal's hand by 12:30 p.m. the next day, February 18. He was warned that non-compliance would result in further disciplinary action. Respondent was absent from work on February 18, 2000, and did not attempt to give the documents to his principal until February 24 at 3:30 p.m. His principal refused to accept the package because it was so overdue. On February 28, 2000, Respondent was directed to report to a conference-for-the-record at the Office of Professional Standards at 9:00 a.m. on March 14, 2000. On March 13, 2000, Respondent was accused of battery and administering physically-demanding punishments to students. The investigation revealed that Respondent was still using inappropriate punishment and profanity with his students. The incidents described in paragraphs numbered 40-48 below were discovered. On March 2, 2000, Respondent called A. W. a "dummy," told him to "shut up," and ordered him to pull a heavy cylinder across the physical education field. The cylinder is a piece of equipment that is pulled by a tractor and used to flatten pavement. A. W. tried but could not comply. He was crying when he went to the school office, complaining that his hands hurt. Respondent ordered other students to pull or push the cylinder as punishment. Respondent also ordered students to push volleyball poles, or standards, which have tires filled with cement at the bottom. At the final hearing, Respondent admitted to administering this punishment one time. Respondent also ordered students to walk or run on the physical education field. At the final hearing, Respondent admitted to ordering students to walk to the far fence. Respondent ordered students to do "push-ups." At the final hearing, Respondent admitted he used "push-ups" as punishment at the election of the student in lieu of other discipline. Respondent ordered his students to move rocks located around his portable classroom. Respondent called the students derogatory names, such as "stupid," "dumb, dumber, and dumbest," and "imbecile." He told them to "shut up." In speaking with a security monitor, Respondent referred to one of his students as "a piece of shit." Respondent required his students to write essays and repetitive "lines" as punishment, which he admitted at the final hearing. He made his students stand for lengthy periods of time as punishment. At the final hearing, Respondent asserted that he only made them stand for 30-45 minutes. Respondent claims he was sending his students to "time-out" on the physical education field. Even if true, sending the students to the physical education field is not an appropriate time-out. It is humiliating and demeaning to the students, the students were not properly supervised, the students were not being educated, and the students were at risk of injury. The procedure for disciplining students at Richmond Heights was to counsel the student after the first violation, make contact with the parents after the second violation, and write a referral to the administrators after the third time. The School Board does not permit the physical punishment of students. On March 14, 2000, Respondent was two hours late for the scheduled conference-for-the-record. By the time he arrived, the other participants had left. He was directed to report for a re-scheduled conference at the Office of Professional Standards on March 27, 2000. On March 27, 2000, a conference-for-the-record was held with Respondent to address his non-compliance with site directives regarding prescription deadlines, student discipline, violation of the Code of Ethics and of professional responsibilities, violation of School Board rules, and his future employment status. Respondent was directed to comply with all previously-issued directives, to refrain from retaliating against students and staff, to use sound professional judgment at all times, and to comply with all School Board rules, the Code of Ethics, and the Principles of Professional Conduct for the Education Profession in Florida. On May 15, 2000, Principal Jackson observed Respondent outside of his classroom, with his back to his class, talking on the telephone. The class was noisy. No one was supervising his students. He was again directed not to leave his classes unsupervised. On May 22, 2000, a conference-for-the-record was held with Respondent to address the pending action by the School Board to take dismissal action at its meeting of June 21, 2000. On June 21, the School Board suspended Respondent without pay and initiated this dismissal proceeding against him.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered finding Respondent guilty of the allegations contained in the Notice of Specific Charges, affirming Respondent's suspension without pay, and dismissing Respondent from his employment with the School Board effective June 21, 2000. DONE AND ENTERED this 18th day of May, 2001, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. LINDA M. RIGOT 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 18th day of May, 2001. COPIES FURNISHED: Stewart Lee Karlin, Esquire 400 Southeast Eighth Street Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33316 Madelyn P. Schere, Esquire School Board of Miami-Dade County 1450 Northeast Second Avenue Suite 400 Miami, Florida 33132 Roger C. Cuevas, Superintendent School Board of Miami-Dade County 1450 Northeast Second Avenue Suite 912 Miami, Florida 33132 Honorable Charlie Crist Commissioner of Education Department of Education The Capitol, Plaza Level 08 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400 James A. Robinson, General Counsel Department of Education The Capitol, Suite 1701 Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
