Monday, June 27, 2011

Fort Cherry School Board - Using Taxpayer Dollars to Conceal How the District is Spending Taxpayer Dollars?

Observer-Reporter, June 18, 2011:



Let’s take a closer look at this story.  The Observer article is shown below in black print.  Additional information in red and blue.
As you read this, remember, Fort Cherry administrators are paid with our tax dollars. 
The Right-to-Know Law specifically notes that all manner of financial records are public information. 
It is our right as taxpayers to be assured that the Fort Cherry administrators are being paid the amount of salary that has been publicly advertised.

Judge upholds open records decision
By Linda Metz, Staff writer  lmetz@observer-reporter.com

Washington County Judge John DiSalle has upheld a decision by the Pennsylvania Office of Open Records forcing Fort Cherry School District to hand over copies of W-2 and 1099 forms for four of its employees to a Bulger woman.
However, the judge's May 11 ruling is only a formality, as the district and Susan Coppola of Bulger have reportedly reached an agreement to resolve the matter.

This is not just a formality.  By ruling in favor of the Office of Open Record’s final determination, Judge DiSalle has ruled that the W-2s are public information.


This case has set Office of Open Records precedent and is law. 
If the decision to uphold the Final Determination stands up to further appeal by the district, a citizen will be able to make an official Right-to-Know request for the W-2s and Fort Cherry will be required to release the W-2s by law.


The Observer-Reporter states that the district and Ms. Coppola reached an “agreement”. 
Officially, Ms. Coppola withdrew from the appeal for the W-2s and submitted a separate, second request for compensation paid to Dinnen, Sroka, Craig, and Smith.  This separate, second request involved no “agreement”.
The Observer failed to report that Ms. Coppola withdrew from the appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, but the Fort Cherry School Board permitted the solicitor to continue with the appeal. 
The solicitor’s objective:   to set precedent so the district would NEVER be required to release the W-2s. 
 
On Feb. 18, 2010, Coppola filed a formal request with the district for the 2008 and 2009 W-2 and 1099 payroll tax reporting forms of Superintendent Dr. Robert Dinnen, business manager Paul Sroka, director of curriculum Trish Craig and director of special education Dawn Smith under the Pennsylvania Right-to-Know Law.
Coppola did not specify the reason for her request in her filing.

The RTK law states that a citizen does not need to provide a reason for a request:
Section 703. Written requests.
A written request for access to records may be submitted in person, by mail, by e-mail, by facsimile or, to the extent provided by agency rules, any other electronic means. A written request must be addressed to the
open-records officer designated pursuant to section 502. Employees of an agency shall be directed to forward requests for records to the open-records officer. A written request should identify or describe the
records sought with sufficient specificity to enable the agency to ascertain which records are being requested and shall include the name and address to which the agency should address its response. A written request need not include any explanation of the requester’s reason for requesting or intended use of the records unless otherwise required by law.
 Pennsylvania’s New Right to Know Law
Act 3 of 2008, as signed by Gov. Edward G. Rendell on February 14, 2008
Effective January 1, 2009

Sroka, who also serves as the district's open records officer, notified Coppola Feb. 22 that regarding the W-2 forms, he was "invoking a 30-day extension for legal review, possible redaction and location of any records that may have been moved off-site due to a noncurrent status."
Such a review and extension are authorized under the law, the district contends.
In regard to the 1099 forms, which are issued to independent contractors, Sroka informed Coppola that her request was denied because the records did not exist.

Sroka denied the 1099s existed but would not provide an affidavit.  Why?  Keep in mind that according to Fort Cherry’s Act 93 agreement, the administration is entitled to the following:
·        5% of grant money obtained by the district
·        bonus salary for doctorate degrees
·        generous insurance buy-out
That information, and any other type of extra compensation, could appear on a 1099 form.
The district solicitor is well aware that an affidavit should have been provided.
Could it be that the Open Records Officer failed to provide the affidavit so as to avoid perjuring himself?
From the Final Determination issued by the OOR (Coppola v Fort Cherry, AP 2010-0248):
The District also denied the Request as to the 1099’s stating that they do not exist.

However, the District did not provide the OOR with an affidavit made under penalty of perjury establishing that fact. As such, it has not provided sufficient factual support regarding the requested records to support a denial of access.

The District is required to provide the Requester with an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury that the requested1099’s do not exist in its custody, possession, or control.

FINAL DETERMINATION IN THE MATTER OF :
SUSAN COPPOLA
v.
FORT CHERRY SCHOOL DISTRICT
Docket No.: AP 2010-0248



A little more than a week later, Coppola received written notice that her request for the W-2 forms was also being denied because they are not considered "public records" under the law.
Sroka also explained that the W-2s contained personal financial information such as Social Security and employer identification numbers that were exempt from release.

