09-002270TTS
Manatee County School Board vs.
Stephanie Waiters
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Monday, February 1, 2010.
Recommended Order on Monday, February 1, 2010.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8MANATEE COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD, )
13)
14Petitioner, )
16)
17vs. ) Case No. 09-2270
22)
23STEPHANIE WAITERS, )
26)
27Respondent. )
29)
30RECOMMENDED ORDER
32Pursuant to notice, a formal hearing was held in this case
43on September 10 and 11, 2009, in Bradenton, Florida, before
53Lawrence P. Stevenson, the designated Administrative Law Judge
61of the Division of Administrative Hearings.
67APPEARANCES
68For Petitioner: Erin G. Jackson, Esquire
74Thompson, Sizemore, Gonzalez &
78Hearing, P.A.
80201 North Franklin Street, Suite 1600
86Tampa, Florida 33602-5246
89For Respondent: Adam Tebrugge, Esquire
942337 Ixora Avenue
97Sarasota, Florida 34234
100STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
104The issue is whether Petitioner, the Manatee County School
113Board (the "School Board"), may terminate Respondent's
121employment as a non-instructional employee for "just cause" as
130defined in Section 6.11 of the School Board's Policies and
140Procedures Manual, based upon the conduct alleged in the Amended
150Administrative Complaint filed at the Division of Administrative
158Hearings on June 9, 2009.
163PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
165On April 2, 2009, School Board Superintendent Timothy
173McGonegal served a letter on Respondent Stephanie Waiters. The
182letter informed Ms. Waiters that the Superintendent intended to
191recommend the termination of Ms. Waiters' employment at the next
201meeting of the School Board on April 27, 2009. Served with the
213letter was a copy of an Administrative Complaint detailing the
223factual allegations supporting the Superintendent's
228recommendation. On April 25, 2009, Ms. Waiters timely filed a
238request for an administrative hearing to contest the
246Superintendent's recommendation. On April 27, 2009, the School
254Board placed Ms. Waiters on temporary assignment in its print
264shop pending the outcome of the requested administrative
272hearing. The matter was forwarded to the Division of
281Administrative Hearings ("DOAH") on April 28, 2009.
290On May 28, 2009, the School Board filed a Motion for Leave
302to File an Amended Administrative Complaint, based on additional
311facts obtained through investigation conducted after the filing
319of the initial Administrative Complaint. Over Respondent's
326objection, the motion was granted by Order dated June 4, 2009.
337On June 9, 2009, the School Board filed its Amended
347Administrative Complaint, which contained the following factual
354allegations:
3551. Waiters has been employed with the
362School District of Manatee County since
368August 6, 1996. She is currently on
375temporary assignment at the print shop with
382pay pending the hearing on her termination.
3892. At all times pertinent to the
396allegations of this administrative
400complaint, Waiters was an area coordinator
406in the Transportation Department.
4103. Due to the absence of the regular school
419bus driver, Carol Hindman ("Hindman") of
427school bus #537 on Monday, February 9, and
435Tuesday, February 10, 2009, substitute bus
441driver Jose Rodriguez ("Rodriguez") drove
448said bus on the morning run to Palmetto High
457School.
4584. During the bus route on both days, the
467students on the bus reportedly engaged in
474misbehavior such as screaming and yelling,
480talking at the railroad tracks, and
486directing racial slurs toward Rodriguez.
4915. Rodriguez reported this information to
497the regular driver, Hindman and Waiters on
504Tuesday, February 10, 2009.
5086. As a result of the information related
516to Hindman and Waiters by Rodriguez, on the
524morning of Wednesday, February 11, 2009,
530Waiters rode bus #537 along with Hindman and
538Rodriguez on the bus bound for Palmetto High
546School.
5477. At the direction of Waiters, the bus
555stopped at 29th Street and 9th Avenue Drive
563East (the fourth stop of the run) whereupon
571the students were permitted to board the bus
579for transportation to Palmetto High School.
5858. However, Waiters ordered that the bus
592not proceed to Palmetto High School and
599instead she read aloud a list of students
607provided to her by substitute driver
613Rodriguez. Waiters stated that the students
619she read from the list should enjoy the ride
628because it would be "their last day riding
636the bus, ever."
6399. Waiters then called an unidentified
645party from her cell phone and requested that
653the Sheriff's Department report to 29th
659Street and 9th Avenue Drive East whereupon
666Waiters advised the students that she would
673be releasing them either to their parents or
681the Sheriff. Waiters directed the students
687that if they had a cell phone, they should
696call their parents to pick them up.
70310. After checking student identification,
708Waiters released several students on the
714list to their parents.
71811. Shortly thereafter, a Manatee County
724Sheriff's Deputy boarded the bus and
730explained to the remaining students that
736they were not permitted to disembark the bus
744because the School Board was responsible for
751their safety.
75312. Shortly thereafter, the Palmetto High
759School resource officer and assistant
764principal arrived at the bus stop and
771assisted in transporting to Palmetto High
777School the students who had been unable to
785reach their parents for transportation to
791that school.
79313. Waiters did not provide Assistant
799Principal Carl Auckerman ("Auckerman") with
806bus referrals prior to refusing to permit
813students from riding bus #537 to Palmetto
820High School and releasing them to their
827parents. Nor had said students been
833suspended from riding the bus by anyone with
841the authority to do so.
84614. Waiters unilaterally, summarily removed
851and thus suspended students from being
857transported to Palmetto High School on their
864school bus on the morning of Wednesday,
871February 11, 2009, in violation of the
878Standard Operating Procedures Manual of the
884Transportation Department of the School
889District of Manatee County as well as
896Florida Statutes. Waiters had absolutely no
902authority to detain the bus once it was en
911route to Palmetto High School.
91615. As a result of Waiters' actions, the
924health, welfare and safety of the students
931who were removed from the bus was
938jeopardized as was that of the students who
946were waiting to be picked up by bus #537 at
956subsequent stops along the side of the road.
96416. Waiters directed students on the bus to
972use their cell phones when riding the school
980bus in violation of the Standard Operating
987Procedures Manual of the Transportation
992Department of the School District of Manatee
999County.
100017. As a result of Waiters' unauthorized
1007detaining of bus #537, all of the students
1015on the bus route were late for school
1023inasmuch as the bus arrived at Palmetto High
1031School at 7:57 a.m. after school had started
1039at 7:45 a.m. due to Waiters' unauthorized
1046action.
104718. Waiters' actions individually and
1052cumulatively, constitute just cause for
1057discipline under section 6.11 of the
1063Policies and Procedures Manual of the School
1070Board of Manatee County.
107419. Prior to this incident, Waiters was
1081reprimanded and suspended without pay for
1087previous instances of misconduct.
1091Based on these factual allegations, the Amended
1098Administrative Complaint charged Ms. Waiters with the following
1106violations:
110721. Waiters' actions violated Section
11123.003(2) of the Standard Operating
1117Procedures Manual of the Transportation
1122Department of the School Board of Manatee
1129County which provides that the School
1135District requires progressive discipline and
1140that disciplinary actions, including
1144suspension of students from riding on school
1151district buses shall be subject to School
1158Board policies and may be imposed by the
1166principal or the principal's designee.
1171Section 3.003 further provides that the
1177principal or the principal's designee may
1183delegate any disciplinary authority to
1188school bus operators except for suspension
1194of students from riding the school bus.
120122. Waiters' actions violated Section 4.003
1207of the Standard Operating Procedures Manual
1213of the Transportation Department of the
1219School Board of Manatee County which
1225specifically provides that school principals
1230may elect to suspend the student's bus
1237riding privileges when prior warnings and/or
1243alternative discipline have failed to result
1249in an improvement in the student's behavior.
1256Section 4.003 specifically provides that the
1262school principal may suspend a student's bus
1269riding privileges.