The Issue In DOAH Case No. 97-5828, the issue is whether the Respondent committed the violations alleged in the Amended Administrative Complaint dated March 24, 1998, and, if so, the penalty which should be imposed. In DOAH Case No. 98-2387, the issue is whether the Respondent committed the violations alleged in the Notice of Specific Charges dated July 30, 1998, and, if so, whether he should be dismissed from employment with the Miami-Dade County School Board.
Findings Of Fact Based on the oral and documentary evidence presented at the final hearing and on the entire record of this proceeding, the following findings of fact are made: The School Board of Miami-Dade County, Florida, is the entity authorized to operate the public schools in the county and to "provide for the appointment, compensation, promotion, suspension, and dismissal of employees" of the school district. Section 4(b), Article IX, Florida Constitution; Section 230.23(4) and (5), Florida Statutes (1997). The Department of Education is the state agency responsible for investigating and prosecuting complaints against teachers holding Florida teachers' certificates for violations of Section 231.28, Florida Statutes. Section 231.262, Florida Statutes. Pursuant to Sections 231.261(7)(b) and 231.28(1), Florida Statutes, the Educational Practices Commission is the entity responsible for imposing discipline for any of the violations set forth in Section 231.28(1). Richard V. Powell holds Florida Educator's Certificate No. 585010, which covers the subjects of journalism and English- as-a-Second-Language ("ESOL"). His teacher's certificate has an expiration date of June 30, 1999. Mr. Powell was first employed as a teacher with the Miami-Dade County public school system in August 1985. From 1989 through August 1996, Mr. Powell was assigned to Jose Marti Middle School as an ESOL teacher; in August 1996, he was assigned to John F. Kennedy Middle School ("JFK Middle School") as an ESOL teacher; in August 1997, he was given a new assignment as the facilitator of JFK Middle School's School Center for Special Instruction. On November 26, 1997, Mr. Powell was temporarily assigned to the Region II office. At all times material to this proceeding, Mr. Powell was employed by the School Board under a professional service contract. November 1995 incident On the evening of November 19, 1995, at around 10:00 or 10:30 p.m., Mr. Powell was driving his Ford Bronco on Pembroke Road in Broward County, Florida. Mr. Powell's fourteen-year-old son was sitting in the front passenger seat, and he and his father began arguing about his school behavior and progress and about his failure to do his chores around the house. Mr. Powell became angry and punched his son in the mouth with his fist and then pulled the Bronco off the street, into a vacant lot. Mr. Powell got out of the Bronco, walked around the back of the vehicle to the door on the passenger's side, opened the door, and pulled his son out of the vehicle. After the child was outside the vehicle, Mr. Powell punched his son once in the face and, when the child fell to the ground, Mr. Powell kicked him at least once in the ribs. 8/ The child broke away and ran to a convenience store about twenty-five yards from the vacant lot, where a witness to the incident had already called the police. When he arrived at the convenience store, the child was sobbing and holding his side; blood was pouring from his lip. 9/ After the altercation with his son, Mr. Powell was not feeling well and, believing that his son had run the short distance to his home, Mr. Powell drove home. He waited a few minutes for his son and then walked from his home to Pembroke Road. He saw his son, a police car, and an ambulance at the convenience store, and he walked up to the police officers and identified himself as the child's father. Mr. Powell's son was taken to the hospital and treated and released with a split lip and a bruise in the area of his ribs. Mr. Powell was taken to the Pembroke Pines, Florida, police station. Mr. Powell is a diabetic, and, while he was at the police station, he asked to be examined by a doctor because he did not feel well. He was taken to the hospital, where he remained for about an hour. After his release from the hospital, Mr. Powell was arrested and charged with child abuse. On July 29, 1996, after a bench trial on child abuse charges, the court found Mr. Powell guilty but withheld adjudication, sentenced him to six months' probation, and required him to complete a parent counseling course. 10/ Mr. Powell successfully completed the course in December 1996 and was released early from probation on January 8, 1997. In August 1996, Mr. Powell was transferred from Jose Marti Middle School to JFK Middle School, where Raymond Fontana was principal. In a letter dated August 1, 1996, Seth A. Levine, an assistant state attorney in Broward County, Florida, notified the superintendent of the Miami-Dade County public school system that Mr. Powell had been tried on the charge of child abuse, and he advised the superintendent of the resolution of the case. The letter was forwarded to James E. Monroe, who was at the time an Executive Director in the School Board's Office of Professional Standards, who reviewed the letter and transmitted the information contained therein to Mr. Fontana at JFK Middle School and to the state Department of Education Educational Practices Services. Mr. Monroe was not aware of the November 1995 incident involving Mr. Powell and his son until on or about August 14, 1996, when he received