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By Daniel Gesslein
After seven years of allegedly suffering
constant harassment, as well as verbal and physical abuse, School Board
8's long-time secretary won a $100,000 settlement with the Board of Education
for their lack of disciplining Dennis Coleman. The controversial school
board member at the center of the harassment case still remains on the
board.
Two years after the lawsuit was filed and
weeks before the trial was to begin, Board of Ed officials agreed to settle
and pay Maureen Grogan $100,000. Grogan filed a lawsuit against the Board
of Ed, former Chancellor Rudy Crew and board members Dennis Coleman and
Rose Foley. The long-time secretary claimed that Crew and the Board of
Ed did nothing to discipline Coleman after he repeatedly harassed her.
"Think of how many books and blackboards
and pencils the Board of Ed could have bought with $100,000," said Grogan's
attorney Joseph Maya of Maya and Associates, a lawfirm which specializes
in employment discrimination lawsuits. During
the course of the pre-trial hearings, Coleman's counterclaims of slander
were thrown out. However, despite the settlement over the way he allegedly
harassed his employee over a seven-year period, Coleman remains on the
schoolboard. Calls made to him were not returned. Board of Ed officials
also did not return the News' calls.
In the suit, Grogan claimed that she had
been the target of harassment and discrimination when she refused to lie
in an investigation into age discrimination. Coleman allegedly refused
to hire a woman for a position with the school board because she was too
old. Grogan told investigators this and was allegedly intimidated from
that point on.
According to the lawsuit, in October 1992,
Coleman called Grogan at her home and demanded that she recant statements
she made to an agent of the Office of Special Investigations. The school
board member allegedly threatened Grogan with losing her job with her
husband out of work at the time and her two children in college.
Grogan told the Investigations agent about
the alleged threats and thereafter was subjected to a daily hostile work
environment which included being ignored, shunned and given contradictory
instructions and work-related directions. She was also allegedly threatened
with innuendoes regarding the timing of her pension vesting. The suit
also claimed that Coleman would repeatedly yell at her over trivial matters
such as his mail.
As a result, Grogan said she was forced
to see a psychiatrist because of the stress placed upon her. She also
took an extended leave in 1993. When she returned, Grogan found that most
of her work, which included sensitive confidential material was turned
over to a temporary office worker who was not a Board of Ed employee and
was not qualified to handle confidential material.
Afterward, Grogan claims Coleman continuously
made disparaging comments about her appearance, her intelligence and her
ability to understand school board rules and regulations.
During one school board meeting in December
1994, Coleman allegedly accused Grogan of discrimination and of being
a member of the mafia. Grogan countered by filing a formal complaint alleging
that Coleman was discriminating against her and was harassing her. After
a review, no action was taken by the Board of Ed.
Grogan claims that after this incident
Coleman began to publicly humiliate her at every school board meeting.
The secretary wrote a letter to Crew's office but no action was taken.
Then in October 1996, Coleman assaulted Grogan during a heated exchange
at a school board meeting. After a review of the matter, Crew scolded
Coleman's actions but did not discipline him.
Grogan was continuously harassed during
meetings and on a daily basis until she quit from the strain in June 1999.
She then filed a lawsuit against the parties.
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