127123. Waiters' actions violated [Section]
12761006.10(2), Florida Statutes (2008) which
1281provides that the principal or principal's
1287designee may delegate any disciplinary
1292authority to school bus drivers except for
1299suspension of students from riding the bus.
130624. Waiters' actions constitute misconduct
1311in office which is defined as a violation of
1320the Code of Ethics of the Education
1327Profession as adopted in [Florida
1332Administrative Code Rule 6B-1.001] and the
1338Principles of Professional Conduct for the
1344Education Profession in Florida as adopted
1350in [Florida Administrative Code Rule 6B-
13561.006], which is so serious as to impair the
1365individual's effectiveness in the school
1370system.
137125. Waiters' actions in directing students
1377to call their parents on the cell phone in
1386violation of section 4.005 of the Standard
1393Operating Procedures Manual of the
1398Transportation Department of the School
1403Board of Manatee County as well as the Code
1412of Student Conduct, both of which require
1419that students' cell phones be turned off
1426while they are on the school bus.
143326. Waiters' actions violated [Florida
1438Administrative Code Rule 6B-1.006(3)(a)],
1442which requires that the employee make a
1449reasonable effort to protect the student
1455from conditions harmful to learning and/or
1461to the student's mental and/or physical
1467health and/or safety.
147027. Waiters' actions violated [section]
14756.13(4)(a) and (b) of the Policies and
1482Procedures Manual of the School Board of
1489Manatee County in that she failed to make
1497truthful statements to the Office of
1503Professional Standards during her interview.
150828. Waiters' actions violated [Florida
1513Administrative Code Rule 6B-1.006(5)(a)],
1517which requires that the individual shall
1523maintain honesty in all professional
1528dealings.
152929. Waiters' actions constitute a violation
1535of Florida Administrative Code Rule 6B-
15411.001(2), which provides that the educator
1547will seek to exercise the best professional
1554judgment and integrity.
155730. Individually and cumulatively, Waiters'
1562actions and her violations of the
1568aforementioned policies, procedures, rules
1572and statutes constitute just cause for the
1579termination of her employment with the
1585Manatee County School Board.
1589The matter was continued once before the final hearing was
1599held on September 10 and 11, 2009. At the hearing, the School
1611Board presented the testimony of: Daniel Whidden and Kenneth
1620Warner, deputies with the Manatee County Sheriff's Office at the
1630time of the events in question; Anissia Williams-Bell, the
1639mother of a student who rode Bus 537 in February 2009; Carl
1651Auckerman, assistant principal at Palmetto High School at the
1660time of the events in question; Douglas Marsten, an officer with
1671the Palmetto Police Department and the school resource officer
1680("SRO") at Palmetto High School; Kevin Jackson and Robert Kelly,
1692parent liaisons at Palmetto High School; Terry Palmer, director
1701of the School Board's transportation department; and Debra
1709Horne, investigator for the School Board's office of
1717professional standards ("OPS"). The School Board's Exhibits P-1
1727through P-9, P-11, P-14 through P-16, P-18, P-19, P-21, P-25,
1737P-29 and P-30 were admitted into evidence. (Only pages 56
1747through 65 of School Board Exhibit 6 were admitted into
1757evidence).
1758The Respondent testified on her own behalf and presented
1767the testimony of Terri Anne Dingler, an area coordinator for the
1778School Board, and Jose Rodriguez, a substitute bus driver for
1788the School Board. Respondent's Exhibits R-1 through R-3 were
1797admitted into evidence.
1800The two-volume Transcript of the hearing was filed at DOAH
1810on October 28, 2009. Also on October 28, 2009, the parties
1821filed a Joint Motion for Extension of Time to File Proposed
1832Recommended Orders, which was granted by order dated October 29,
18422009. In accord with the order granting extension, both parties
1852filed their Proposed Recommended Orders on November 20, 2009.
1861FINDINGS OF FACT
18641. Respondent Stephanie Waiters was hired by the School
1873Board as a bus driver on August 6, 1996. In 2005, she was
1886promoted to the position of area coordinator. The five "area
1896coordinators" are first-line supervisors responsible for
1902overseeing the daily operations of the buses within their
1911assigned geographical districts.
19142. In December 2008, Terry Palmer was promoted from
1923assistant director to the position of director of
1931transportation. Upon his promotion, he was informed by the
1940School Board that, due to budget constraints, his former
1949position would not be filled, nor would the open position of
1960operations coordinator. On January 23, 2009, Mr. Palmer issued
1969a memorandum to all transportation employees regarding the
1977additional duties that transportation department employees would
1984be required to undertake in response to the budget cuts.
19943. Mr. Palmer's memorandum stated that, because he would
2003not have administrative assistance, the area coordinators would
2011report directly to him and would assume certain "additional
2020responsibilities":
2022The expanded role of the Area Coordinators
2029will include: 1. employee evaluations; 2.
2035parent conferences; 3. coaching and
2040assisting employees on their buses; 4.
2046observing bus operations at stops, schools
2052etc. when needed; 5. following through on
2059complaints from schools, parents and/or
2064citizens and coordinating action with others
2070inside and outside the department; 6.
2076counseling employees on performance issues
2081and documenting employee discipline; 7.
2086ensuring all employees assigned to them have
2093all of the training and coaching they need
2101to succeed; 8. initiating, in conjunction
2107with the director, involvement of the Office
2114of Professional Standards on extreme issues
2120of poor performance and/or misconduct.
21254. Ms. Waiters was the area coordinator for District 5,
2135which includes Palmetto High School. Bus 537 was assigned to
2145District 5 and ran routes to, among other schools, Palmetto High
2156School. The regular operator of Bus 537 during the 2008-2009
2166school year was Carol Hindman. Ms. Waiters testified that there
2176had been a lengthy history of student disciplinary problems on
2186Bus 537.
21885. On Thursday, February 5, 2009, Ms. Waiters phoned Jose
2198Rodriguez, a substitute bus driver employed by the School Board,
2208and informed him that he would be driving Bus 537 on Monday,
2220February 9, 2009. 1 On the morning of Friday, February 6, 2009,
2232Mr. Rodriguez rode Bus 537 with Ms. Hindman driving in order to
2244familiarize himself with the route.
22496. Mr. Rodriguez testified that there were no problems on
2259the bus until it reached the stop at 29th Street and 9th Avenue
2272Drive East ("29th and 9th"). The students at this stop were
2285rowdy and disregarded his instructions to put away their cell
2295phones and iPods and to carry their backpacks in front of their
2307bodies. From that stop onward, it became a "party bus,"
2317according to Mr. Rodriguez. The students informed Mr. Rodriguez
2326that they run the bus, and that the "racist cracker bitch"
2337Ms. Hindman just drives it. The students claimed to have hurt
2348Ms. Hindman, and threatened to hurt Mr. Rodriguez if he
2358attempted to control their behavior. One student began calling
2367Mr. Rodriguez "Chico."
23707. Mr. Rodriguez testified that the situation was even
2379worse on the afternoon route, with noise, screaming, radios
2388playing and general horseplay making the situation dangerous.
2396That night, Mr. Rodriguez phoned Ms. Waiters to tell her the
2407Palmetto High School students on Bus 537 were "off the chain"
2418and he was not sure he could handle the situation. She advised
2430him to drive the bus on Monday and see how it went when he was
2445alone. Ms. Waiters told Mr. Rodriguez to "write referrals" on
2455the students who made trouble and she would back him up in any
2468way necessary.
24708. Mr. Palmer explained the disciplinary authority of bus
2479drivers and the related referral process as follows:
2487From the standpoint of what they can do, is
2496obviously they should try to work with the
2504student on the bus, they can counsel them,
2512they can move their seat, they can work with
2521them on the bus. If that's unsuccessful,
2528they then write a referral which is given to
2537the school for processing, describing what
2543the behavior has been that is disruptive or
2551that is [in] violation of the safety rules,
2559and then that's given to the school to take
2568care of...