the copy of Mr. Levine's letter. In a letter dated October 10, 1996, the Education Practices Services notified Mr. Powell that it had received a complaint against him related to the charges of child abuse, and an investigation was begun which led to the filing of the original Administrative Complaint dated January 21, 1997. The disciplinary action taken against Mr. Powell by the School Board with respect to the child abuse charges consisted of a Site Disposition in the case, which the School Board referred to as Case No. A-17734. In a memorandum to Mr. Powell dated October 15, 1996, Mr. Fontana summarized the substance of a conference which was held on October 15, 1996, with Mr. Powell, Mr. Fontana, and William McCard, an assistant principal at JFK Middle School, in attendance. In the memorandum, Mr. Fontana indicated that "[t]he purpose of the conference was to establish a final disposition through administrative review of the above indicated case." Mr. Fontana further stated: Upon review of all the records and talking with you, it is determined that the incident in question happened in Broward County, no adjudication of guilt was established, and legally the case was closed. However, you have agreed to counseling in order to forestall any future problems. The case in question dealt with your own family member and alleged child abuse. We reviewed my expectations of you in regards to your teaching position at John F. Kennedy Middle School and your professional treatment of all your students. We reviewed the State Code of Ethics guidelines dealing with the same subject. Thus, I am directing you to follow the established State Code of Ethics Rules, School Board Policy, and Site Rules dealing with conduct becoming a teacher and subsequent teaching relationships with students. I feel that this will adequately bring closure to this incident and that in the future your teaching behavior will always be of the highest professional standard. In his annual evaluation for the 1995-1996 school year, Mr. Powell was rated "acceptable" in both classroom performance and in professional responsibility, and he was recommended for continued employment. Likewise, in his annual evaluation for the 1996-1997 school year, Mr. Powell was assessed "acceptable" in both classroom performance and in professional responsibility, and he was recommended for continued employment. This annual evaluation followed a Teacher Assessment and Development System Post-Observation Report completed on April 16, 1997, by Mr. McCard, in which he found that Mr. Powell's performance satisfied every indicator subject to evaluation. 11/ November 1997 incident On November 25, 1997, Mr. Powell was the teacher in charge of the School Center for Special Instruction ("SCSI") at JFK Middle School. The SCSI is an indoor suspension program for children who are being disciplined for behavior violations; SCSI is an alternative to sending these children home for the duration of their suspension. The SCSI class was held in the school cafeteria at JFK Middle School from 9:00 a.m. until the end of the school day at 3:40 p.m. Two sets of double doors provide access to the cafeteria. One set, those on the right, were locked from the outside and not normally used; the students entered and left the cafeteria by the set of doors on the left of the building. At approximately 3:20 p.m. on November 25, 1997, the SCSI students were returning to the cafeteria after cleaning up an area outside the cafeteria. Mr. Powell was outside supervising the students as they returned to the cafeteria, and there was no adult supervising the students who had already moved inside the cafeteria. During this hiatus, a seventh-grade student named M. M. got into an altercation with several other boys in the class whom he suspected of taking his book bag. The boys began pushing and shoving M. M. and encouraging him to fight with one specific boy. M. M. refused to fight; he became angry and upset and left the cafeteria by way of the set of double doors on the right side of the cafeteria. Because he was angry and upset, M. M. pushed the door open quite forcefully. Mr. Powell had had surgery on his right foot the previous day; his foot was in a cast, and he used a cane to assist him in walking. At the time M. M. pushed open the cafeteria door, Mr. Powell was standing outside directly in the path of the door as it opened. M. M. could not see Mr. Powell because there were no windows in the door. As it swung open, the door hit Mr. Powell's injured foot, and Mr. Powell raised his cane and struck M. M. on his right arm. 12/ M. M. ran back inside the cafeteria, in tears. He rushed through the cafeteria and exited through the set of doors on the left side of the cafeteria. He went directly to the office of Sandra Clarke, one of the guidance counselors at JFK Middle School. When he arrived at her office, M. M. was agitated and crying, and he told Ms. Clarke that Mr. Powell had hit him on the arm with his cane. M. M. showed Ms. Clarke the mark on his arm, which was located on the outside of his right arm, midway between his shoulder and his elbow. Ms. Clarke observed that M. M. had a red welt on his arm, and she took him to the office of Patrick Snay, who was at that time the principal of JFK Middle School. Mr. Snay called in Assistant Principal McCard and told him about the allegations M. M. had made against Mr. Powell. Mr. Snay directed Mr. McCard to call the school police and to take statements from the students in the class who witnessed the incident. Mr. McCard took a statement from M. M. and observed the red mark on his arm. A school security guard went into the SCSI class right before school ended for the day and asked that any students who had seen the incident involving Mr. Powell and M. M. stay after school and write a statement telling what they had seen. Several students remained and prepared statements. 