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By DAVID CRITCHELL
The city's Board of Education settled a discrimination
and retaliation lawsuit brought by a former Bronx School Board employee
last week for $100,000.
The suit, filed against the Board of Ed and others
by Maureen Grogan, a long-time secretary at Community School Board 8,
alleged sexual and racial harassment and assault by Dennis Coleman, a
member and former president of that board.
A counterclaim made by Coleman, alleging that Grogan's
accusations were false and defamatory, was dismissed by the court also
last week.
Coleman, at one time a State Senator for a short period
in the mid-1960s, was suspended by then School Chancellor Rudy Crew several
years ago in connection with his behavior over an incident during a school
board meeting. A tape of the meeting revealed that he had yelled at a
parent in attendance, and shoved Grogan, reinjuring an old neck problem
she suffered from.
Coleman is still a member of Board 8. The suit, which
alleged a pattern of discrimination that stretched through years, added
fuel to the fire of that board's already hot flames of racial division.
Grogan's suit claimed that Coleman would regularly treat her in an abusive
fashion, making her feel "insulted and humiliated." An
investigation by the Office of Equal Opportunity Employment into the allegations
found grounds substantiating at least some of Grogan's claims.
Despite the findings however, Board of Education officials
did not reprimand Coleman, sparking the suit filed by Grogan's lawyer,
Joseph Maya, in federal court for the Southern District of New York.
Coleman was later suspended in connection with the
incident at the school board meeting.
In Crew's harsh suspension letter to Coleman at that
time, the school's chancellor had said that Coleman's actions, "went beyond
that of antagonism and rudeness and crossed the line beyond which elected
school board members can go... your vilification of parents, as well as
your shouting at colleagues and staff ... are indefensible."
Coleman could not be reached for comment as of press
time. Board of Education officials were also unavailable for comment as
of press time.
Maya, reached by phone on Tuesday, called the settlement
a "tremendous victory" for his client.
"It really is a victory for her to be vindicated,"
Maya said. "And to have Dennis Coleman's counterclaims dismissed."
Maya called the entire incident a shame, saying that
"The children of New York City should not be burdened with losing $100,000
for this sort of thing."
According to Maya, last week's settlement came after
long negotiations between both parties. He called the discrimination suffered
by his client "egregious and systemic."
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