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May 1, 2013

Good Georgia Education Lawyer Resolves Former Fulton County School District Employee's Dispute



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A Fulton County school district former employee resolved their dispute today with the school district. Williams Oinonen LLC was gratified to be able to represent our client and obtain a successful outcome. Said our client:

"Julie Oinonen became a driving force that fought for my rights and maximum protection under the fullest extent of the law. She was a glimmer of hope in a time of desperation, and a voice of relief in a complicated predicament. She worked with me to provide services that fit my budget, and kept me informed every step of the way. I am truly grateful for all that she has done to protect my career and to preserve my future. Thank you, Julie!!!"


April 30, 2013

Petition To Charter Committee of the State Board of Education Concerning Breach of Floyd County Charter Agreement



Today's front page headline in the Rome Tribune:
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Gilda Day Petition by julie9094

April 2, 2013

Floyd County School Government Seeks To Infringe on Educators Constitutional Right to Due Process, Fair Dismissal Hearings



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The Rome Tribune featured in the news today that Williams Oinonen LLC filed suit yesterday on behalf of one of the many Floyd County school educator clients, issuing the following statement:

"Not only is the Floyd County School government breaching the charter agreement by violating the people of Floyd County's right to local self-governance by excluding parents, principals, and community leaders who make up the Local Governance Councils in their decision to RIF, but now the local government is depriving Floyd County educators of their constitutional and civil rights. The government is prohibited from depriving life, liberty or property without due process of law, but is now doing exactly that by attacking Floyd County educators right to a fair hearing that is required under the charter agreement, Floyd County Board of Education policy, Georgia state law, and the Constitution.

They are denying Ms. Day the right to obtain the Georgia open records act requests prior to her fair dismissal hearing and are failing to provide both the evidence to be used against her and the blank subpoenas that she is legally entitled to under both Georgia law (the Fair Dismissal Act) and the Constitution. We are asking the Court to order that the local government stop infringing on the constitutional rights of Floyd County educators and comply with Georgia law by ordering them to produce the Open Records Requests, other evidence, and blank subpoenas that she and other Floyd County educators are legally entitled to obtain prior to their due process hearing."

Most troubling, the Superintendent and Board through their attorney is now stating that it does not believe it is required to comply with the Fair Dismissal Act if it doesn't want to, that it can take away tenured educators right to a fair dismissal. This was not the intent of the charter. This was not the intent of the former Superintendent Plunkett, who sought to insure the rights of Floyd County educators were protected.

Under Georgia law and the Board of Education policy, educators are entitled to have a fair dismissal hearing, regardless of whether the district is a charter system or not. The Floyd County community is urged to contact their local school board of education member and demand that they comply with the Georgia Fair Dismissal Act and do not seek to erode the constitutional rights of Floyd County educators to due process by denying them their right to a fair dismissal hearing..

Said Ms. Oinonen: "Just because there is a charter system in place, doesn't mean that the local government doesn't have to follow the Constitution."

February 25, 2013

Governor Nathan Deal Suspends Six DeKalb County School Board of Education Members



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Governor Nathan Deal announced today that he was suspending six of DeKalb County school board members. Deal stated that he has appointed a panel to nominate replacements and selected Brad Bryant, a former school board member of DeKalb, to be the liaison.

This decision was based on the recommendation of the State Board of Education. SACS accreditation agency had put the District on probation in December due to a host of governance problems.

For more information, you can read Governor Nathan Deal's official statement here.

A federal district hearing this Friday is pending on the matter as the Board has filed suit in an effort to stop the Governor's decision.

February 20, 2013

Good Georgia Education Lawyer Sues DeKalb County School Board



Williams Oinonen LLC filed suit today on behalf of our client Ms. Denise Davis, a courageous whistleblower and former DeKalb County School District Human Resources Administrator who contends that the DeKalb County Schools unlawfully RIF'd DeKalb County educators throughout the District by failing to comply with the Georgia Reduction in Force statute O.C.G.A. § 20-2-948 and their own District policy.

Specifically, she alleges in her complaint that they circumvented the RIF requirement to consider job performance as the primary factor by eliminating entire positions, then creating new titles that were in effect the same jobs that had been eliminated but were now simply under a different name upon which they selected new hires based on favoritism, friendship, or familial status.