2570Typically, [upon receipt of the bus driver
2577referral,] the principal will assign the
2584assistant principal or have parent liaisons
2590that will meet with the individual students
2597regarding behavior, talk about what that
2603behavior is, why it's dangerous, and so
2610forth, counsel them the first time, and then
2618go through a series of progressive
2624disciplinary steps which can lead to
2630suspension from the bus and ultimately
2636expulsion if it's not corrected.
26419. The referral form indicates the disciplinary action
2649taken by the principal or his designee. (Section 1006.10(2),
2658Florida Statutes, prohibits the principal from delegating to bus
2667drivers the authority to suspend students from riding the bus.)
2677If the student is to be suspended from riding the bus, the
2689student's parent must first be notified. The school bus
2698operator is also notified of the discipline resulting from the
2708referral. Before a suspended student may ride the bus again, he
2719is required to present the pink carbon copy of the referral form
2731to the driver. 2
273510. Mr. Rodriguez drove Bus 537 on the morning of Monday,
2746February 9, 2009. He testified that it was "the same routine"
2757on Monday. Mr. Rodriguez said that he did not even attempt to
2769control the students because his efforts to do so the previous
2780Friday had been such a failure.
278611. Mr. Rodriguez stated that he was concerned for his and
2797the students' safety at the three railroad crossings the bus had
2808to traverse on the way to Palmetto High School. The proper
2819procedure is to put on the signal flashers when the bus comes
2831within 50 feet of the railroad crossing. Then, when the bus is
2843within 25 feet of the crossing, the driver turns off everything
2854but the motor to achieve as complete a silence as possible,
2865because he must be able not only to see but to hear whether a
2879train is approaching the crossing.
288412. Mr. Rodriguez testified that he tried to silence the
2894students at the railroad crossings, telling them it was for
2904their own safety. They laughed and carried on with their
2914screaming and horseplay.
291713. After finishing the morning route, Mr. Rodriguez
2925reported to Ms. Waiters, who told him to write referrals on the
2937students for their behavior at the railroad crossings and the
2947general mayhem described by Mr. Rodriguez. Ms. Waiters told
2956Mr. Rodriguez to take a School Board vehicle and drive to
2967Palmetto High School to turn in the referrals. Mr. Rodriguez
2977testified that he went to Palmetto High School and gave the
2988referrals to the assistant principal, Carl Auckerman.
2995Mr. Rodriguez testified that Mr. Auckerman told him he would
3005take care of the matter.
301014. Mr. Rodriguez testified that the situation was at
3019least as bad on the Monday afternoon route of Bus 537.
3030Ms. Waiters phoned him at home that evening, and advised him to
3042write more referrals on the misbehaving students. She asked him
3052if he needed someone else on the bus, but Mr. Rodriguez said he
3065could handle the situation.
306915. Mr. Rodriguez testified that he wrote referrals on
3078Monday evening. He drove the bus on Tuesday morning,
3087experienced the "party bus" situation again, and then wrote more
3097referrals. He testified that he and Ms. Waiters drove to
3107Palmetto High School with the new referrals. They met with
3117Mr. Auckerman and the SRO, Officer Douglas Marston of the
3127Palmetto Police Department.
313016. Mr. Rodriguez testified that Mr. Auckerman told them
3139he was going to issue bus suspensions of eight-to-ten days to
3150all of the students who received referrals. Mr. Rodriguez and
3160Ms. Waiters were satisfied with this outcome, and left the
3170office.
317117. Ms. Waiters generally supported Mr. Rodriguez' version
3179of the events occurring on Monday, February 9 and Tuesday,
3189February 10. However, Mr. Auckerman, the assistant principal,
3197testified that he did not know Mr. Rodriguez, did not meet with
3209him on February 9 or 10, and received no referrals related to
3221Bus 537 prior to February 11, 2009. Officer Marston testified
3231that he knew nothing of the situation on Bus 537 prior to the
3244morning of Wednesday, February 11.
324918. The testimony of Mr. Auckerman and Officer Marston was
3259consistent and credible. The testimony of Mr. Rodriguez and
3268Ms. Waiters was inconsistent. Their chronology of events
3276constantly shifted and was unsupported by the documentary
3284evidence, which was consistent with the testimony of
3292Mr. Auckerman and Officer Marston. 3
329819. Mr. Rodriguez testified that he alone met with
3307Mr. Auckerman on the morning of Monday, February 9. In a
3318deposition, Ms. Waiters testified that she accompanied
3325Mr. Rodriguez to Palmetto High School on February 9 and was in
3337Mr. Auckerman's office with Mr. Rodriguez. At the hearing,
3346Ms. Waiters testified that her only meeting with Mr. Auckerman
3356on February 9 occurred that afternoon at the Palmetto High
3366School bus loop.
336920. During cross-examination, when she was confronted with
3377her contradictory deposition testimony, Ms. Waiters testified:
3384With all the dates, the 9th, the 10th and
3393the 11th, it's very vague, everything. I
3400probably did, probably didn't, but I did go
3408in to see Mr. Auckerman. I don't know if he
3418came to the bus loop on Monday or whether I
3428went, but I did go there two consecutive
3436days with Mr. Rodriguez.
344021. The above quote is typical of Ms. Waiters' testimony
3450at the hearing. She would make a definite, affirmative
3459statement as to where and when an event occurred, but when
3470pressed by opposing counsel or contradicted by her own prior
3480statements, she would retreat into vagueness and uncertainty.
348822. During her interview with Debra Horne, the OPS
3497investigator, Ms. Waiters stated that referrals were submitted
3505to Mr. Auckerman on Tuesday, February 10 and Wednesday,
3514February 11, then changed her story to state that the referrals
3525were not submitted until Wednesday, February 11 and Thursday,
3534February 12. Both versions contradict her testimony at the
3543hearing that she oversaw Mr. Rodriguez' writing of referrals on
3553Monday, February 9 and Tuesday, February 10. Ms. Waiters
3562attributed her confusion to Ms. Horne's interviewing style. 4
357123. Mr. Rodriguez was similarly subject to confusion as to
3581the timing of events. As noted above, he testified that he and
3593Ms. Waiters met with Mr. Auckerman on Tuesday, February 10 and
3604that at this meeting Mr. Auckerman announced that the
3613misbehaving students would be suspended for eight to ten days.
3623During cross-examination, Mr. Rodriguez was presented with the
3631referrals that he claimed to have written on February 10, and
3642was forced to concede that these referrals described events that
3652actually occurred on Wednesday, February 11. He unconvincingly
3660continued to claim that the meeting occurred on February 10, and
3671that there existed other referrals that were actually written on
3681February 9 and 10 that were not part of the documentary
3692evidence. Mr. Rodriguez claimed to have his own copies of these
3703referrals, but was unable to produce them at the hearing.
371324. In her interview with Ms. Horne, Ms. Waiters claimed
3723that on the morning of Wednesday, February 11, she was enforcing
3734bus suspensions issued by Mr. Auckerman at their meeting on the
3745previous day. At the hearing, she conceded that she could not
3756remember whether the meeting with Mr. Auckerman occurred on
3765February 10 or 11, and further conceded that no student had been
3777suspended from Bus 537 prior to Wednesday, February 11, 2009.
378725. Mr. Rodriguez testified that Bus 537 was worse than
3797ever on the afternoon of Tuesday, February 10, because the
3807students knew they had received referrals and had nothing to
3817lose. He was afraid for his personal safety when crossing
3827railroad tracks. On the phone that evening, Ms. Waiters told
3837Mr. Rodriguez that she would be riding the bus on Wednesday
3848morning.
384926. As to the events leading up to Wednesday morning,
3859Ms. Waiters testified that Mr. Rodriguez had difficulty writing
3868his initial referrals on Monday because, as a substitute driver,
3878he did not know the names of the students. Ms. Waiters lives in
3891the area served by Bus 537, and drove many of the same students
3904on her bus when they were in elementary school. She suggested
3915that they "pull the tape" from Monday morning so that she could
3927name the misbehaving students for Mr. Rodriguez.