13/ Mr. Powell reported for school the next morning but was told to report to the School Board's Region 2 office. Mr. Powell worked at that office for one day, and then, beginning on the Monday after Thanksgiving, he was assigned to work at Highland Oaks Middle School. He worked at that school until he was suspended by the School Board on May 13, 1998. His duties at Highland Oaks Middle School included taking care of disabled students, accompanying them to their classes and to lunch, sitting with them, and taking notes for them, all under the direct supervision of the school's media specialist. At the direction of James Monroe, who was at the time an Executive Director in the School Board's Office of Professional Practices, a personnel investigation was initiated on December 6, 1997, with respect to M. M.'s allegations against Mr. Powell. A preliminary personnel investigation report was submitted on February 13, 1998, in which the investigator concluded that the charge against Mr. Powell was substantiated. A Conference-for-the-Record was held on March 25, 1998, attended by Mr. Snay; John F. Gilbert, Director of Region 2; Ms. Falco, Mr. Powell's union representative; Dr. Monroe; and Mr. Powell. Several issues were discussed during the conference: Mr. Powell was allowed to review a copy of the School Board's investigative report regarding the incident involving M. M., and he was allowed to comment on the report. Mr. Powell denied having hit M. M. and advised the School Board personnel that he knew of an eye witness to the incident who would support his denial. Mr. Powell was also allowed to review a copy of the October 15, 1996, memo to Mr. Powell from Principal Fontana, discussed in paragraph 16, supra, memorializing the discipline imposed with respect to the charges that Mr. Powell had committed child abuse on his son. Dr. Monroe advised Mr. Powell that he had failed to comply with the directives included in that disposition. /14 During the Conference-for-the-Record, Mr. Powell was told that a recommendation would be made to the School Board that his professional services contract not be renewed and that a decision would be made whether to take disciplinary measures against him, which could include suspension or dismissal. In a letter dated April 29, 1998, the Superintendent of Schools recommended to the School Board that Mr. Powell be suspended from his position as a teacher and that dismissal proceedings be initiated against him. The School Board accepted this recommendation on May 13, 1998. On October 29, 1998, Mr. Powell was tried by a jury on the criminal charge of battery arising out of his striking M. M. A number of students testified at the trial, and Mr. Powell was found "not guilty" of the charge. On September 5, 1997, Mr. Powell was honored by the Florida House of Representatives with a Certificate of Appreciation for "his contributions and accomplishments in the National Association of Black Scuba Divers." As a member of that association, Mr. Powell was recognized and commended for his work with the sunken slave ship Henrietta Marie and for his lectures and seminars on the history of this ship. On May 28, 1998, an article about the Certificate of Appreciation appeared in The Miami Times, together with a picture of Mr. Powell and Representative Larcenia Bullard. Nowhere in the certificate or in the news article is Mr. Powell identified as a teacher or former teacher in the Miami-Dade County public schools. Mr. Powell is mentioned and quoted in an article which was published in the South Florida edition of the Sunday Sun Sentinel newspaper on February 1, 1998. The article discussed the celebration of Black History Month by the descendants of slaves who are living in South Florida. Mr. Powell is identified in the article as the person who led members of the National Association of Black Scuba Divers in a dive to the site of the Henrietta Marie. Mr. Powell also gave a lecture on the Henrietta Marie in February 1997 at the Miami-Dade County Community College, as part of a special African-American history course. Summary The evidence presented herein clearly and convincingly establishes that Mr. Powell struck and kicked his son on November 19, 1995, and that he struck M. M. with his cane on November 25, 1997, while carrying out his duties as an SCSI teacher. Mr. Powell's testimony that he did not strike either his son or M. M. is rejected as not persuasive, as is the testimony of those witnesses who testified that Mr. Powell did not strike M. M. The evidence presented is sufficient to establish that Mr. Powell committed an act of gross immorality and of moral turpitude when he dragged his fourteen-year-old son from the passenger seat of his Ford Bronco, struck his son in the face twice, and kicked his son in the ribs at least once, causing him to suffer a split lip and bruised ribs. This act of violence is not only inconsistent with the public conscience, it is an act of serious misconduct which was in flagrant disregard of society's condemnation of violence against children. The seriousness of Mr. Powell's act is only exacerbated by the fact that he acted in anger. Although the evidence establishes that Mr. Powell committed an act of gross immorality, the only evidence offered regarding any notoriety arising from the November 1995 incident and from Mr. Powell's