Unfortunately, the District continues to deny Ms. Davis' lawful request for a hearing before the DeKalb County Board of Education so that she may avoid expensive and costly litigation to the DeKalb taxpayers and to herself forcing her to file this lawsuit.

Tomorrow the DeKalb County Board of Education has a hearing before the State Board of Education to determine whether a recommendation will be made to the Governor to remove them from office.

February 7, 2013

DeKalb County School District Superintendent Cheryl Atkinson Resigns Amid Controversy



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Superintendent Cheryl Atkinson just resigned as Superintendent amid much controversy.

The AJC reports on her resignation stating that the District is currently on probation after SACS the accreditation agency found evidence of fiscal mismanagement and unethical practices.

The recent lawsuit against her was dismissed after our client who had been non-renewed due to a reduction in force was rehired by the District.

Williams Oinonen LLC is committed to protecting the rights of educators, students, and families throughout DeKalb County School District and Georgia.

December 16, 2012

Senator Emmanuel Jones Discusses Lawsuit Against DeKalb County School District



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Concerning the recent lawsuit against DeKalb County School District, Senator Emanuel Jones, leader of the DeKalb's Senate delegation commented on his concerns about the school district's failure to respond to open records requests: "When they're not responding, it just begs the question as to, 'What are they hiding? What are they covering up?'" he says, "And it's going to lead to more questions and it's going to lead to more concerns from the public and all the other stakeholders."

The AJC featured the story here and WSBTV's Erica Byfield interviewed Senator Jones on the evening news in a piece that can be read here entitled "Lawsuit Raises Concerns About DeKalb Schools Corruption" The video can be seen here.

The news story quoted our law firm attorneys stating:

"Our law firm was informed that the Superintendent did not want the text messages to go public and that as a result she was willing to offer Ms. Gipson and up to 11 of our clients their jobs back, not just for this year but also a guaranteed contract for next year as well in exchange for us withdrawing the open records demand for her text messages. We accepted in writing the offer that had been sent to us by the Chief Legal Officer of DeKalb County School District Senator Ronald Ramsey on the Superintendent's behalf.

For the Superintendent's high priced law firm paid by the taxpayers to claim no text messages is absolutely preposterous. For the school district to have backtracked out of this agreement violates our RIF'd clients rights. We received a tip in August that relevant evidence was located in those text messages and over the past several months our law firm, Senator Emmanuel Jones and the news media have demanded these text messages. We call upon our leadership to stop this cover up and comply with Georgia law."

December 15, 2012

Good Georgia Education Lawyer Sues DeKalb County School District and Superintendent Cheryl Atkinson



Good Georgia Education Lawyer sued Superintendent Cheryl Atkinson and DeKalb County School District on behalf of our client for violations of the Open Records Act in relation to a fair dismissal hearing where a graduation coach was non-renewed due to a reduction in force.

The complaint alleged that Defendant Superintendent Cheryl Atkinson thwarted the Georgia Open Records Act by withholding the production of public documents: text messages contained within her DeKalb County School District issued cellular phone. The complaint also alleged that the Superintendent made representations that she would be willing to offer Plaintiff a job and 11 (eleven) other of Plaintiff counsel's clients who had been "RIF'd" (laid off due to a reduction in force) in exchange for Plaintiff being willing to withdraw her Georgia Open Records Act demand for the Superintendent's text messages.

As a "tenured" Georgia educator, the complaint alleged that the Plaintiff is subject to rights under the Fair Dismissal Act O.C.G.A. § 20-2-940 which provide her with the opportunity to be heard and to present evidence in a non-renewal hearing in front of a tribunal. Her due process rights are alleged to have been violated by a failure to disclose evidence and information concerning these factual allegations that are being withheld deliberately and without substantial justification by DeKalb County School District and the Superintendent.

The Plaintiff further contended that the school district unlawfully engaged in a pattern and practice of systematically and pervasively violating Georgia law O.C.G.A. § 20-2-948, through an arbitrary and capricious implementation of the Reduction in Force in violation of DeKalb County School District employees' rights.

September 29, 2012

Good Georgia Education Employment Lawyer Saves Clayton County Public School Teacher's Job



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Good Georgia Lawyer was pleased to save the job of a Clayton County Public School teacher who had his contract non-renewed. Fortunately, we were able to aggressively intervene and the school system rescinded the non-renewal of the teacher, placing him back into the school system and awarding him all his retroactive back pay.