393427. The School Board maintains recording video cameras on
3943its school buses. However, the video camera on Bus 537 was
3954broken and in need of repair. A written repair request
3964submitted by Mr. Rodriguez at 10:13 a.m. on Tuesday, February
397410, 2009, stated, "Camera & tape don't work; tape pops out &
3986stays out; no red light indicating camera is on." Nonetheless,
3996Mr. Rodriguez testified that he and Ms. Waiters watched a video
4007recording from Bus 537 on Monday, February 9.
401528. Ms. Waiters testified that there was no video tape
4025from February 9 because the tape was "popped out," but that they
4037were able to watch video after the morning route on February 10.
4049She stated that "the tape was working fine, but the audio was
4061totally messed up." No video tape documenting the events of the
4072morning of February 10 on Bus 537 was presented at the hearing.
408429. The video camera was repaired and fully functional on
4094the morning of Wednesday, February 11, 2009, and a video
4104recording of the events of that morning on Bus 537 was entered
4116into evidence. 5 The undersigned viewed the videotape at the
4126final hearing, and viewed a DVD version of the videotape twice
4137more during the preparation of this Recommended Order.
414530. Ms. Hindman, the regular driver, drove Bus 537 on the
4156morning of February 11. Mr. Rodriguez was already on the bus as
4168the video commenced at 6:44 a.m. Mr. Rodriguez thought he was
4179to drive the bus on Wednesday morning, but for some reason
4190Ms. Hindman showed up and drove. Mr. Rodriguez decided to ride
4201the bus because Ms. Hindman had no control over the situation,
4212and he would be free to watch the situation and continue writing
4224referrals on the troublesome students.
422931. Ms. Waiters testified that she decided to ride Bus 537
4240on Wednesday morning because Mr. Palmer had ordered her to "take
4251care" of the situation, which she took as permission to do
4262whatever was needed to bring order to the bus. 6 At 6:47 a.m.,
4275Ms. Waiters boarded Bus 537 at the corner of 22nd Street and 2nd
4288Avenue, one stop before 29th and 9th.
429532. As the bus proceeded, Mr. Rodriguez consulted
4303Ms. Waiters as he attempted to identify some of the
4313troublemaking students. He held a sheaf of papers. Ms. Waiters
4323admonished him not to discuss what they were about to do in
4335front of the students 7 already on the bus, and stated her intent
4348to move those students to the back of the bus before the
4360students boarded at 29th and 9th.
436633. The bus was scheduled to reach the stop at 29th and
43789th at 6:50 a.m. On February 11, 2009, the bus stopped at 29th
4391and 9th at 6:53 a.m. When the bus came to a stop, Ms. Waiters
4405directed the students already on the bus to move to the rear
4417seats.
441834. After the bus had been stopped for approximately ten
4428seconds, a student at the 29th and 9th stop, whom Ms. Waiters
4440identified as J.P., knocked on the door. Ms. Waiters moved to
4451the door and out of camera range, but could be heard stating
4463authoritatively, "Get your hands off the window."
447035. At the hearing, Ms. Waiters testified that she
4479suspected J.P. was carrying a weapon and that she feared for her
4491safety and that of the students on the bus, but believed that
4503the safest course was to allow him to board the bus rather than
4516confront him about the suspected weapon. This testimony cannot
4525be credited, as Ms. Waiters made no mention of such a suspicion
4537to the Sheriff's deputies who were later dispatched to the bus,
4548to Mr. Auckerman or SRO Marston when they arrived at the bus, or
4561to Ms. Horne during the later investigation. Ms. Waiters'
4570testimony that she did not reveal her suspicions due to fear of
4582reprisals from J.P. or his confederates, based in part on an
4593apparently unrelated and unsolved break-in that occurred at her
4602home five years earlier, is not credited.
460936. After admonishing J.P., Ms. Waiters stated, "Everybody
4617that rode yesterday, let's get on the bus, come on." Then, only
4629seconds later, she stated, "Everybody who rode this bus
4638yesterday still thinks they are going to get on the bus.
4649They're not riding anymore." She stood just inside the door and
4660began allowing a few students on the bus one at a time,
4672directing them to their assigned seats. Ms. Waiters could be
4682heard telling one unseen student, "Off the bus, off the bus,"
4693while his voice could be heard saying, "But I ride this bus."
4705She began reading out names from a list provided by
4715Mr. Rodriguez. The named students, apparently those who did not
4725make trouble for Mr. Rodriguez the previous day, were allowed to
4736board the bus. 8 After these students were boarded and seated,
4747Ms. Waiters directed them to move to the back of the bus.
475937. Then, Ms. Waiters began letting the rest of the
4769students from 29th and 9th onto the bus. As they boarded, she
4781said, "Enjoy this ride. This is y'alls last day riding the bus
4793ever." The videotape shows that these students boarded the bus
4803in orderly fashion and were seated without incident.
481138. As the students were boarding, Ms. Waiters stated that
4821the bus would not be stopping at 29th and 9th any more. "You're
4834within walking distance, you'll walk," she said to an unseen
4844student.
484539. By 6:59 a.m., all of the students had boarded the bus
4857at the 29th and 9th stop. The bus remained stopped. The
4868students talked loudly among themselves, but were otherwise well
4877behaved. Ms. Waiters phoned her dispatcher and told her to
4887request that the Manatee County Sheriff's Office send deputies
4896to the bus stop at 29th and 9th.
490440. At approximately 7:02 a.m., a male student attempted
4913to disembark, telling Ms. Waiters that he had phoned his mother
4924and she was coming to pick him up. Ms. Waiters told him to be
4938seated because they had to wait for the Sheriff's deputies to
4949arrive. The student complained, "What Sheriff? Nobody didn't do
4958nothing," but obeyed Ms. Waiters' instruction.
496441. While they waited, the students in the front of the
4975bus could be heard laughing and joking about what various
4985parents or step-parents might do when they came to the bus, such
4997as breaking the windows or tearing off the door. 9
500742. At approximately 7:06 a.m., Ms. Waiters spoke to some
5017unseen parents through the closed door of the bus, saying, "Wait
5028a minute. We'll release them in a second." A few seconds
5039later, she addressed the students: "We'll either be releasing
5048you to your parents or the Sheriff. So if you have a cell
5061phone, you want to call your parents. You can go ahead and call
5074them."
507543. At this point, no Sheriff's deputy had arrived at the
5086scene. The evidence established that the first deputy to
5095arrive, Deputy Kenneth Warner, was not even dispatched until
51047:07 a.m. This fact is significant because during her
5113interview, Ms. Waiters told Ms. Horne that law enforcement had
5123directed her to tell the student to call their parents. At the
5135hearing, Ms. Waiters testified that a Sheriff's deputy told her
5145to have the kids call their parents, and that she was just
5157repeating what the deputy told her. Ms. Waiters' testimony on
5167this point is clearly not true.
517344. At approximately 7:07 a.m., Ms. Waiters stated to the
5183students, "We're waiting to release you to the Sheriff or your
5194parents." At this point, the students were still in high
5204spirits, talking loudly to each other but not noticeably upset.
521445. At approximately 7:08 a.m., a call was made to the
5225Sheriff's Office by a parent. The caller informed the
5234dispatcher that her son had used his cell phone to call her from
5247Bus 537. Her son told her that the students were locked on the
5260bus and the driver refused to speak to parents who had arrived
5272at the bus stop in response to their children's calls.
528246. Deputy Warner arrived at 29th and 9th at 7:10 a.m.
5293His view of the situation, which is entirely supported by the
5304videotape, was as follows:
5308[The students] were all sitting in their
5315seats, no one was up, but they were vocal,
5324they were expressing their concerns about
5330comments and stuff like that Ms. Waiters was
5338stating... She was kind of instigating an
5345issue. She was walking up and down, and
5353making comments. Like if they made a
5360comment to her, she would reply with a
5368comment which would fire them up, and then
5376they would all have comments back and
5383forth... [The four or five parents who
5390arrived] just didn't know what was going on,
5398as me, I didn't know what was going on,
5407either. They were wondering why they were
5414getting calls from their children. So, I
5421don't know. They were upset.
