Sunshine Laws – 鶹Ʒ America's Education News Source Thu, 04 May 2023 23:45:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Sunshine Laws – 鶹Ʒ 32 32 Douglas County Schools Pays $832K to Fired Chief Who Claimed Retaliation /article/douglas-county-supe-settlement/ Wed, 03 May 2023 11:15:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=708322 Correction appended, May 4

A former Colorado schools chief, whose 2022 ouster by his board’s new conservative majority made national headlines, quietly settled his unlawful termination and retaliation claims against the Douglas County district last month for nearly $833,000.

The district agreed to pay Corey Wise $270,733 for the remainder of his contract and $562,000 to resolve his unlawful termination claims. While Wise’s attorneys initially described the source of the money differently, school board trustee David Ray said Thursday the district paid Wise for the remainder of his contract when he was terminated in February 2022 and is now responsible for covering its $150,000 deductible from the $562,000 the former superintendent will receive from the district’s insurance company.

“Had these funds not been expended, the dollars could have been reallocated to another area such as student learning,” Ray said. “This marks a dark day in our district when disrespect, political agendas and refusal to take ownership for mistakes negatively impact much needed financial resources for our students.”

A popular superintendent who served the school system for 26 years, Wise was fired  at a special meeting last February that barred public comment and came after the school board’s conservative majority reportedly met to plan his removal — a move that prompted yet another court battle over alleged violations to the state’s Open Meetings Law.


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Wise had strong support among students and educators alike: Just a day earlier, some 1,500 employees staged a sickout to protest his impending removal, forcing the state’s third-largest school district to close. 

Wise said board members Becky Myers, Michael Peterson, Christy Williams and Kaylee Winegar terminated him without cause and targeted him for advocating for students with disabilities and minority youth. 

The battle in predominantly white, affluent Douglas County mirrored those being fought in the pandemic’s wake. Conservative parents, pushing back against what they saw as government overreach, organized politically and ran school board candidates who opposed COVID-related protocols and teachings around race and gender. At the same time, other groups began to rise up to counter those views.

In Douglas County, the board members’ actions violated Wise’s First Amendment and due process rights in addition to state and federal laws, according to a statement released last month by his attorneys. Peterson, the school board president, did not return requests for comment. 

Amy Valentine, a district parent and a part-time substitute teacher at a local charter school, said she wasn’t surprised by the hefty payout. 

“School boards must be held accountable for their actions, and I’m glad that was the case in Douglas County,” she said. 

Wise’s attorneys said their client’s story might serve as a lesson to other school districts, many of which have seen right-wing groups gain control over local boards of education as a means to counter cultural movements with which they disagree, fighting against equity and inclusion efforts and social-emotional learning, among other issues. 

“Hopefully, his story sheds light on the dangers of politicizing student education and spreading misinformation about students, personnel, curriculum, and school policies,” Wise’s attorneys wrote. They added the four board members “put their success over the success of students,” and have “destroyed trust between community members, engendered hate within our county, and degraded the quality of education for our students.”

Wise’s case isn’t the district’s only legal headache. Bob Marshall, an active community member with no children in the school system, filed a lawsuit against the school board as a whole and the four majority members with the Colorado District Court on Feb. 4, 2022, trying to get a temporary restraining order to keep them from meeting and ousting Wise.

Marshall, an attorney, was hoping “everyone could have gone to their corner, settled down and done it the right way.” He said he had no allegiance to Wise and no opinion about his leadership, but filed the lawsuit because he believed the board violated the law by meeting in secret. , a longtime Republican who now describes himself as a conservative Democrat, was elected to the state Assembly in November 2022. 

Unless it is settled before that, Marshall said his case could go to trial in June. 

Whether Wise’s support for a controversial district equity policy played a role in his termination was also scrutinized by his lawyers. Before the school board was set to discuss the policy last week, a biracial student told the trustees he and his siblings faced at school. One student posted that Black people should be removed from the planet and called for bringing back the Holocaust. The slurs leveled in person and over social media were so frequent and hate-filled that his mother said she could not envision sending him back to campus. 

The district is also facing other challenges: Voters rejected a bond request for construction improvements and another measure to boost teacher pay, which remains among the lowest in the state — and nation. 