Said this teacher:

"My family appreciates your hard work and dedication to the case. You have brought so much joy and dignity back to our household and professional life. You worked hard and gave it your all to bring justice to our case. As a result, many will gain because you made it okay to fight for what is right!

When we went into education, we never thought we would have a battle as this one. Yet, we grew professionally and learned quite a bit. We will always hold your name, Julie, up in our prayers and meditations because without your efforts we would be lost.

Please continue your hard work. I will always reference you to any other teacher needing legal advice and help.

Thank You! Thank You! Thank You!"

Good Georgia Lawyer is proud to represent Georgia educators throughout our state. We are not afraid of suing school districts and fight hard to protect the rights of teachers, administrators, parents, and students who go up against these mammoth governmental entities who pay their law firms millions of dollars to fight disputes. Williams Oinonen LLC is proud to say that we do not represent school districts---only educators and the families they teach. We are also proud to be a Georgia Association of Educators referral firm.

If you are a teacher with a problem during the school year do not wait till you get a non-renewal letter down the road. If you receive a PDP or letter of directive, the time to act is NOW rather than later to save your job and protect your interests. If you are looking for aggressive fighter on your side, contact us to insure your legal rights are protected.

September 5, 2012

Good Georgia Employment Lawyer Saves University System of Georgia Employee's Job



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Good Georgia Lawyer was pleased to save the job of a university administrator who worked for a college within the University System of Georgia. The University System of Georgia is the third largest university system in the United States and enrolls more than 310,000 students, employs more than 40,000 faculty and staff, and the combined annual operating budgets of all 35 institutions is over $6 billion.

Our client was a university professional who had a long history of working within the university system and had been wrongfully terminated. Fortunately, Williams Oinonen LLC was able to intervene and the university system rescinded the termination, placing him back into his position.

Stated our client:

"I am writing to express my sincere thanks to Williams Oinonen LLC with the help they gave me with my employment law case. At the beginning of the process, the firm informed me of all of the legal remedies available. The firm took time to research my issue and developed a plan of action that would be acceptable. The firm communicated with the opposing party on my behalf, and they were strong advocates of my position. When communicating with the opposing party, Julie Oinonen remained firm but reasonable. Julie's knowledge of the law and strategic decisions lead to a favorable decision in my case. I cannot thank her enough."

If you have an employment matter, contact Williams Oinonen LLC. Georgia is an "at will" employment state meaning that if you have a problem at work, the time to contact an attorney is sooner rather then later, i.e. while you still have a job. Legal intervention, even if it is "behind the scenes" can assist you in keeping the job you have and protect your legal interests.

Contact us today to discuss your rights under Georgia law.

August 20, 2012

Good Georgia Education Lawyer Reverses Reduction In Force Part Two:



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Williams Oinonen LLC was very gratified with the courage the Tribunal showed in making the right decision to reject Superintendent Cheryl Atkinson's recommendation to terminate the contract of an educator in DeKalb County School District through a reduction in force.

While the educator ended up accepting a very attractive offer at a nearby school district so the Tribunal's decision did not end up having to be ruled on by the Board, Ms. Oinonen hopes that the DeKalb County Board of Education will take note as to how the Reduction in Force is being applied, ask the right questions and demand accountability from the Superintendent in the future.

Regarding Ms. Oinonen's legal representation, Mr. Lynch stated:

"She won a RIF hearing for me. That says it all. I cannot recommend Julie enough. She is passionately intense and sincerely dedicated to securing the interests of her client. But, most importantly, she achieved a singular and, in my opinion, far reaching success when she won my RIF hearing, a very difficult thing to do. I would not hesitate to recommend her for any educator in a similar situation."


August 19, 2012

Good Georgia Lawyer Wins Reduction In Force Hearing, Successfully Argues DeKalb County School District Illegally Implementing RIF Plan and Violating Georgia Law (Part One):



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In a recent Fair Dismissal Hearing, the Tribunal published its "Findings of Fact and Recommendations to the DeKalb County Board of Education" stating that it "rejects the recommendation to terminate the contract" of a media specialist educator based upon the Reduction in Force plan.

Ms. Oinonen successfully argued that Dekalb County School District's (DCSD's) implementation of the Reduction in Force (RIF) plan is illegal and a violation of the new law, OCGA 20-2-948. This legislation, recently enacted in May 2012 holds it illegal to consider length of service as the primary factor in a RIF. Rather school districts must consider "performance of the educator" as the primary factor in implementing a reduction in force.

