08-004213TTS
Miami-Dade County School Board vs.
Saydel Mas
Status: Closed
Settled and/or Dismissed prior to entry of RO/FO on Monday, April 26, 2010.
Settled and/or Dismissed prior to entry of RO/FO on Monday, April 26, 2010.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8MIAMI-DADE COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD, )
13)
14Petitioner, )
16)
17vs. ) Case No. 08-4213
22)
23SAYDEL MAS, )
26)
27Respondent. )
29________________________________)
30RECOMMENDED ORDER
32Robert E. Meale, Administrative Law Judge of the Division
41of Administrative Hearings, conducted the final hearing in
49Miami, Florida, on January 30, 2009.
55APPEARANCES
56For Petitioner: Jean Marie Middleton, Esquire
62Miami-Dade County School Board
661450 Northeast Second Avenue, Suite 400
72Miami, Florida 33132
75For Respondent: Randy A. Fleischer, Esquire
818258 State Road 84
85Davie, Florida 33324
88STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
92The issue is whether Petitioner has just cause to terminate Respondent's employment as a Coordinator I in the Facilities Design and Standards Department.
115PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
117By Notice of Specific Charges filed September 24, 2008,
126Petitioner alleged that, from March to September 2007,
134Respondent received, in addition to his regular salary from
143Petitioner, checks totaling over $17,000 directly from Morales
152Moving and Storage Company, a vendor of Petitioner. The Notice
162of Specific Charges alleges that Respondent's work computer hard
171drive contained "images of nude women, women in bikinis, and
181other pornographic photographs," and the images bore
188Respondent's user ID.
191Count I of the Notice of Specific Charges realleges the
201above-cited allegation and alleges that Petitioner's Rule 6Gx13-
2094A-1.21 requires all School Board employees to "conduct
217themselves, both in their employment and in the community, in a
228manner that will reflect credit upon themselves and the school
238system." Count I alleges that the receipt of funds directly
248from a vendor while employed by the School Board does not
259reflect credit upon Respondent and the school system.
267Count II of the Notice of Specific Charges realleges the
277above-cited allegations and alleges that Petitioner's Rule
2846Gx13-4A-1.212(D) prohibits conflicting employment or
289contractual relationships.
291Count III (miscited as Count IV) of the Notice of Specific
302Charges realleges the above-cited allegations and alleges that
310Section 1012.32(l), Florida Statutes, requires good moral
317character for continued employment. Count IV alleges that
325Respondent demonstrated a lack of good moral character by
334accepting funds directly from a vendor with whom the School
344Board contracted and by viewing inappropriate material on a
353School Board computer.
356Count IV (the second Count IV) of the Notice of Specific
367Charges realleges the above-cited allegations and alleges that
375Respondent's "actions and admissions" are a violation of
383Petitioner's Rule 6Gx13-4A-1.213 and Florida Administrative Code
390Rules 6B-1.001 and 6B-1.006.
394At the hearing, Petitioner called five witnesses and
402offered into evidence 11 exhibits: Petitioner Exhibits 1-2, 5,
4117, 9-14, and 20, which were all admitted. Respondent called one
422witness and offered into evidence no exhibits.
429The court reporter filed the Transcript on February 17,
4382009. The parties filed their Proposed Recommended Orders by
447March 2, 2009.
450FINDINGS OF FACT
4531. Respondent has worked for Petitioner under two
461arrangements. At first, he worked part-time as Capital
469Improvement Project Support Clerk and received his pay checks
478from Petitioner. Respondent left this employment for military
486service. When he returned from military service, he wanted to
496return to employment with Petitioner, but was unable to do so
507due to a hiring freeze.
5122. However, Petitioner hired Respondent, arranging for a
520vendor, Brown & Brown Architects, to pay Respondent, who oversaw
530relocation crews that received and assembled new equipment. In
539late 2003, when the hiring freeze ended, Petitioner hired
548Respondent directly as a Capital Improvement Project Project
556Specialist. While receiving pay checks from Brown & Brown
565Architects and subsequently from Petitioner directly, Respondent
572worked under the direct supervision of Willie Lopez, an employee
582of Petitioner.