The Right-to-Know Law specifically notes that all manner of financial records are public information. 
Information such as Social Security and employee identification numbers can easily be redacted using a black marker.  The district has eagerly redacted information on other RTK requests; there is no reason that information can’t be redacted from a W-2 form.

Coppola subsequently appealed the district's decision with the Office of Open Records.
The district responded by citing a 2009 Monroe County court decision that found an employee's W-2 form was protected from disclosure.
Despite the district's arguments, the open records office granted Coppola's request on April 21.

Fort Cherry cited a 2009 Monroe County court decision, but the district did not supply any legal support for its argument.
More from Coppola v Fort Cherry, AP 2010-0248:
The OOR has previously determined that W-2 tax forms are public record and
subject to release.  See Campbell vs. Berwick Area School District AP 2009-0212,
Campbell vs. Souderton OOR Dkt. 2009-0269, Zeldenrust vs. Pocono Mountain Sch. District OOR Dkt. 2009-0305, Campbell vs. Souderton Area School District OOR Dkt. 2009-0269, Campbell vs. Colonial School District OOR Dkt. 2009-0350, Campbell vs. Boyertown School District OOR Dkt. 2009-0230.

The legal analysis and holding in these Final Determinations are incorporated and adopted herein as OOR precedent.

While the District argues that the Monroe County Court of Common Pleas
decision should be binding precedent here, it supplies no legal support for such an argument. As the District is not located in Monroe County, the OOR is not bound by the Court’s decision in this appeal.

FINAL DETERMINATION IN THE MATTER OF :
SUSAN COPPOLA
v.
FORT CHERRY SCHOOL DISTRICT
Docket No.: AP 2010-0248

As stated in the synopsis of the Monroe Decision (full copy of synopsis at the end of the post), the Court was “constrained to find sufficient proof that this request relates in any way to the purpose of the RTKL, i.e. transparency of government”.
Fort Cherry based its argument on a case that does not relate in any way to the purpose of the Right-to-Know Law. 

The Court appears to have factored into its decision the purpose of Mr. Campbell’s request, belied by the fact that he requested the W-2 for only one named employee of the school district. “If instead of singling out one employee’s personal financial information, Requester would have legitimately sought information that would expose the business operations of Agency, this court may have ruled differently. After examining the record in this case, we are constrained to find sufficient proof that this request relates in any way to the purpose of the RKTL, i.e. transparency of government.”
 SYNOPSIS
Simon Campbell v. Pocono Mountain School District
Court of Common Pleas, Monroe County, No. 6384 CIVIL 2009


The district appealed the decision, but the office again found in Coppola's favor.

The district did not submit another appeal to the Office of Open Records; they submitted a “Petition for Reconsideration” which was denied.


The district then filed an appeal with Washington County Court, in which arguments were made that the open records office erred in its final decision not only because it snubbed the Monroe County Court decision but also because Coppola failed to appeal the initial denial within the 15-day deadline.


This appeal was filed with the Court of Common Pleas.  The “arguments” most likely appear in the brief that the solicitor filed with the Court on 11/29/10 as stated in his letter to Judge DiSalle (above).
As for the district’s claim that the Office of Open Records snubbed the Monroe Court Decision, keep this in mind:
1.     Fort Cherry failed to provide legal support for their argument.
2.     Fort Cherry is not located in Monroe County so the Office of Open Records is not bound by the Monroe Court’s decision.
3.     The Monroe Court did not release the requested W-2 because the purpose of the request was to single out one employee’s personal financial information.  But the Court may have ruled in favor of releasing the W-2s had the court found sufficient proof that the request related in any way to the purpose of the Right-to-Know Law, i.e. transparency of government.
And finally, the district’s argument that Ms. Coppola failed to appeal within the 15-day deadline is difficult to believe.  The Office of Open Records is very strict regarding deadlines and will not follow-up on an appeal if a deadline is missed.

So, now that Fort Cherry has lost its appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, will the public be privy to the actual salary paid to the Fort Cherry administrators?
Not just yet. . .
As in the Tribune Review right-to-know case (a link to the Trib case appears at the bottom of this post), the Fort Cherry School Board has given the solicitor permission to move the appeal to the next level, Commonwealth Court.
The Fort Cherry School Board approved expending our tax dollars to keep taxpayers in the dark.
The solicitor will be paid with our tax dollars.  Legal fees for right-to-know work are paid over and above the solicitor’s yearly retainer.
·       The district solicitor advises the board how to proceed in every right-to-know request, and the taxpayers pay for it.
·       When the district solicitor advises Fort Cherry to appeal a ruling from the Office of Open Records, the solicitor creates more business for himself, and the taxpayers pay for it.

Taxpayer money is used to pay the salaries and bonuses of the administration. 
The public has the RIGHT-TO-KNOW exactly how taxpayer money is spent.
Will the Fort Cherry School Board continue to approve the use of taxpayer money for legal appeals to conceal how the district is spending OUR PUBLIC FUNDS?