Ms. Oinonen argued that this is exactly what DCSD is violating although they denied it--- using a seniority "first in last out system" by claiming that everyone is equal because everyone supposedly has an "overall" satisfactory performance evaluation.

However, under cross examination, the Chief Human Resources officer admitted that DCSD retained people who currently have "Needs Improvements" on their evaluations and who had been on Professional Development Plans ("PDPs") compared to our client with a perfect record.

The Tribunal agreed with Ms. Oinonen's argument and stated in their findings that they "believed that job performance was not fully and properly investigated to differentiate between employees." Additionally, the Tribunal stated the following:

"[T]he Superintendent failed to properly evaluate the final 13 Media Specialists concerning performance, but instead found these 13 to be `equal on performance based solely on an annual evaluation of "satisfactory" without any further review and investigation of these employees. The Tribunal believes it is crucial to further evaluate these employees to weigh and quantify them on performance standards. Failure to do so disregards the intent of OC.G.A. § 20-2-948 which requires the Board to consider performance as the primary factor in implementing a RIF action. Accepting only the annual evaluation of "satisfactory " fails to even minimally comply with this requirement and limits the ability of the District to maintain quality personnel."

The following are two brief excerpts of the cross examination of Dr. Ward Smith, Chief Human Resources Officer during the tribunal hearing and Ms. Oinonen's closing argument:

Excerpt of the Cross Examination of Dr. Ward Smith:

Q. Okay. Now, reminding you that you're under oath, Dr. Ward-Smith, I'd like to ask you would you admit to me that there are some media specialists currently still employed with DeKalb County that have actually been on a PDP at one point in their career?

A. Yes, one point in their career. That is the key phrase.

Q. And would you agree with me that there are some media specialists currently employed with DeKalb County School District that have been on a PDP while as employees of the School District, DeKalb County?

A. I just answered it. Yes.

Q. Well, let me clarify just for the point of the record. I earlier asked would you agree with me that there are currently some media specialists that are still employed with your School District who have been over the course of their entire career in the United States of America have been on a PDP. And I believe you answered yes, correct?

A. Yes. Uh-huh (affirmative).

Q. And now, my second question, just to clarify: Would you also agree with me that there are still media specialists that are going to go back to work this fall who have also been on a PDP while under the auspices of employment within the DeKalb County School District?

A. Yes.

Q. Would you agree with me that Mr. Lynch has never been on a PDP at DeKalb County School District?

A. I cannot confirm, but I would say I don't have information in front of me.

Q. Okay. You don't have the information -- you're saying today under oath that you have no idea whether Mr. Lynch has ever been on a PDP?

A. I'm saying I did not have a PDP for Mr. Lynch.

Q. Okay. And you are also saying, and, again, I'm not trying to be difficult, I just want to understand for the purpose of advocating for my client that you are stating under oath today that you have no knowledge whether he's ever been on a PDP before in his life?

A. I am saying I did not have a PDP for Mr. Lynch.

Q. You don't have one today or you don't --

A. I do not have one --

Q. -- have knowledge?

A. I don't have knowledge of a PDP for Mr. Lynch.

Q. Okay. Thank you. Would you admit, Dr. Ward-Smith, that there are some media specialists that are currently still employed with your School District who have received an NI, needs improvement, on their annual performance evaluations at one point during their career over the past year at DeKalb County School District?

A. Yes, ma'am.

Q. Okay. So there are actually media specialists going back to work this fall who have an NI on their annual performance evaluations?

A. I would say yes, there are.

Q. Okay. And you know that Mr. Lynch has never gotten an NI at DeKalb County School District?

A. Over the last three years, the annual evaluation overall ratings that we reviewed -- and like I say, I can't answer that. But at that particular point, I have no knowledge of Mr. Lynch having an NI.

Q. Okay.

A. Over the last three years.

Q. Do you have any knowledge of Mr. Lynch's annual performance evaluation, period?

A. Yes, ma'am. I have knowledge that it was overall satisfactory.

Q. Okay. Now, let's go back to this RIF evaluation that's now required by Georgia law since May of 2012, regarding considering the primary factor the performance of the educator. So I'd like to talk about this. Now, I think you've already admitted that media specialists -- there's media specialists that are still employed at DeKalb who don't have dual certifications like Mr. Lynch and who have been on Needs Improvement, unlike Mr. Lynch, and who have been on PDPs, unlike Mr. Lynch. So I want to ask you how many media specialists, to your know- -- media specialists, it's like a librarian, right?

