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School & District Management

Feuding Superintendents and School Boards Struggle to Make Amends

Legal battles mar relationships
By Francisco Vara-Orta 鈥 March 07, 2017 5 min read
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When a rocky relationship between a superintendent and school board winds up in court, it can lead to the awkwardness of divorce鈥攁kin to a feuding couple living together, with their children stuck in the middle.

As the relationship breaks down, it鈥檚 pretty common for superintendents to hit the escape hatches in their contracts, through resignation or retirement, or for members to get voted on or off school boards as tensions air out.

What鈥檚 more uncommon, though, are sitting superintendents who sue the school board members who can hire, and in most cases, fire them. Conversely, it鈥檚 rare for a sitting member, or an entire board, to sue a superintendent.

When it does happen, it usually doesn鈥檛 end well, according to a review by 91制片厂视频 Week of such legal cases over the past decade.

The most recent case is unfolding in the Howard County, Md., district, where in a dispute that is both professional and personal. The suit, filed in January in Howard County Circuit Court, alleges that school board members passed a series of resolutions that aimed to 鈥渟trip the superintendent of her lawful authority鈥 since the newly elected board was sworn in December. The conflict has extended to Foose鈥檚 personal life, as she also claims in the suit that she has faced discrimination because she is gay.

Cynthia Vaillancourt, the president of the Howard County board, said in an email that the board has turned legal matters over to its lawyers and will continue to work with Foose. But Vaillancourt acknowledged that the suit has fostered a 鈥渃hallenging鈥 working situation, and she characterized Foose as trying to usurp the board鈥檚 governance abilities.

Point of No Return

Dan Domenech, the executive director of AASA, the School Superintendents Association, and a former superintendent of the Fairfax County district in Virginia, said that generally, it鈥檚 a bad idea for superintendents to go public with concerns about the board, which employs them.

鈥淲hen that happens, relations are undoubtedly at the point where the superintendent will be making an exit soon,鈥 said Domenech, who was not referring to any specific case.

For now, Foose and Howard County鈥檚 board have to constantly come back to the table to work鈥攁n indefinite situation thanks to the superintendent鈥檚 contract and stipulations rarely seen in state education law but . Foose is in the first year of a new four-year contract, after already serving in the post for the past four years when she had a majority of support on the board.

In an interview, Foose said she has no plans to back down from her position.

In Maryland, contracts for superintendents must be four years at a time, according to Bill Reinhard, a spokesman for the state education department. Many states allow board members to simply tack on another year or two if they are satisfied with the superintendent.

While most states give local boards authority to fire superintendents, Maryland law mandates that only the state superintendent can terminate them. The state chief has five grounds for doing so: immorality, misconduct in office, insubordination, incompetency, and/or willful neglect of duty. Maryland law does allow boards to negotiate separation agreements.

Reinhard said it鈥檚 unclear when that law went into effect for the state, which has 24 school systems.

Even if a state allows its school boards more liberty to get rid of a superintendent, involving the courts can certainly protract the separation process. 91制片厂视频 Week found a handful of such cases in recent years as reported by local media.

In 2013 in Ohio, Randy Stepp, the superintendent of the Medina City district, sued the board for allegedly defaming him. Board members then moved to fire Stepp, which prompted the then-suspended superintendent to file a second suit to halt his dismissal. Stepp eventually submitted his resignation nearly a year later in the aftermath of a state auditor鈥檚 report that found he had misspent school funds, .

In South Carolina in 2014, Vashti Washington, the superintendent of the Jasper County district, sued school board member Randy Horton for defamation. While the court battle largely played out in the press, Washington and Horton had to work together for nearly a year and a half until the suit was settled and the superintendent .

鈥楳arriage Counseling鈥

91制片厂视频 experts say discord between superintendents and boards can hijack the district鈥檚 political climate, and that can have a chilling effect as employees may feel pressure to choose sides.

In the absence of 鈥渕arriage counseling,鈥 Domenech of the AASA quipped, there are intermediaries who can help mediate disputes, such as lawyers and school board and superintendent associations.

The National School Boards Association offers a for members to help navigate the process of building and maintaining relationships with schools鈥 chiefs.

Thomas Gentzel, the executive director and CEO of the National School Boards Association, said board members must carefully weigh their First Amendment rights and speaking out on behalf of their communities against the superintendent, especially in public. Board members should always confer with their district鈥檚 legal counsel while in sensitive conflicts with the superintendent in order to safeguard their behavior from putting the school system at risk of further litigation, he said.

That鈥檚 not to say that board members and superintendents who are always in harmony is ideal either, Gentzel said.

The best board-superintendent relationships are those in which people can respectfully disagree and debate issues. What鈥檚 vital when there is disagreement, he said, is for board members and superintendents to monitor how serious a rift is before allowing it to turn into an unbridgeable gulf.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e not dysfunctional if you disagree. You鈥檙e dysfunctional if you can鈥檛 make a decision,鈥 Gentzel said. 鈥淒isagreement can be healthy if it鈥檚 done in the right environment.鈥

Library Intern Briana Brockett-Richmond contributed to this report.
A version of this article appeared in the March 08, 2017 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as After a Feud, Hard for Schools Chiefs and Boards to Make Up

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