542647. Deputy Warner credibly denied that he gave any
5435directives to Ms. Waiters, or indeed had much idea why he had
5447been summoned to the scene: "It was my impression when I arrived
5459that she just needed me there as support, and that she was
5471handling the situation."
547448. The videotape shows Ms. Waiters meeting Deputy Warner
5483at the door of the bus, and stating that this was a situation
5496similar to the "one we had a couple of weeks ago that I took
5510care of." 10 She told the deputy that certain students on the bus
5523must either be taken to the juvenile detention center ("JDC") or
5536be released to their parents, because there have been "a lot of
5548problems" on the bus. Ms. Waiters offered Deputy Warner no
5558further details as to why the students could not ride the bus to
5571school.
557249. Because he was confused by the situation, Deputy
5581Warner radioed dispatch and requested that SRO Marston respond
5590to his call.
559350. At 7:12 a.m., Ms. Waiters announced to the students,
"5603You need to call your parents because you will not be riding
5615the bus. The ones that have parents at work, you'll need to get
5628your aunts or something, because you will not ride the bus."
5639Ms. Waiters began releasing students whose parents were waiting
5648outside the bus.
565151. At 7:20 a.m. and at 7:22 a.m., Ms. Waiters again told
5663the remaining students that they needed to call their parents
5673for a ride to school.
567852. Deputy Daniel Whidden was dispatched by the Sheriff's
5687Office and arrived at the scene after Deputy Warner. Deputy
5697Whidden, who was also a football coach at Palmetto High School
5708and knew several students on the bus, testified that he gave
5719Ms. Waiters no direction on how to handle the situation.
5729Ms. Waiters told him that there had been problems on the bus the
5742day before, and she was calling parents and having them pick up
5754their children.
575653. At 7:23 a.m., Deputy Whidden boarded the bus and
5766explained to the students that they were not allowed to
5776disembark because the School Board was responsible for their
5785safety. He told the students that SRO Marston was on his way to
5798the bus stop to assist in transporting to school those students
5809who were not allowed to ride the bus.
581754. Deputy Whidden testified that when he boarded the bus,
5827the students were all in their seats. Some were protesting that
5838they had done nothing wrong, but no one needed to be calmed
5850down. This testimony is consistent with the evidence of the
5860videotape.
586155. At 7:26 a.m., Ms. Waiters told Deputy Whidden that the
5872students in the rear would be transported to school on the bus.
5884As to the others, she stated, "I told them yesterday at the
5896school they might as well find transportation in the morning.
5906Well, they came here, and we can't leave them standing out at
5918the bus stop." In conversation with Deputy Whidden, a female
5928student confirmed that some of the students had been told they
5939would not be allowed on the bus for the rest of the year. 11
595356. Officer Marston and Mr. Auckerman arrived at the bus
5963stop at 7:31 a.m. When they arrived, most of the students had
5975already disembarked. At no time did Mr. Auckerman tell
5984Ms. Waiters that the students on the bus should call their
5995parents or be transported by Sheriff's deputies. Ms. Waiters'
6004testimony to the contrary is not credited.
601157. Mr. Auckerman, Officer Marston, and Deputy Whidden
6019drove students to Palmetto High School.
602558. The bus began to run again at 7:37 a.m., 44 minutes
6037after it stopped at 29th and 9th. The bus made only one more
6050stop before arriving at Palmetto High School. This stop
6059occurred at 7:43 a.m. Two students boarded the bus.
606859. Bus 537 is scheduled to make five stops after 29th and
60809th. Because of the delay, Ms. Waiters called the driver of Bus
6092534 to cover some of Bus 537's stops. However, not all of Bus
6105537's stops were covered, and Bus 534 was 15 to 20 minutes late
6118picking up some of the students. Further, Bus 537 was scheduled
6129to make an elementary school run after it dropped off students
6140at Palmetto High School. The bus made only one of its nine
6152scheduled stops for elementary school students because the
6160parents of most of those students had given up on the bus and
6173either driven their children to school or had the children
6183walk. 12
618560. During the 2008-2009 school year, classes began at
6194Palmetto High School at 7:45 a.m. Bus 537 typically arrived at
6205Palmetto High School at 7:20 a.m. On Wednesday, February 11,
62152009, Bus 537 arrived at Palmetto High School at 7:57 a.m.,
6226twelve minutes after the final bell.
623261. After the bus arrived at Palmetto High School,
6241Ms. Waiters and Mr. Rodriguez went into the school and spoke to
6253Mr. Auckerman. They presented him with the list of names that
6264they had used to identify the misbehaving students on Bus 537.
6275Mr. Auckerman told them that he would need referrals before he
6286could take any disciplinary action against the students.
6294Ms. Waiters and Mr. Rodriguez submitted some referrals on
6303Wednesday, February 11, then submitted additional referrals on
6311Thursday, February 12.
631462. The referrals described student misbehavior, such as
6322failing to be silent at railroad crossings and using cell
6332phones, but gave no indication that either Ms. Waiters or
6342Mr. Rodriguez ever feared for their safety on Bus 537.
6352Mr. Rodriguez testified that the only time he feared for his
6363physical safety was when he had to drive the noisy bus over
6375railroad crossings. He did not fear any sort of physical
6385assault by the students on the bus. 13
639363. Mr. Auckerman passed on the referrals to Palmetto High
6403School's parent liaisons, Robert Kelly and Kevin Jackson.
"6411Parent liaisons" are School Board employees responsible for
6419general disciplinary referrals and communicating with parents
6426regarding student behavior and discipline. The principal of
6434Palmetto High School has delegated the authority to issue bus
6444suspensions to the parent liaisons.
644964. On Friday, February 13, Mr. Kelly interviewed some of
6459the students. He decided that the referred students would be
6469suspended from riding the bus, commencing Tuesday, February 17.
6478However, as Mr. Kelly and Mr. Jackson were about to finalize the
6490suspensions by entering the referrals into the computer system,
6499Mr. Auckerman halted the suspension process pending a School
6508Board investigation into the events of the morning of February
651811.
651965. Mr. Auckerman was reacting to parent complaints about
6528Ms. Waiters' actions on Bus 537. Mr. Palmer, the director of
6539transportation, also began receiving complaints. Mr. Palmer
6546spoke with Ms. Waiters, safety officer John Searles, and school
6556personnel, and was unsettled by the inconsistency of their
6565stories. On or about February 18, 2009, Mr. Palmer referred the
6576matter to the OPS.
658066. Ms. Horne then began her investigation of the
6589incident. At the conclusion of her investigation, Ms. Horne
6598presented a written OPS investigatory report to her supervisor
6607and scheduled a meeting of all persons in Ms. Waiters' chain of
6619command, up to Mr. Palmer, the transportation director. At a
6629meeting on March 19, 2009, the School Board personnel met and
6640recommended to the Superintendent that Ms. Waiters' employment
6648with the School Board be terminated. The Superintendent
6656concurred with the recommendation.
666067. Aside from contending that she was merely carrying out
6670suspensions issued by Mr. Auckerman, which was completely at
6679odds with the credible evidence produced at the hearing,
6688Ms. Waiters' chief defense was that her actions on February 11,
66992009, were consistent with the action she took in an incident
6710that occurred on Wednesday, January 28, 2009, for which the bus
6721driver received a laudatory write-up in the local newspaper and
6731the praise of law enforcement and school officials.
673968. In the earlier incident, a substitute driver on a
6749morning route to Lakewood Ranch High School pulled the bus over
6760on State Road 64 and refused to continue because she believed
6771the students' actions were placing her and the students in
6781danger. In particular, the students were rocking the bus back
6791and forth to the point that the driver feared losing control.