A. Library media specialist. Yes, ma'am.

Q. Okay. Okay. So how many library media specialists, to your knowledge, have a 4.0 masters degree in Library Information Sciences?

A. I'm not aware.

Q. Okay. Would you agree that certainly there's probably just a small percentage of them out of the whole 130 folks that you evaluated?

A. I'm not aware of an exact number.

Q. So you don't have that data today that you can show us whether --

A. I do not.

Short Excerpt of Ms. Oinonen's Closing Argument:

"We're 85 million dollars in deficit. But at least, let's do it right. We have enough problems in DeKalb County than screwing up this whole thing and not even complying with Georgia law, and for goodness sake, our own policy, our own policy that our Superintendent and our School Board approved, which states: "The criteria and the evaluation is to be based on professional expertise and certification and performance based upon annual evaluation and seniority only after the aforementioned factors have been considered and found to be equal." That's in addition to the requirement of the law.

And that's why you must reverse this RIF, because they're violating Georgia law. They are not following RIF statute, they are not following their own RIF policy.
But, again, they have the burden of proof to prove that they are. And what did they prove? Did they show us this magical database that I was stammering over when I was trying to think of Dr. Fletcher's excellent question about the rubric? Did they even bring one personnel file to show about these 13 people that were RIF'd? Not once did they present any kind of statistical analysis, did they show us the percentages or any type of formula based on number of satisfactory evaluations to unsatisfactory? No, they didn't do any of that.

But I tell you what they did do. They showed you that something really screwed up is going on. And I say this respectfully, because I think these are all nice people. But why? I can't testify, but I represent educators. And I know what goes on. Why are they keeping people that are on PDP? We all know what that means. Why are keeping people that have a bunch of NI's? You heard her testifying under oath that the people that they kept that didn't RIF, the media specialists, the 130 people that they all said were equal or, you know, were all satisfactory, why were they keeping people that are on current Professional Development Plans or receiving NI rankings and RIFing the people that have absolutely satisfactory evaluations?

This stinks to high Heaven. Something is going on. And it's up to you all to address this issue and to let them know that we understand we're in deficit. We understand we have to RIF people, and it's difficult and it's hard decisions. But when we're going to make these hard decisions, my God, at least let's make them right so they don't end up getting reversed and we end up being in a deeper hole. Let's at least follow our own policy, and let's do it as educators.

We're educators. My God. We've trained on how to do these things. I mean, isn't that what we taught constantly as educators, about learning assessments and evaluations, and we can't even evaluate our own properly? There's something that's going on here. And I'm asking you today to address it and nip this in the bud, because if they're doing this to media specialists, then what are they going to do with the teachers?

Think about that when that comes down the pipe, when 250 teachers get passed, and the Board recommends that they're laid off. Is this how they're going to evaluate? If you don't say something now, they're going to do it to all the teachers in the DeKalb County School District. They're going to RIF the people with satisfactory evaluations, and they're going to keep the people on PDP and with NI's in their record. And what outcome for results is that going to be to the children of DeKalb County? Think about that.

The School District failed to meet their burden of proof. I did not see one chart. I did not see one graph. I did not see one personnel file, which by the way, is subject to the Opens Records Act, and if they were concerned about confidentiality, they could have redacted some names. I didn't see any of that. I didn't see anything, anything, not one single document that really analyzed the criteria according to who should be RIF'd and who shouldn't.

All I heard was Dr. Ward-Smith say a quote that I wrote down to be sure I quoted. She used four words, all things are equal. No, they're not. They're not. They're not following. They're not doing what they're supposed to do. They're not complying with RIF policy, and they're not complying with Georgia law.

I'm not asking you to please play favorites on Mr. Lynch. I'm asking you to do the right thing. I'm asking you to do the right thing that he is afforded as a Georgia educator under O.C.G.A. 20-2-940, and I'm asking you to do the right thing regarding Georgia law concerning the reduction in force and concerning our own School District policy.
You've seen his résumé. And you all know whether this is average or not, a 4.0 Master's degree, Honor's Dean List from UGA, Community Service, Obama Organizing Fellow, English Honor's Society Member, Delta Epsilon Iota Honor's Society Member, UGA Honor's Program Member.