For more information on this topic and the Trib RTK case,







Friday, June 17, 2011

1998 - The Beginning of the End of Truth, Honor, and Integrity at Fort Cherry

“A man can't have his integrity taken from him, but he can sure give it away.”

May 2010 phone conversation with
Lieutenant Colonel (Retired) Ron Yelk  
Senior Army Instructor
Mattoon High School


New Brighton - 1997
September 1997:  Dinnen testified regarding his “experience in basic (K-12) schools”.  
That testimony will be reviewed by Secretary of Education, Eugene Hickok who will issue an adjudication of the case.
Hickok will take 6 months to issue the adjudication, enabling Dinnen to remain employed as a noncommissioned superintendent at New Brighton.

When he applied for his LOE and superintendent certificate, Dinnen did not have the required K-12 experience to be eligible for certification.

October 1997:  Dinnen is student teaching at Parkway West Technical School.
Dinnen states that he is student teaching “as part of his own professional development”.


Here are the thoughts of the New Brighton Education Association at that time:


More from the New Brighton Education Association:




February 1998:  Dinnen used the “professional development” he received student teaching at Parkway West Vo-Tech to apply to the PDE for a teaching certificate.  The PDE could not provide any documentation supporting the number of hours Dinnen spent student teaching.



February 1998:  The New Brighton School Board (with newly elected members) voted to stop paying Dinnen’s legal fees.
==================================================
BOARD WON'T PAY DISPUTE LEGAL FEES
--------------------------------------------------
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)-February 17, 1998
       The school board will no longer pay the legal fees of Superintendent Robert Dinnen in his ongoing dispute with the state Department of Education.
       Dinnen was promoted from business manager to acting superintendent in May 1996 and later was made superintendent. The Education Department issued Dinnen a superintendent's certificate in November 1996, but then withdrew it after raising questions about his educational experience.
       Dinnen is disputing the department's findings and the case is being reviewed by Education Secretary Eugene Hickock.
       The previous school board agreed to pay for Dinnen's legal fees, but the new board voted 6-2 to end that practice after meeting privately in an executive session last night.
       Voting against paying his legal fees were board President Lawrence Albanese and board members Edith Pavlinich, Edward LeDonne, Tina Shannon, Ralph Mason and Michael Smith. Voting to continue paying were board members Donna Fath and Walter Debo. Board member Sandra Ciccone was absent.
       Officials would not say last night how much the district had spent on Dinnen's case.
     Memo: NEW BRIGHTON SCHOOLSEdition: REGIONSection: LOCALPage: B-3Column: WEST NEIGHBORHOODS

March 25, 1998:  Fourteen months after the PDE originally asked for the LOE and certificate which were erroneously issued due to a clerical error be returned, Secretary of Education Eugene Hickok annulled Dinnen’s LOE and certificate in his adjudication.
·        On page 11, Dinnen is given credit for supervising the JROTC program at Mattoon.
To save space, only pages 1, 11-14, and final page of the adjudication are shown.








Two years credit for supervising the JROTC program at Mattoon?
As detailed in the last post, Mattoon replied to a FOIA request asking for verification of Dinnen’s oversight at Mattoon as follows:
Only individuals hired by the Mattoon Community Unit School District #2 Board of Education have oversight over any programs within the Mattoon School District.  Mattoon Community Unit School District #2 records and Board of  Education minutes indicate that Mr. Robert W. Dinnen has never been an employee of the Mattoon Community Unit School District #2; therefore, Mr. Dinnen has never served as the ROTC Commander for the Mattoon High School JROTC program or had any oversight over the Mattoon High School JROTC program.
FOIA Request Response
Mattoon Community Unit School District No. 2
April 12, 2011

“Furthermore, Lt. Col. Yelk responded to his letter dated on March 18, 1997, that Mr. Dinnen’s administrative and professional assistance to the Mattoon High School JROTC program pertained only to those activities related to formal JROTC inspections, occasional field exercise activities, and annual recruitment day activities while Mr. Dinnen was representing Eastern Illinois University. 
FOIA Request Response
Mattoon Community Unit School District No. 2
June 6, 2011

Beaver County Times, March 26, 1998:

March 1998:  A year after filing suit, which was paid for by the New Brighton taxpayers, Dinnen appealed his case to the PDE’s Certification Appeal Committee.  As stated previously, Dinnen was asked to go through the appeal process back in December of 1996 when the PDE first contacted him to ask for the return of his LOE and certificate.
By appealing, Dinnen was permitted to remain employed as a noncommissioned superintendent in New Brighton, while waiting for the PDE’s Certification Appeal Committee to hear his case.
May 1998:  Dinnen resigns from New Brighton.
==================================================
DINNEN RESIGNS AS SUPERINTENDENT
--------------------------------------------------
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)-May 19, 1998
       The school board last night accepted the resignation of Superintendent Robert Dinnen effective June 30.
       Dinnen was hired three years ago as business manager.
       He was later appointed acting superintendent when John Ross, the former superintendent, was suspended May 1, 1996.
       When Ross retired later that year, the school board promoted Dinnen to superintendent.
       The state Department of Education had issued a superintendent's certification to Dinnen, but later tried to annul the certificate, saying it had been issued in error.
       Department of Education officials said Dinnen's teaching experience did not meet state requirements for the certificate.
       He continued to fight to keep his certification while seeking to accumulate enough teaching hours to meet the state requirements.
       Dinnen would not comment last night on his resignation or his future plans.
       Also last night, board members approved a final $16.1 million budget for 1998-99 that will not increase real estate taxes.
       Millage will remain at 36 mills.
     Memo: NEW BRIGHTON SCHOOLSEdition: SOONERSection: LOCALPage: B-3Column: WEST NEIGHBORHOODS

May 18, 1998:  Dinnen is one of the candidates who appeared before the Fort Cherry School Board to interview for the position of Acting Superintendent.



Dinnen presented himself to the FC Board as a fully certified superintendent.
Dinnen did not divulge the following facts to the Fort Cherry School Board:
1.     Dinnen was NEVER commissioned as a superintendent due to the questions about his certification.
2.     Dinnen’s letter of eligibility and superintendent certificate were annulled by Hickok in the March 1998 adjudication.
3.     Dinnen’s certification was under appeal. 
Dinnen submitted this letter to the school board on the night of his interview:
·        In paragraph 4, Dinnen states, “over five years experience supervising a department in a higher education institution with oversight of a program in a public high school.”
·        In paragraph 5, Dinnen lists “Superintendent Certification” under his Educational credentials.

June 1, 1998:  Dinnen submitted this application letter to the Fort Cherry School Board.
·        In paragraph 2, Dinnen states, “I have a strong and diverse administrative and educational background having successfully served in the military, at the college level, and in K-12 public educational settings.”

·         Dinnen lists “Superintendent Certification” under “Certifications”, even though his LOE and certification had been annulled.


·        Dinnen gives himself an entire year of experience as an Accounting Instructor at Robert Morris College (1995-1996).  Dinnen’s time at RMU began in January 1996.  A letter attesting to his time at RMU is shown below.  Dinnen was working for the State of Indiana Commission for Higher Education until October of 1995.  In addition, in December of 1995, Dinnen was still attending Indiana State University in Terre Haute, Indiana.  A letter attesting to his employment with the Indiana Commission for Higher Education and his transcript from Indiana State shown below.



·        Dinnen states:  “Monitored and supervised JROTC Program at Mattoon Senior High School” under his duties as Professor of Military Science at Eastern Illinois University from 1989 to 1994.
·        The FOIA from Mattoon states:   “Mr. Dinnen has never served as the ROTC Commander for the Mattoon High School JROTC program or had any oversight over the Mattoon High School JROTC program.




·        Dinnen spent 6 months at RMU, not an entire year as stated on his resume.  It would be impossible to student teach at RMU prior to January of 1996 considering Dinnen was working for the Indiana Commission for Higher Education until October of 1995 and attending classes in Terre Haute, Indiana, until the fall semester ended on December 15, 1995.








Fort Cherry School District Policy #302 states:
Any candidate's misstatement of fact material to qualifications for employment or the determination of salary shall be considered by this Board to constitute grounds for dismissal.

Fort Cherry School District Policy No. 302
ADMINISTRATIVE EMPLOYEES
EMPLOYMENT OF SUPERINTENDENT/ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT
ADOPTED: March 27, 1995
http://fortcherry.schoolwires.net/fortcherry/lib/fortcherry/_shared/District_Policies/300_Administrative_Employees/302-Employ_of_Supt-Asst_Supt.1.pdf


The word shall is defined as:
§  indicating that something must happen or somebody is obliged to do something because of a rule or law
§  to be under obligation for
§  to be obliged; must

Every member of the Fort Cherry School Board has taken this oath of office.

Oath of Office:

School Director Oath of Office
24 PS 3-321

I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support, obey and defend the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of this Commonwealth, and that I will discharge the duties of my office with fidelity.

The Fort Cherry School Board has sworn to discharge the duties of the office, which includes upholding the policies of the school district.
The Fort Cherry School Board is OBLIGATED to uphold Policy #302:
Misstatement of fact material to qualifications for employment shall be considered to constitute grounds for dismissal.
The Fort Cherry School Board recently voted to furlough legally and truthfully certified teachers, while leaving the administration intact.

Will Truth, Honor, and Integrity ever return to Fort Cherry?

Believe it or not, there’s more. . . to be continued . . .