5843. On July 1, 2005, Petitioner reassigned Respondent to
593Office of Facilities Design & Standards Coordinator I. At this
603time, Respondent began to work under the direct supervision of
613William Barimo. Respondent was employed in this position until
622his suspension without pay, as described below.
6294. At some point, Mr. Lopez and Rose Diamond approached
639first Respondent and then Mr. Barimo and asked if Respondent
649could help Mr. Lopez clear backlogged work by working after
659regular hours. They offered to pay Respondent at his regular
669hourly rate. Respondent wanted the chance to earn additional
678money, and Mr. Barimo consented to this arrangement. Mr. Barimo
688considered Respondent to be an excellent employee who had always
698demonstrated good moral character during the five years that
707Respondent worked under Mr. Barimo's supervision.
7135. At the time of agreeing to this arrangement, Mr. Barimo
724told Respondent that he needed to complete his regular work for
735Mr. Barimo before performing additional work for Mr. Lopez.
744Mr. Barimo did not warn Respondent that he could not work for a
757vendor of the School Board.
7626. On March 12, 2007, Respondent began performing
770additional work for Petitioner under the supervision of
778Mr. Lopez. Mostly, Respondent worked at a single facility of
788Petitioner, although he sometimes worked out of his home or at
799other facilities of Petitioner.
8037. Respondent did not receive a pay check for this
813additional work until April 17, 2007. When Respondent received
822the check, he noticed that it was from Morales Moving and
833Storage. Only after he had begun asking about his compensation
843did Respondent learn, not more than one week prior to receiving
854the first check, that Petitioner would not be paying him.
864However, Respondent did not consider himself an employee of
873Morales Moving and Storage because he performed all of his
883additional work under the supervision of Mr. Lopez, an employee
893of Petitioner, and the work was for Petitioner.
9018. Respondent performed additional work, under this
908arrangement, from March 2007 to September 2007, earning over
917$17,000. Respondent submitted his timesheets to a colleague of
927Mr. Lopez, Ms. Ramos. She submitted the timesheets to Morales
937Moving and Storage. Toward the end of this period, Mr. Lopez
948died, and Ms. Ramos, assuming Mr. Lopez's responsibilities,
956informed Respondent that she was having problem obtaining
964payment for Respondent and other, similarly situated employees.
972Shortly after that, Petitioner's investigators contacted
978Respondent with respect to an investigation of the arrangement
987with which Mr. Lopez had been involved.
9949. Respondent had become involved in some sort of
1003fraudulent scheme in which Mr. Lopez, but not Ms. Diamond, was
1014involved. The details of the scheme are unclear, but nothing in
1025this record suggests that Respondent was a knowing participant
1034in the scheme. Other of Petitioner's employees were also caught
1044up in this scheme and also received payment from vendors while
1055performing Petitioner's work, but not all such employees were
1064terminated.
106510. Several facts suggest that Respondent's involvement in
1073Mr. Lopez's scheme was entirely unwitting. Mr. Lopez and
1082Ms. Ramos approached Respondent's current supervisor, who
1089approved the arrangement. Working under his previous
1096supervisor, Mr. Lopez, Respondent was performing work of
1104Petitioner, mostly in facilities of Petitioner and at his normal
1114rate of pay with Petitioner. Lastly, Respondent had previously
1123been employed, legitimately, in an arrangement in which he had
1133done Petitioner's work, but had been paid by a vendor.
114311. Under these circumstances, at no time was Respondent
1152employed or in a contractual relationship with Morales Moving
1161and Storage. At all times, Respondent performed work of
1170Petitioner, under the supervision of one of Petitioner's
1178employees, and, at no time, was Morales Moving and Storage
1188contractually obligated to pay Respondent for this work. The
1197contractual relationship, and thus the conflict, evidently
1204existed at the level of Mr. Lopez, not Respondent.
121312. In the course of the investigation of Mr. Lopez's
1223scheme, Petitioner's investigators inspected the hard drive of
1231Respondent's work computer and found inappropriate sexual
1238content. The investigators determined that the images were
1246linked to Respondent's ID. Generally, the computer was in an
1256area that was accessible by others. Respondent typically signed
1265in at the start of his work shift, but often, while leaving the
1278computer in a signed-in condition, left the building to perform
1288work at remote school sites. Respondent denied downloading any
1297sexually inappropriate material and, given the circumstances, it
1305is impossible to find otherwise.