680269. Ms. Waiters drove out to the scene, followed shortly
6812by at least six Sheriff's deputies. Ms. Waiters described the
6822students as "out of control," "hanging out of the windows,
6832yelling and cursing, throwing stuff out of the windows, rocking
6842the bus." Ms. Waiters boarded the bus and was able to calm some
6855of the students. The Sheriff's deputies called the parents of
6865the troublemaking students and gave them the choice of picking
6875up their children or having them taken to the JDC. According to
6887Ms. Waiters, some students actually fought with their parents
6896and had to be forcibly taken to the juvenile detention center.
690770. The next day, the local newspaper ran an article
6917containing praise for the substitute bus driver. The principal
6926of Lakewood Ranch High School and a spokesman for the Sheriff's
6937Office were both quoted saying that she "did the right thing."
6948Though Ms. Waiters was not mentioned in the article, it is clear
6960from her testimony that she believed the praise was reflected on
6971her.
697271. The differences between the incidents of January 28
6981and February 11, 2009, are clear. In the earlier incident, law
6992enforcement was summoned to deal with an immediate, on-going
7001dangerous situation. Sheriff's deputies took charge of the
7009matter, with some assistance from Ms. Waiters, and concluded
7018that the bus driver had done the right thing in stopping the bus
7031when it became too hazardous to continue.
703872. In the February 11 incident, the videotape makes plain
7048there was no danger whatever. Once allowed to board the bus,
7059the students took their seats and talked among themselves.
7068There were no threats, no disturbances, no rocking of the bus.
7079Ms. Waiters' claim that she felt threatened was unsupported and
7089not credible. The students, with good reason, appeared mostly
7098puzzled as to what was happening. From the incident of
7108January 28, 2009, Ms. Waiters apparently took the lesson that
7118she was authorized to stop the scheduled running of a school bus
7130for nearly an hour and to call out Sheriff's deputies to assist
7142her in disciplining students for misbehavior that occurred on
7151previous days. This was the wrong lesson.
715873. Ms. Waiters acknowledged that she did not have
7167authority to suspend students from the bus, and claimed that she
7178was not "suspending" the students; rather, she was restoring
"7187order and control" on the bus for the students' safety. 14
7198Ms. Waiters' actions might have been partially justified had
7207there been some imminent danger such as that on the Lakewood
7218Ranch High School bus on January 28, 2009, though even in that
7230situation it was Sheriff's deputies, not Ms. Waiters, who
7239removed the problem students from the bus. On Bus 537 on
7250February 11, 2009, in the absence of any immediate threat or
7261even untoward behavior by the students, Ms. Waiters took it upon
7272herself to halt the bus and require students to phone their
7283parents for rides to school well before law enforcement arrived
7293on the scene. Ms. Waiters' actions were disproportionate to the
7303situation on the bus, and constituted "suspensions" of the
7312students under any reasonable understanding of that term.
732074. Ms. Waiters' actions on the morning of February 11,
73302009, might merit discipline short of termination had Ms.
7339Waiters fully and honestly cooperated in the subsequent
7347investigation. However, Ms. Waiters stubbornly told a
7354convoluted and contradictory version of events that made little
7363sense on its face and was at direct odds with the consistent and
7376credible testimony of School Board personnel and law enforcement
7385officers who were present during the relevant events, and at
7395odds with the direct evidence of the videotape from Bus 537.
7406Ms. Waiters lack of candor throughout the process, coupled with
7416the extremely poor judgment she employed in stopping the bus and
7427suspending students without immediate cause or authority, fully
7435justifies the School Board's decision to terminate her
7443employment.
7444CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
744775. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
7454jurisdiction over the parties to and subject matter of this
7464proceeding pursuant to Section 120.569 and Subsections 120.57(1)
7472and 1012.33(6)(a), Florida Statutes. 15
747776. The School Board has the burden to establish by a
7488preponderance of the evidence the grounds for disciplining
7496Ms. Waiters. See , e.g. , McNeill v. Pinellas County School
7505Board , 678 So. 2d 476, 477 (Fla. 2d DCA 1996); Sublett v. Sumter
7518County School Board , 664 So. 2d 1178, 1179 (Fla. 5th DCA 1995);
7530Allen v. School Board of Dade County , 571 So. 2d 568, 569 (Fla.
75433d DCA 1990); Dileo v. School Board of Dade County , 569 So. 2d
7556883, 884 (Fla. 3d DCA 1990).
756277. The School Board Superintendent is authorized to
7570recommend to the School Board that an employee be suspended
7580and/or dismissed from employment. § 1012.27(5), Fla. Stat.
758878. Pursuant to Sections 1012.22(1)(f) and 1012.40(2)(e),
7595Florida Statutes, the School Board is authorized to terminate or
7605suspend school personnel without pay or benefits.
761279. Respondent is subject to Section 6.11(1) of the
7621Policies and Procedures Manual of the School Board, which
7630provides:
7631Any employee of the School Board may be
7639temporarily suspended, with or without pay,
7645or permanently terminated from employment,
7650for just cause including, but not limited
7657to, immorality, misconduct in office,
7662incompetence, gross insubordination, willful
7666neglect of duty, drunkenness, or conviction
7672of any crime involving moral turpitude,
7678violation of the Policies and Procedures
7684Manual of the School District of Manatee
7691County, violation of any applicable Florida
7697statute, violation of the Code of Ethics and
7705the Principles of Professional Conduct of
7711the Education Profession in Florida.
771680. Ms. Waiters is not an instructional employee as
7725defined by Subsection 1012.01(2), Florida Statutes. However,
7732the quoted language of the Policies and Procedures Manual of the
7743School Board renders her subject to the Code of Ethics of the
7755Education Profession in Florida, Florida Administrative Code
7762Rule 6B-1.001, and to the Principles of Professional Conduct for
7772the Education Profession in Florida, Florida Administrative Code
7780Rule 6B-1.006.
778281. The School Board alleges that Ms. Waiters has
7791committed misconduct in office, which is defined as "a violation
7801of the Code of Ethics of the Education Profession as adopted in
7813Rule 6B-1.001, F.A.C., and the Principles of Professional
7821Conduct for the Education Profession in Florida as adopted in
7831Rule 6B-1.006, F.A.C., which is so serious as to impair the
7842individual's effectiveness in the school system." Fla. Admin.
7850Code R. 6B-4.009(3).
785382. The Amended Administrative Complaint alleges that
7860Ms. Waiters violated Florida Administrative Code Rules 6B-
78681.001(2) and 6B-1.006(3)(a) and (5)(a).
787383. Florida Administrative Code Rule 6B-1.006(3)(a)
7879requires the employee to "make reasonable effort to protect the
7889student from conditions harmful to learning and/or to the
7898student's mental and/or physical health and/or safety." The
7906School Board has proven by a preponderance of the evidence that
7917Ms. Waiters' actions violated Florida Administrative Code Rule
79256B-1.006(3)(a). Without need or authority, Ms. Waiters
7932suspended several students from riding on Bus 537. She verbally
7942harassed and provoked the students on the bus. She
7951unnecessarily made all of the students riding Bus 537 late for
7962school. Her actions caused a safety hazard, with elementary and
7972high school students left standing at bus stops for an
7982unreasonably long period of time. Bus 537's late arrival at
7992Palmetto High School caused a ripple effect that led to
8002elementary school students missing the bus and parents
8010scrambling to improvise ways to get their children to school.
802084. Florida Administrative Code Rule 6B-1.006(5)(a)
8026required the employee to "maintain honesty in all professional
8035dealings." Florida Administrative Code Rule 6B-1.001(2)
8041requires the employee to "seek to exercise the best professional
8051judgment and integrity." The School Board has proven by a
8061preponderance of the evidence that Ms. Waiters used very poor
8071judgment in stopping Bus 537 and suspending several of the
8081students on that bus on February 11, 2009. The School Board has
8093proven by a preponderance of the evidence that Ms. Waiters did
8104not maintain honesty or integrity during the School Board's
8113investigation into the events of February 11, 2009. Indeed,
8122Ms. Waiters' testimony at the final hearing itself was a farrago
8133of contradiction, confusion, and shifting timelines so
8140perplexing as to defeat any attempt to construct a clear
8150narrative of her version of events.