The three seats held by the board members who are not part of the conservative majority are all up for election for this year.

“We have three outstanding minority board members now,” Marshall noted. “Anything other than getting three equivalent board members will be a loss.”

Correction: The source of the funds paid to ousted Douglas County Superintendent Corey Wise was incorrectly reported in an earlier version of this story based on information provided by his attorneys.

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School Chief’s Firing By Conservative Board Sets Off Backlash /article/in-white-wealthy-douglas-county-colo-a-conservative-school-board-majority-fires-the-superintendent-and-fierce-backlash-ensues/ Wed, 23 Feb 2022 21:03:39 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=585405 The November election of four conservative members to Colorado’s Douglas County school board led to the firing this month of the district’s beloved superintendent and the swift mobilization of teachers, students and community members against his dismissal.

Corey Wise, who served the district for 26 years in various capacities, was ousted during a special meeting Feb. 4 that barred public comment and came after the four members reportedly conferred on their own to strategize his removal. 


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A day before, some 1,500 employees staged a sickout in protest of what was to come, forcing the state’s third-largest school district to close its doors.

“People are out of sorts right now,” teachers union President Kevin DiPasquale told 鶹Ʒ. “The way our former superintendent was fired without due process or any type of performance evaluation really has shaken the community and our staff. Employees feel like they could be next.”

Students were equally upset, walking out of school en masse Feb. 7, saying the board valued politics more than education.

“I get that Corey is beloved,” board President Mike Peterson said at the Feb. 4 meeting. “I will stipulate that. But just because a leader is loved and respected doesn’t mean he has the skills, the vision and capabilities to lead this large district.”

Mike Peterson, elected to the Douglas County school board in November, moved to oust popular superintendent Corey Wise at the Feb. 4 meeting. (Douglas County School District / YouTube)

The battle in predominantly white, affluent Douglas County mirrors those being fought in , some with very different demographics. As conservative parents have become organized during the pandemic, they are pushing back against what they see as government overreach, opposing COVID-related protocols and targeting the teaching of race and gender-related topics.

Other are beginning to rise up to counter those views.

Board member Elizabeth Hanson, who broke down in tears defending Wise at the board meeting, said the eyes of the state and nation are on Douglas County.

“This decision was not about performance in any way,” she said. “This is politics in its ugliest and purest and most destructive form. This is an attack on public education and I hope that it is something that will wake up our community, our state and our country. There are very calculated efforts that are happening right now and only the people have the power to stop that.”

Douglas County School board member Elizabeth Hanson speaks out in Corey Wise’s defense during Feb. 4 meeting in which the superintendent was fired. (Douglas County School District / YouTube)

Many community members are now considering a possible recall effort. A similar, successful push in , in which three board members were removed last week, might serve as a playbook. The strategy seems to be gaining momentum: Ballotpedia, a nonprofit, nonpartisan online political encyclopedia counted , up from 29 a year earlier. 

Neither Peterson nor the three other newly elected board members agreed to be interviewed. The slate, backed by , won election running on an anti-mask, anti-critical race theory platform. The phrase refers to a college-level academic framework but has become a catchall for any subject dealing with race or systemic racism in the K-12 setting.

Wise’s critics on the board said he did not have the leadership skills necessary to enact their vision, though they didn’t articulate what that is. 

Wise, whose base salary was $247,500, told the board Feb. 4 that he recognized the division in the community and welcomed the chance to address members’ concerns about his performance. 

“I love this district,” he said. “I love this county. It’s been my home. I have been working my tail off — as has all the staff.” 

Corey Wise was superintendent of the Douglas County School District until his firing Feb. 4 by a newly elected conservative school board majority. (Douglas County School District / YouTube)

Wise’s firing has prompted legal action from community member and attorney Robert Marshall. He for discussing the superintendent’s employment outside a formal board session in violation, he said, of the state’s open meeting laws. He wants the termination vote thrown out.

“It’s the behind-closed-doors deal-making that is exactly what this law was put in place to prevent,” Marshall, a self-described conservative who wants to stop the board from acting similarly in the future, told 鶹Ʒ.

Board members David Ray and Susan Meek said Peterson, the board president, told them that the majority members talked about Wise’s job status amongst themselves and offered the superintendent an opportunity to resign before bringing the issue to the full board. The district is obligated to pay Wise’s salary for 12 more months. 