The only reason I -- the only thing that I didn't do that I probably should, I mean, I should have asked Mr. Lynch how much he loves teaching. But I didn't talk about -- I didn't ask him about how much he loved the students. So I can't really go into that, because I didn't present it as evidence, and I wish I had.

But I'm asking you to reverse his RIF. I know it's a big thing, but it's the right thing to do. And if it doesn't get done, and if we just rubber stamp this decision, mark my word, they're not going to just do it to Mr. Lynch, they're going to do it to every teacher. Mark my words, you're going to send a message today. And I just ask you to send the right one. And I ask you sincerely to think carefully what I said and to review all the evidence, and to reverse Mr. Lynch's reduction in force and termination."

July 15, 2012

Good Georgia Lawyer Saves Educator's Job, Reverses Non-Renewal:



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Good Georgia Lawyer was pleased to save an Assistant Principal's job in one of the largest school district's in Georgia.

Regarding Julie Oinonen, attorney at Williams Oinonen LLC, the Assistant Principal stated the following:

"First and foremost Julie was honest & attentive with me from our first meeting concerning my case. In addition, she was easily accessible by phone or e-mail throughout the duration of my case. She is a true professional. In the end, she protected my name, reputation, and secured my contract for the upcoming school year. Thanks!!!"

Good Georgia Lawyer handles all types of education and employment cases representing teachers, administrators, students and parents. We are Georgia Association of Educators (GAE) and National Educators Association (NEA) referring attorneys.

If you are an educator who is placed on a PDP or is experiencing difficulty from your supervisor, the time to seek legal counsel is sooner rather then later in order to protect your job. Seeing an attorney before you are terminated, demoted, or suspended can be key to helping you best insure your legal interests in order to protect your job.

For more information on resolving a dispute concerning education or employment, contact Williams Oinonen LLC at 404-654-0288.

April 5, 2012

Good Georgia Education & Employment Lawyer Needed During Non-Renewal of Teacher Contracts, PDP's, and Terminations:



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It's that time of year again, when sadly, many good teachers start to worry whether their principal or school administrator will issue them a non-renewal letter regarding their teaching contract. This can often happen if the teacher has been previously placed on a Professional Development Plan, or "PDP."

One of the biggest way principals or school districts lay the groundwork in order to try and fire a tenured teacher is by putting them on a PDP early on in the school year. Laying the "paper trail" even when the accusations against the teachers are not legitimate, is the most effective legal strategy that school districts use to try and ensure that future adverse employment action against the teacher is deemed legal and fair.

One administrator estimates that 50% of the teachers placed on a Professional Development Plan ("PDP") are successful in completing it. School administrators know this 'game' when they place the teacher on a PDP. Oftentimes the end purpose is not to improve the teacher's performance, but rather simply to have legal justification for firing the tenured teacher down the road. To do this successfully, some teachers end up being set up for failure by being placed in a no-win situation.

If you are a tenured teacher who has been placed on a PDP, it is vital that you immediately seek competent, legal counsel in order to begin to fight the one-sided paper trail that will be used to justify non-renewal of your teaching contract from day one.

It is also important to educate yourself on your legal rights as a Georgia teacher. For example, if a school board terminates, suspends, or demotes a teacher in the middle of a contract year, the teacher has a right to be represented by counsel during a hearing - even if the teacher is not tenured (O.C.G.A. 20-2-940). If a school board attempts to non-renew a tenured teacher's contract, the teacher again has a right to a non-renewal hearing. (O.C.G.A. 20-2-942).

Good Georgia Lawyer has written about the rights of teachers relating to employment termination and contract non renewal which we recommend you read here and here.

The important thing is to act sooner rather than later if you are a teacher facing a potential adverse employment action. All too often, human beings procrastinate rather than dealing with the scary things in life that we don't want to have to face such as the loss of a job in this difficult economy. As a result, clients are oftentimes calling us after the fact rather then early on when it is much easier to help them.

Don't end up in a case of too little, too late. The sooner an attorney is on your side, the better the chance your employment as a teacher in a challenging work environment will have a successful outcome.

