The township Board of Education is trying to fire the 16-year veteran teacher,
accusing her of poor supervision of students after two 5-year-olds
emerged from a classroom bathroom together in September and said they
had engaged in sex play.
Today’s hearing before a
state Department of Education arbitrator is not open to the public. The
arbitrator will have 45 days from the end of the hearing to release a
decision on whether Mascio can be fired that will be made public.
Mullica Township Education Association President Barbara Rheault will attend as union president, she said Tuesday.
Lawyers for Mascio, of
Mullica Township, and for the Board of Education will present their
evidence to the arbitrator, and interview and cross-examine witnesses,
said Vineland attorney Ned Rogovoy, who has represented teachers in such
hearings
.
.
It’s conducted much like a
court case, but since it operates under American Arbitration
Association labor rules and is held on private property rather than in a
courthouse, it is a private proceeding and members of the media cannot
attend, according to the DOE. However, the arbitrator’s detailed written
decision will be made public on the DOE website.
Administrative law judges
used to hear tenure charge cases, and the proceedings were then open to
the public, but the backlog in court meant the process took about 120
days and created burdens for all involved.
The state tenure reform
law TEACHNJ changed the process in 2012 to allow DOE arbitrators to
decide cases, Rogovoy said, which has shortened the time required to go
through the process to closer to 90 days.
“The burden of proof is
still the same — it’s on the district trying to take tenure away from
the respondent teacher,” he said. “They have to ... tip the scale in
their favor. “
The arbitrator can also
recommend lesser consequences for Mascio than firing, such as suspension
or giving up a pay increase; or can recommend that she be reinstated
with full back pay.
In the past,
administrative law judge decisions could be appealed to the commissioner
of education, then to Appellate Court, Rogovoy said. Now appeals go to
Superior Court of New Jersey, but generally only cases of fraud or clear
mistakes have a chance.
“The burden is huge to
overturn an arbitration decision,” he said, adding there is also no
court reporter present to create a written transcript unless one of the
parties pays for it.
Rogovoy said arbitrators
are paid $1,200 a day, with a maximum for each case at a total of
$7,500, which would cover about six days of prep, hearing and writing.
“A case that involves
inefficiency can go for a long time — you might have to review a whole
year’s paperwork,” Rogovoy said. “Others like this one only have to do
with one incident. That shouldn’t take that long.”
Neither Mascio’s lawyer
Michael Damm, of Selikoff & Cohen in Mount Laurel, Burlington
County, nor Board of Education attorney Will Donio, of Cooper Levenson
in Atlantic City, returned calls for comment.
Mascio has been suspended
since the September 30 incident, first with pay and then without pay
after tenure charges were certified by the Board of Education and sent
to the state in late February. Her treatment by the board and
Superintendent Brenda Harring-Marro has sparked protests by township
teachers and parents, who have argued firing her is too harsh.
About 93 percent of about
100 teachers in the district voted no-confidence in Harring-Marro in
March. In April a group of teachers and parents delivered a petition
to the Board of Education, with about 720 township residents’
signatures, asking that Mascio be reinstated and Harring-Marro’s
contract not be renewed. Later some signers said they thought they were
only signing a petition in support of Mascio.
At the April 25 school
board meeting, members of the board spoke publicly in favor of
Harring-Marro’s leadership, making it clear they would not try to sever
Harring-Marro’s employment with the district.
At that meeting the board
also announced it was ending the job of Elementary School Principal
Jeanine Middleton as a cost-cutting move, and giving the job of
principal for both schools to Middle School Principal Matthew Mazzoni.
Mazzoni is the person who
filed an incorrect police report in September, stating the children
involved in sexual play in Mascio's classroom were naked when found by
Mascio, when in fact they were fully clothed. News reports relied on the
police report and included the incorrect information until the tenure
charges were made public at a Feb. 26 board meeting, and it was clear
the police report was wrong.
http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/breaking/tenure-hearing-begins-wednesday-for-mullica-kindergarten-teacher/article_ef4d4016-d566-11e3-a00a-001a4bcf887a.html
http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/breaking/tenure-hearing-begins-wednesday-for-mullica-kindergarten-teacher/article_ef4d4016-d566-11e3-a00a-001a4bcf887a.html
5 comments:
We have lost our school to the inept Board, incompetent Superintendent and the new principal who falsified a police report - regardless of the arbitrators decision in the Mascio case. What was once a source of pride for our town has now been destroyed. It just illustrates the importance of leadership. In this debacle, with no leadership or integrity at the Board level, the principal or with the superintendent, this is what happens.
Dear Anonymous, your comments on the super's lack of leadership and integrity are very accurate. However, please know that the NEW principal did not file a false police report. The new principal, Ms Middleton, is exactly what Ms Marro and Mr Mazzoni are not - Middleton is respected in the school community as a leader. It was Mazzoni who filed the false report. What does he get for lying to our own police dept? PROMOTED!!! What does Middleton get for her professionalism and honesty? FIRED!!! The super and BOE are setting wonderful examples for our children, aren't they?
12:57PM, The NEW Principal of the Whole School is who 9:37pm is referring to. That is Mazzoni. There will be no peace until Marro and Mazzoni are gone. Trust has been broken.
The arbitrator has 45 days from the end of the hearing to release a decision. This mess could drag on until the end of June.
Tomorrow is the second day of the arbitration.
Post a Comment