815685. The combination of extremely poor judgment, usurpation
8164of the principal's authority, and almost flamboyant dishonesty
8172could not help but impair Ms. Waiters' effectiveness in the
8182school system. The School Board has proven by a preponderance
8192of the credible evidence that Ms. Waiters has committed
8201misconduct in office as that term is defined in Florida
8211Administrative Code Rule 6B-4.009(3). This proof of misconduct
8219in office is sufficient to support the Superintendent's
8227recommendation that Ms. Waiters' employment be terminated.
823486. The Amended Administrative Complaint alleges that
8241Ms. Waiters violated Section 6.13(4)(a) and (b) of the Policies
8251and Procedures Manual of the School Board of Manatee County,
8261which provide that all School Board employees must cooperate
8270fully with OPS or other appropriate authorities who are
8279conducting an investigation, and that failure to cooperate
8287completely and truthfully will subject an employee to
8295disciplinary action. The preponderance of the evidence
8302established that Ms. Waiters repeatedly failed to make truthful
8311statements during her interview with Ms. Horne.
831886. The Amended Administrative Complaint alleges that
8325Ms. Waiters violated Section 1006.10(2), Florida Statutes, and
8333Sections 3.003(2) and 4.003 of the SOP Manual. Read together,
8343these provisions state that the school principal has
8351disciplinary authority over students' bus riding privileges, up
8359to and including suspension of those privileges, and that the
8369school principal may delegate this disciplinary authority to
8377school bus drivers except for the authority to suspend students
8387from riding the school bus.
839287. It could be argued that Ms. Waiters cannot be held to
8404have violated these provisions because as written, they function
8413as limitations on the authority of school principals, not as
8423prohibitions on bus drivers. Further, at the time of the events
8434at issue, Ms. Waiters was an area coordinator in the
8444transportation department, not a school bus driver. Therefore,
8452at least theoretically, the principal of Palmetto High School
8461might have been authorized to delegate his suspension authority
8470to Ms. Waiters.
847388. However, the preponderance of the evidence established
8481that no person in the School Board's transportation department
8490had been delegated the authority to suspend students from riding
8500the school bus. The preponderance of the evidence established
8509that Ms. Waiters did not have the authority to suspend students
8520from riding the school bus, and knew that she did not have this
8533authority. The preponderance of the evidence established that
8541on February 11, 2009, Ms. Waiters suspended students from riding
8551Bus 537.
855389. The non-delegation provisions cited above, considered
8560in light of the facts of the case, establish that Ms. Waiters
8572could not have believed herself to possess authority to take the
8583actions she did on the morning of February 11, 2009. Even
8594taking the strict view that Ms. Waiters cannot be held to have
8606violated a statute and rule that prohibit principals from
8615delegating their authority to bus drivers, Ms. Waiters knew that
8625her actions were unauthorized and therefore she certainly
8633displayed a failure to "exercise the best professional judgment
8642and integrity" pursuant to Florida Administrative Code Rule 6B-
86511.001(2). This failure further cements the conclusion that she
8660committed misconduct in office as defined in Florida
8668Administrative Code Rule 6B-4.009(3).
867290. The Amended Administrative Complaint alleged that
8679Ms. Waiters violated Section 4.005 of the SOP Manual and the
8690Code of Student Conduct, both of which require the students'
8700cell phones to be turned off while the students are riding the
8712school bus. The preponderance of the evidence established that
8721Ms. Waiters directed the students to use their cell phones to
8732call their parents from Bus 537 on the morning of February 11,
87442009.
874591. However, under all the circumstances, it appears that
8754this violation was de minimus . The bus was not moving, meaning
8766there was no danger that noise from phone conversations would
8776distract the driver or that radio signals from the cell phones
8787might interfere with the functioning of equipment on the school
8797bus. The somewhat special circumstances of this case do not
8807appear to present the situation reasonably contemplated by the
8816cell phone rules. In this case, the students' use of their cell
8828phones probably had a salutary effect overall, keeping their
8837parents apprised of the situation on Bus 537.
884592. Chapter 6.11 of the Policies and Procedures Manual of
8855the School Board of Manatee County allows for termination of
8865employment if there is just cause to believe that Ms. Waiters
8876has committed misconduct in office. The preponderance of the
8885evidence established that she did commit misconduct in office.
8894The undersigned would nonetheless be inclined to recommend a
8903lesser penalty, such as suspension without pay and/or demotion
8912to the bus driver, had Ms. Waiters acknowledged that her actions
8923of February 11, 2009, were unauthorized and that she alone was
8934responsible for the cascade of events that followed. However,
8943under all the facts and circumstances discussed above,
8951termination is appropriate in this case.
8957RECOMMENDATION
8958Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
8968Law, it is
8971RECOMMENDED that Petitioner, the Manatee County School
8978Board, enter a final order that terminates the employment of
8988Respondent, Stephanie Waiters.
8991DONE AND ENTERED this 1st day of February, 2010, in
9001Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
9005S
9006LAWRENCE P. STEVENSON
9009Administrative Law Judge
9012Division of Administrative Hearings
9016The DeSoto Building
90191230 Apalachee Parkway
9022Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
9025(850) 488-9675
9027Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
9031www.doah.state.fl.us
9032Filed with the Clerk of the
9038Division of Administrative Hearings
9042this 1st day of February, 2010.
9048ENDNOTES
90491 / The testimony was unclear as to why Mr. Rodriguez was
9061assigned to Bus 537. Mr. Rodriguez testified that Ms. Waiters
9071told him the regular driver had the flu. However, Ms. Hindman
9082actually drove the bus the next day, February 6, 2009.
9092Ms. Waiters recalled assigning Mr. Rodriguez to the bus on
9102February 5, but did not state specifically why she was
9112substituting him for Ms. Hindman, who did not testify at the
9123hearing. This detail is not especially significant in itself,
9132but is indicative of the overall inconsistency and unreliability
9141of the testimony offered by Ms. Waiters and Mr. Rodriguez.
91512 / All witnesses agreed that there are often situations in which
9163the suspended student presents himself to ride the bus and does
9174not have the pink copy of the referral form. The witnesses also
9186agreed that the driver is required to allow that student to ride
9198the bus, with or without the pink copy. The school bus operator
9210does not, under any circumstances, possess the authority to
9219unilaterally suspend a student from riding the bus. When the
9229suspended student rides without a pink copy of the referral, the
9240driver should take the matter up with the school's liaison.
9250In her defense, Ms. Waiters pointed out that some of the
9261students involved in the incidents described in this Recommended
9270Order lived within two miles of Palmetto High School, and that
9281state law does not require the School Board to provide
9291transportation to students who live within two miles of the
9301school. See Florida Administrative Code Rule 6A-3.001(3),
9308providing that two miles is a "reasonable walking distance" for
9318any student not otherwise eligible for transportation under
9326Section 1011.68, Florida Statutes, which provides the criteria
9334for state funding of student transportation. Granting
9341Ms. Waiters' proposition, she cites to no statute, state rule,
9351or local policy giving the bus driver or the area coordinator
9362the authority unilaterally to deny a student access to the bus
9373because the student lives within two miles of the school. The
9384consensus of the testimony at the hearing was that the driver is
9396not to leave a student standing on the side of the road under
9409any circumstances.
94113 / An accurate chronology is key to Ms. Waiters' defense. The
9423School Board alleges that on Wednesday, February 11, 2009, she
9433suspended students from riding on Bus 537 while lacking any
9443authority to do so. During the School Board's investigation,
9452Ms. Waiters claimed that these students had already been
9461suspended from the bus by Mr. Auckerman on Tuesday, February 10.