subsequent trial on the charges of child abuse is the testimony of Dr. Monroe. Dr. Monroe's testimony that there "was considerable notoriety via the print and the electronic media of Mr. Powell's action which resulted in his arrest" was not based on his personal knowledge but was based on information he received in August 1996 from an assistant state's attorney in Broward County. Dr. Monroe's testimony is not only hearsay unsupported by any other evidence in the record, it is not credible to prove that Mr. Powell's conduct was sufficiently notorious to cast him or the education profession into public disgrace or disrespect or to impair Mr. Powell's service in the community. Moreover, Mr. Powell presented evidence that, subsequent to the November 1995 incident, he was publicly recognized for his contributions to the community through his work with the slave ship Henrietta Marie. The evidence presented is also sufficient to establish that Mr. Powell committed an act of gross immorality and of moral turpitude with respect to the November 1997 incident involving M. M. When Mr. Powell lashed out at this student and struck him with a cane, albeit after the student pushed a door into his injured foot, he demonstrated a flagrant disregard of public morals and of society's condemnation of violence against children, and he committed an act that betrayed the special trust placed in teachers. However, there was no persuasive evidence presented to establish that Mr. Powell's conduct involving M. M. was sufficiently notorious to expose either Mr. Powell or the education profession to public disgrace or disrespect or that Mr. Powell's service in the community was impaired with respect to the November 1997 incident. The most the evidence demonstrates is that the school received inquiries from parents about the need for their children to give statements regarding the incident, but these inquiries do not rise to the level of notoriety. Furthermore, it would be inappropriate to infer notoriety and public disgrace and disrespect from the fact that Mr. Powell was tried and found not guilty of the charge of battery on M. M. The evidence presented is sufficient to establish that, with respect to the November 1997 incident in which Mr. Powell struck M. M. with his cane, Mr. Powell violated several provisions of the Code of Ethics of the Education Profession and of the Principles of Professional Conduct for the Education Profession in Florida because he did not exercise professional judgment; because he inflicted physical injury on M. M. rather than protecting him from such injury; and because he exposed M. M. to unnecessary embarrassment by striking him and causing him to cry in front of his fellow students in the SCSI class. There was, however, no persuasive direct evidence presented to establish that Mr. Powell's effectiveness as a teacher and an employee of the School Board was diminished as a result of the November 1997 incident. This direct evidence consisted solely of the opinion testimony of Dr. Monroe, which was conclusory and was based exclusively on information he obtained from Mr. Powell's records and from discussions with school administrative personnel charged with monitoring Mr. Powell's conduct and teaching performance. No parents or students or members of the community testified that Mr. Powell's effectiveness as a teacher and as an employee of the School Board was diminished as a result of this incident. Under the circumstances of this case, however, it can be inferred from the record as a whole that Mr. Powell's effectiveness as a School Board employee and as a teacher was seriously diminished as a result of the November 1997 incident. Mr. Powell stuck a student with a cane during school hours, and the incident was witnessed by a number of students, who were asked to testify both in this proceeding and in Mr. Powell's criminal trial. In addition, the allegations against Mr. Powell with respect to the November 1997 incident were of such a serious nature that it was necessary to relieve Mr. Powell of his teaching responsibilities and to transfer him from JFK Middle School to the Region 2 administrative offices and, from there, to another middle school in which his contact with students was closely supervised. Finally, the evidence presented is sufficient to establish that, with respect to the November 1997 incident in which he struck M. M. with his cane, Mr. Powell did not conduct himself in a manner which reflected credit on himself or on the school system, nor did his conduct conform to the highest professional standards.
Recommendation Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that In DOAH Case NO. 97-5828, the Education Practices Commission enter a final order finding Richard V. Powell guilty of violating Section 231.28(1)(c) and (i), Florida Statutes, and revoking his teacher's certificate for a period of two years, followed by three years' probation, subject to reasonable conditions to be determined by the Commission; and In DOAH Case No. 98-2387, the School Board of Miami-Dade County, Florida, enter a final order finding Richard V. Powell guilty of misconduct in office pursuant to Section 231.36(1)(a) and (6)(a), Florida Statutes, and of violating School Board Rules 6Gx13-4A-1.21 and 6Gx13-4-1.08 and 4-1.09; sustaining his suspension; and dismissing him from employment as a teacher with the Miami-Dade County Public Schools. DONE AND ENTERED this 11th day of October, 1999, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. PATRICIA HART MALONO 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 11th day of October, 1999.