Wise’s newly hired attorneys on Feb. 18 requested records from the school district and the preservation of evidence The lawyers are interested in board communications around Wise’s termination and topics such as masking, student racial demographics, banning books, the teachers union and the district’s equity policy. 

‘Get Out and Leave’

The board majority has been openly anti-union — as the power grabbers,” conservative board member Kaylee Winegar told Fox News Feb. 7 — and has pledged to revisit the equity plan, which took years to develop and was only just beginning to be implemented.

It was meant to help address the type of racial tension that led to the in recent years, including the former. and central office employees wrote a letter to the board Jan. 25 demanding the equity plan’s preservation. Parents are also concerned.

“I am a mom of some LGBTQ students and a student with special needs,” Tiffany Baker said. “We have to worry about equity.”

The mood in Douglas County schools continued to deteriorate after the Feb. 4 board meeting. Teachers in at least three district schools found fliers on their cars Feb. 16, admonishing them. “Most Teachers Are Good and We Appreciate Them!” it read. “You are Bad! Get Out and Leave!”

Flier placed on teachers’ cars at three Douglas County schools last week (Amy Valentine)

“It is shocking to see such high levels of hate being leveled at teachers and staff,” DiPasquale, the union head, said. “They should not have to worry about their safety at schools or in our community.”

The fliers came the same week teachers were informed by the district that someone asked, under the Colorado Open Records Act, for the names of all those who called in sick during the protest. The request, which alarmed many given the heightened tension in the community, has since been rescinded, Meek said.

A similar petition to release teachers’ names in Colorado’s second-largest school district was . That same district, Jefferson County, managed to members a year earlier.

Parents have also said the district should be more concerned with student mental health than political infighting: In addition to the pandemic, Douglas County schools suffered a at one of its charter campuses in 2019 that left one student dead and many more injured. Parents still credit teachers for saving their lives — one mother was visiting campus when shots rang out — and that of their children. 

“Bullying, social-emotional struggles, safety — that’s what we should be focusing on,” said parent Amy Valentine.

Kailani Smile, a 16-year-old junior, was among the students who walked off campus Feb. 7. The past two years have been an enormous challenge, she said: Turmoil at the administrative level has only added more stress. 

“It’s great to see students my age and younger pushing for things like the equity policy,” she said. “But we shouldn’t have to be dealing with this. We are students and should be focusing on our education instead of worrying about our school board.”

‘Things we could have handled better’

The Douglas County School District serves 64,000 students some 30 miles south of Denver. It’s reliably Republican: the U.S. presidential race by a comfortable margin in 2020, though as the prior election.

The county, 90 percent white, is in the nation: The median home value between 2015 and 2019 was $468,700, . The same held true for and , which was $119,730.

But those comfortable statistics have not stopped the chaos that has unfurled in the past few weeks, crystallizing around the superintendent’s removal. Board member David Ray called the barring of public comment on the matter a travesty.

“To take an action on an all-encompassing topic like ‘future direction of the district’ without allowing the public to formally address this is reckless and negligent,” he said. “It goes against decades of practice where this board has always allowed for public comment prior to taking any formal action.”

Board member Winegar, while criticizing Wise for, among other things, enforcing the district’s mask mandate, seemed to concede the move to get rid of him took place outside normal channels.

“Maybe there are some things we could have handled better, to bring in the whole board,” she said. 

The conservative members’ plan was not flawlessly executed: Board member Becky Myers, who won election as part of the slate, at first voted against the superintendent’s dismissal and then hastily changed her answer to a “yes” after being prompted by Peterson, the board president.

The flip-flop incensed board member Hanson, who voted against Wise’s firing.

“If she cannot follow what is happening, it is not your responsibility to bring her up to speed,” Hanson said. “Her vote is ‘no.’”

Amid the board conflicts and the public protests, Peterson seemed to take his mandate to terminate Wise from a different source — the election that swept him and his fellow conservatives into office. 

“I think we heard the voters loud and clear in November,” he said. 


Lead Image: Teachers and their supporters rally outside Douglas County School District’s central office Feb. 3, a day before Superintendent Corey Wise’s ouster. (Courtesy of Kevin DiPasquale)

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