Continue reading "Good Georgia Education & Employment Lawyer Needed During Non-Renewal of Teacher Contracts, PDP's, and Terminations:" »

March 6, 2012

Good Georgia Lawyer Discusses Paula Deen Lawsuit For Racial Discrimination, Use of the N-Word, Sexual Harassment of Employees



Paula Deen, her brother, and her companies have been sued for racial discrimination, assault, battery, sexual harassment, amongst other unlawful, humiliating conduct practiced upon their employees. Ms. Lisa T. Jackson is the plaintiff in this matter and the former general manager at one of Paula's restaurants. Ms. Jackson worked for Paula Deen from approximately 2005 to 2010.

Hired to do "a man's job:"
Paula Deen put her in the position of general manager to clean up her brother Bubba's failing restaurant which was called "Uncle Bubba's." At that time, the complaint alleges that Paul Deen stated, "if you think I have worked this hard to lose everything because of a piece of p***y think again. . . And now I am going to do something I have never done. I am going to put a woman in a man's job" giving Ms. Jackson six months to turn the restaurant around.

Called "my little Jew girl:"
The complaint alleges that in six months, Ms. Deen's directive was accomplished and as a result she was called "my little Jew girl" by Paula's brother and "almost Jewish" by their Certified Public Accountant (CPA). As general manager, Ms. Jackson alleges that in spite of her accomplishments, she was not paid a salary equal to her male counterparts and was told by the CPA that "women are stupid because they think they can work and have babies and get everything done" and that Paula's brother Bubba "would not permit a woman to be paid any more than she was already paid."

Ms. Jackson stated that she and her employees were subjected to oppressive sexual and racial harassment including being subjected to inescapable pornography that brother Bubba brought into her office every single day.

Sexual Harassment:
The complaint alleges that Paula Deen's brother Bubba would ask Ms. Jackson if she would bring pictures of when she was young for him to view, would comment on her physical appearance, comment on other female employees physical appearance, and regularly made abusive comments that included talking about men putting beer on top of a woman's head while "she is giving you a blowjob." Ms. Jackson also alleges that Paula Deen's brother Bubba Hiers forcibly and unlawfully grabbed her face, kissing her and spitting upon her.

Racial Discrimination Including Use of the N-Word:
Ms. Jackson (who is Caucasian) alleges in her complaint that both Paula Deen and her brother Bubba Hiers also subjected her to racially discriminatory conduct every single day. For example, the complaint Ms. Jackson states that when she asked Paula Deen what type of uniforms she preferred the servers to wear, Paula Deen responded by stating:

"Well what I would really like is a bunch of little n*ggers to wear long sleeve white shirts, black shorts and black bow ties, you know in the Shirley Temple days, they used to tap dance around. . .Now that would be a true southern wedding wouldn't it? But we can't do that because the media would be on me about that." laughed Paula Deen to Ms. Jackson.

Keeping Blacks in the Back:
Ms. Jackson states in her complaint that all African American staff persons at her restaurant were required to use one restroom in the back of the restaurant and not the customer restrooms even though the white staff were allowed to. Additionally, she alleges that African American staff persons were not allowed to go to the front of the restaurant and that when Ms. Jackson hired two African American hostesses, Paula's brother Bubba Hiers repeatedly complained. Ms. Jackson also alleges that Bubba would start drinking whiskey at approximately upon 10:00 a.m. where he began his day of drinking and abusive behavior.

"Don't You Wish You Could Rub All The Black Off of You And Be Like Me?":
The complaint alleges many of Bubba's abuse including stating: "I wish I could put all those n*ggers [in the kitchen] on a boat to Africa;" that he told a black security guard: "don't you wish you could rub all the black off of you and be like me. . you just look dirty I bet you wish you could;" told a vendor that he had a "bunch of coons in this kitchen," told jokes using the word n*gger in the presence of others, physically and violently shook an African American kitchen staff person and challenged other black kitchen workers to fight him.

After five years of being subjected to Bubba Hier's abusive violent conduct Ms. Jackson states she began developing enormous stress which caused her chest pains, panic attacks and later serious medical consequences which made her doctor insist she stay away from work and request that he admit her to the hospital. The complaint allege that she made pleas for relief to senior management reporting the discriminatory conditions and abusive treatment she confronted.

Ms. Jackson is asking that the Court permanently enjoin Paula Deen, her brother, and her companies from further unlawful conduct including awarding her damages and attorney fees.

To view the actual complaint, click here: Jackson v. Deen, et al. Complaint(1).pdf

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