9472(Alternatively, and less coherently, she claimed that she was
9481not "suspending" students but merely ensuring the safety of the
9491bus by preventing some students from riding.) Mr. Auckerman
9500testified, with support from the documentary evidence, that he
9509issued no suspensions until after the events of the morning of
9520Wednesday, February 11, 2009.
95244 / Ms. Horne's interview notes do indicate that she frequently
9535shifted from inquiring about the incidents on Bus 537 involving
9545students from Palmetto High School to questions about other
9554incidents, also involving Ms. Waiters, that are not at issue in
9565this proceeding. However, it is not plausible to blame
9574Ms. Horne for Ms. Waiters' inability to get her story straight
9585about events in which she participated. Ms. Horne testified
9594that the interview was confusing because Ms. Waiters easily went
9604off-task, discussing irrelevant matters, and that Ms. Waiters
9612constantly changed her story. This description is consistent
9620with Ms. Waiters' testimony at the hearing.
96275 / The camera was stationary and provided a view down the center
9640aisle of the bus. Neither the driver nor the front door to the
9653bus was visible.
9656Based on the testimony at hearing and the vehicle activity
9666report for Bus 537, which is drawn from GPS information, it is
9678found that the time stamp of the videotape was 14 minutes behind
9690the actual time that events occurred. The actual time of the
9701events is referenced in the Findings of Fact.
97096 / Mr. Palmer recalled a conversation with Ms. Waiters about a
9721substitute driver having problems on Bus 537. The conversation
9730occurred at a daily noon meeting on either February 9 or 10,
97422009. Mr. Palmer didn't recall the specifics of the
9751conversation, but rejected any idea that he had given
9760Ms. Waiters carte blanche to suspend students from the bus,
9770pointing out that he himself lacks the authority to issue such
9781suspensions. Mr. Palmer left for a three day conference in
9791Tallahassee at about 10 a.m. on Wednesday, February 11.
9800Although she had Mr. Palmer's cell phone number and had been
9811encouraged to use it, Ms. Waiters never called him about the
9822events on Bus 537 that morning. Mr. Palmer only heard about the
9834situation upon his return to the office on February 16.
98447 / Not all of the children on the bus at 6:30 a.m. were Palmetto
9859High School students. Some were Ms. Hindman's children and
9868grandchildren. Mr. Rodriguez' daughter was riding the bus with
9877him. In another odd bit of faulty memory at the hearing,
9888Mr. Rodriguez was unable to recall whether his daughter was with
9899him on the morning of February 11 until he actually saw her in
9912the video.
99148 / While reading the names on the list, Ms. Waiters stopped to
9927yell, "[J.P.], get off the bus. Get your butt down off this
9939bus." Her demeanor betrayed no fear of J.P., whom she
9949eventually allowed to board the bus. Further, the video shows
9959that Ms. Waiters and Mr. Rodriguez returned to the bus at 8:41
9971a.m. They discussed how to word the referrals that Mr.
9981Rodriguez was writing. Ms. Waiters, Mr. Rodriguez, and Ms.
9990Hindman specifically discussed J.P., but no mention was made of
10000any weapon.
100029 / At the hearing, both Ms. Waiters and Mr. Rodriguez claimed to
10015have felt endangered and threatened by this banter, none of
10025which was directed towards either of them. These claims are not
10036credible.
100371 0/ See Findings of Fact 67 through 70, infra , for a description
10050of the incident to which Ms. Waiters referred.
100581 1/ It must be recalled that at the time this student heard
10071about the supposed year-long suspensions, no person at Palmetto
10080High School with authority to suspend students from the bus was
10091even aware of the problems on Bus 537.
100991 2/ Mr. Palmer testified that students not being picked up on
10111time is a major safety issue, because a child left at a bus stop
10125on the side of the road could walk away and "anything could
10137happen." At least in Mr. Palmer's mind, this safety issue was
10148the primary reason for recommending Ms. Waiters' termination.
1015613 / He did claim to have felt vaguely threatened by joking
10168comments made by a few students after Ms. Waiters told them to
10180phone their parents. See endnote 9, supra .
101881 4/ Ms. Waiters also denied that she "suspended" students from
10199the bus because the Standard Operating Procedures Manual of the
10209Transportation Department of the School Board of Manatee County
10218("SOP Manual") does not define the term "suspend." "Suspension"
10229is a common term meaning temporary removal of a student from the
10241classroom or, in this instance, from a school bus. There is no
10253requirement that the Legislature, or the School Board in
10262implementing legislation, provide a detailed definition of words
10270in common usage. Dadeland Depot, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire and
10281Marine Insurance Co. , 945 So. 2d 1216, 1225 (Fla. 2006).
10291Ms. Waiters understood that she had no authority to suspend
10301students, and understood what the term "suspension" meant in the
10311context of her job.
103151 5/ Unless otherwise indicated, references to the Florida
10324Statutes are to the 2009 edition.
10330COPIES FURNISHED :
10333Adam Tebrugee, Esquire
103362337 Ixora Avenue
10339Sarasota, Florida 34234
10342Thomas Martin Gonzalez, Esquire
10346Thompson, Sizemore, Gonzalez & Hearing, P.A.
10352201 North Franklin Street, Suite 1600
10358Tampa, Florida 33602
10361Tim McGonegal, Superintendant
10364School Board of Manatee County
10369215 Manatee Avenue West
10373Bradenton, Florida 34205
10376Deborah K. Kearney, General Counsel
10381Department of Education
10384Turlington Building, Suite 1244
10388325 West Gaines Street
10392Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
10395Dr. Eric J. Smith
10399Commissioner of Education
10402Department of Education
10405Turlington Building, Suite 1514
10409325 West Gaines Street
10413Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
10416NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
10422All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
1043215 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions
10443to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that
10454will issue the Final Order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 06/28/2010
- Proceedings: Agency Final Order Rejecting Respondent's Exceptions and Approving Recommended Order filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/28/2010
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Response to Respondent's Exceptions to Recommended Order filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/23/2010
- Proceedings: (Proposed) Final Order Rejecting Respondent's Exceptions and Approving Recommended Order filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/01/2010
- Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held September 10 and 11, 2009). CASE CLOSED.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/01/2010
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/30/2009
- Proceedings: Letter to Judge Stevenson from A. Tebrugge regarding non-receipt of transcript filed.
- Date: 10/28/2009
- Proceedings: Transcript (2) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/28/2009
- Proceedings: Joint Motion for Extension of Time to File Proposed Recommended Orders filed.
- Date: 09/10/2009
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/31/2009
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Unopposed Motion for Extension of Time to File Joint Pre-trial Stipulation filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/15/2009
- Proceedings: Amended Notice of Hearing (hearing set for September 10 and 11, 2009; 9:00 a.m.; Bradenton, FL; amended as to date).
- PDF:
- Date: 06/04/2009
- Proceedings: Order (Motion to File Amended Administrative Complaint is granted).
- PDF:
- Date: 06/04/2009
- Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for July 28 and 29, 2009; 9:00 a.m.; Bradenton, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 06/02/2009
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Taking Deposition (Stephanie E. Waiters) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 05/28/2009
- Proceedings: Petitioner School Board's Contested Motion to File Amended Administrative Complaint filed.
Case Information
- Judge:
- LAWRENCE P. STEVENSON
- Date Filed:
- 04/28/2009
- Date Assignment:
- 04/28/2009
- Last Docket Entry:
- 06/28/2010
- Location:
- Bradenton, Florida
- District:
- Middle
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN TOTO
- Suffix:
- TTS
Counsels
-
Thomas Martin Gonzalez, Esquire
Address of Record -
Erin G. Jackson, Esquire
Address of Record -
Adam Tebrugee, Esquire
Address of Record -
Erin G Jackson, Esquire
Address of Record