12 hours ago • http://www.stltoday.com/search/?l=50&sd=desc&s=start_time&f=html&byline=By%20Jessica%20BockAjbock%40post-dispatch.com314-340-8228 - By Jessica Bock
jbock@post-dispatch.com314-340-8228
For weeks, the reasons behind the dismissal of Hazelwood
schools Superintendent Steve Price have been somewhat of a mystery. And
an expensive one at that.
The Hazelwood School Board disclosed
Wednesday that the district will pay Price’s salary of $237,326 until he
finds another job or June 2014, when his contract ends. At the same
time, the board quickly promoted a new superintendent whose salary will
be $212,000 this year.
Yet board members have refused to disclose specific reasons for the termination, declaring it a confidential personnel matter.
But emails obtained by the Post-Dispatch through the state’s open records law offer clues about the departure.
Days
before Price’s dismissal, he faced questions from the School Board
about a surprising surplus of money in the budget, his leadership in the
wake of stagnant test scores and simmering tensions with staff.
According
to the emails, School Board member Desiree Whitlock had more than a
dozen issues she emailed Price about one week before his removal. She
wrote that she had received several calls, including one about rumors
that Price had told staff the board was trying to get rid of him.
“Teachers
and staff asked why are you threatening to fire them? They indicated
you have created a hostile work environment with your threats,” Whitlock
wrote in the email dated Aug. 24. “Staff that called me were tearful
and cried about this added stress of getting fired.” They said,
“Hazelwood is going to H--l under the current superintendent’s term.”
The newspaper requested emails between board members and Price for the month of August.
The emails reveal complaints and concerns brought up by Whitlock about the surplus money.
The
week after Price’s removal, district leaders told staff a $9 million
budget surplus would allow for an average 5 percent raise for teachers
and other employees. Price and board President Cheryl Latham discussed
the surplus on Aug. 28.
“I’d like for you and (Dwight Lindhorst)
to provide the Board with an update on what and how this happened,”
Latham wrote to Price on Aug. 28. “You should also be prepared to share
written corrective action plan/steps that will address this issue.”
Latham
and Price called an emergency board meeting for Aug. 30 to discuss the
money. The next day, Hazelwood announced Price’s removal.
“Are you
telling me there was more than adequate funds available to have given
staff raises?” Whitlock wrote in an email earlier that week when she
questioned Price about the money. “The staff and teachers were
correct!!!!!!!!!!!!! I want an EXPLANATION!!!!!!!! This Sucks!”
The
surplus stemmed from expenditures coming in 4 percent under budget for
the 2011-12 school year, and revenue higher. Officiials had planned for
32 percent of operating expenditures in the district’s fund balance, a
sort of savings account, but the actual balance at the end of the year
was 38 percent.
About $5.5 million will be spent on salary
increases for the 2013-14 school year, giving staff two steps on the
salary schedule. In July, the district and the Hazelwood Education
Association had agreed on a 1 percent increase, the same as the previous
year. Individual raises will depend on a teacher’s experience and
education.
The board dismissed Price as he began his third year
with the district. He was on paid administrative leave while attorneys
negotiated a contract settlement.
Grayling Tobias, previously
assistant superintendent of learning, took the interim position and then
was officially chosen as superintendent on Tuesday.
The
settlement means the district will effectively be paying for two
superintendents until Price finds another job, or June 2014, the end of
his contract signed by the board in May 2011.
Board members have referred questions to Latham. She said she cannot comment on what led to the board’s decision.
Latham
said that the board wants a narrow focus on student achievement and
that in the 10 weeks since Tobias has taken the lead, the district has
accomplished a “significant amount.”
“We believe that particular leadership change understands our community’s needs,” Latham said.
In
the Aug. 24 email to Price from Whitlock, one of the accusations was
that the superintendent did not care “about anybody but himself and is
trying to get a pension from the district on the backs of our kids and
teachers.” Price responded to her email the following Monday and said he
had also heard that rumor.
“It is simply not true,” said Price,
adding that he had moved his family here and his children were attending
school. “I don’t want to pick up and move, my family and I want this to
be our home for a long time.”
Whitlock did not return phone
messages about the email. Latham said Whitlock has an extensive
community network and has high expectations for the district.
“She
is a passionate advocate,” Latham said. “I don’t know that I can say
she was upset. I think that everyone on this board is very, very
protective of our community.”
Price had previously served as the
superintendent for seven years in Middletown City Schools, a district of
about 7,000 students in Ohio. He left Middletown after a separation
agreement in which he resigned two years before his contract expired.
He
was criticized there for student discipline problems and the cost and
effectiveness of a program on race and equity. In light of Price’s
departure, Hazelwood also is now scaling back its own program
integrating it into other staff training.
Price was hired in
Hazelwood for the 2010-11 school year on a three-year contract at an
annual salary of $235,000. He replaced Chris Nicastro, who left to
become Missouri’s education chief.
After the board’s decision, Price said he was “surprised and saddened” by the board’s actions.
“My
concern has always been, and continues to be, for the welfare and best
possible education for the students of the Hazelwood School District,”
he said in a statement issued through his attorney shortly after the
decision. “I continue to have the highest regard for the students,
parents, teachers, staff and administrative faculty of the district.”
He declined to comment this week.
Districtwide,
Hazelwood’s test scores in communication arts and math have been
relatively flat over the last two years, sitting below state averages.
In math, for example, about 39 percent of Hazelwood students passed in
2012, compared with 55 percent statewide.
Some parents say they feel refreshed with Tobias at the helm. But a few want a better understanding of what happened.
“I
don’t feel like a superintendent’s or principal’s removal should be
hush-hush,” said Holly Vaughn, a parent at Hazelwood West. “But at the
same time, we voted (the board) in to do the hiring for us.”
At a
meeting in October for residents to meet Tobias, Vaughn and a small
group listened to his focus on teaching and learning. “I want to let you
know we are not going to let you down,” Tobias told them.
“We are moving forward,” Tobias said in an interview. “I can’t afford to exert any energy on anything else.”