131013. In August 1, 2008, Petitioner suspended Respondent
1318without pay. He has since been employed only for a short period
1330of time.
1332CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
133514. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
1342Fla. Stat. (2008).
134515. Petitioner's Rule 6Gx13-4A-1.21(I) states:
1350All persons employed by The School Board of
1358Miami-Dade County, Florida are
1362representatives of the Miami-Dade County
1367Public Schools. As such, they are expected
1374to conduct themselves, both in their
1380employment and in the community, in a manner
1388that will reflect credit upon themselves and
1395the school system.
1398* * *
140116. Petitioner's Rule 6Gx13-4A-1.212(D) states:
1406D. Conflicting Employment or Contractual
1411Relationship
14121. In addition to the restrictions on
1419outside employment that School Board Rule
14256Gx13-4C-1.17, Employment--Nonschool, places
1428on employees, no School Board employee shall
1435hold any employment or contract with any
1442business entity or any agency that is doing
1450business with the School Board. . . .
14582. In addition to the restrictions on
1465outside employment that School Board Rule
14716Gx13-4C-1.17, Employment--Nonschool, places
1474on employees, no School Board
14796Gx13-4A-1.212 employee shall have or hold
1485any employment or contractual relationship
1490that will create a continuing or frequently
1497recurring conflict between his or her
1503private interests and the performance of his
1510or her public duties, or that would impede
1518the full and faithful discharge of his or
1526her public duties. Section 112.313.(7)(a),
1531Florida Statute (2002).
153417. Section 1012.32(1), Florida Statutes, requires "good
1541moral character" for eligibility for appointment in any position
1550in a school district.
155418. Petitioner must prove the material allegations by a
1563preponderance of the evidence. Dileo v. School Board of Dade
1573County , 569 So. 2d 883 (Fla. 3d DCA 1990).
158219. Petitioner failed to prove that Respondent violated
1590any of the cited rules or statute as to the computer
1601pornography. As pleaded and in two extensive prehearing
1609conferences, Petitioner's theory of the computer case has been
1618that Respondent downloaded and viewed the sexually inappropriate
1626material found on his computer. At the start of the hearing,
1637Petitioner attempted to broaden this allegation to include a
1646charge that Respondent failed to maintain computer security, but
1655the Administrative Law Judge struck this new charge, for which
1665Respondent had not prepared. As for the charges consistently
1674advanced against Respondent--downloading and viewing
1679pornography--the evidence failed to link him to such material
1688found on his computer. As found above, Respondent frequently
1697left his computer in a signed-in condition where other persons
1707had free access to the computer and could have downloaded the
1718pornography.
171920. Petitioner failed to prove that Respondent violated
1727any of the cited rules or statute as to the additional work that
1740he performed for Mr. Lopez. Although he obviously accepted pay
1750checks from Morales Moving and Storage, Respondent was never
1759employed by Morales Moving and Storage, nor was he ever in a
1771contractual relationship with this vendor. Never having reached
1779any sort of agreement with anyone from Morales Moving and
1789Storage, Respondent had no enforceable contractual rights
1796against this company, either as an employer or otherwise. It is
1807entirely reasonable that, to Respondent, the arrangement looked
1815like the one under which he legitimately had worked for
1825Petitioner while being paid by Brown & Brown Architects. On
1835this record, Respondent has not violated any rule against a
1845conflict of interest by way of employment or contractual
1854relationship.
1855RECOMMENDATION
1856It is
1858RECOMMENDED that Petitioner enter a final order dismissing
1866the Notice of Specific Charges.
1871DONE AND ENTERED this 16th day of April, 2009, in
1881Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
1885___________________________________
1886ROBERT E. MEALE
1889Administrative Law Judge
1892Division of Administrative Hearings
1896The DeSoto Building
18991230 Apalachee Parkway
1902Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
1905(850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675
1909Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
1913www.doah.state.fl.us
1914Filed with the Clerk of the
1920Division of Administrative Hearings
1924this 16th day of April, 2009.
1930COPIES FURNISHED:
1932Mr. Alberto M. Carvalho
1936Superintendent
1937Miami-Dade County School Board
19411450 Northeast Second Avenue, No. 912
1947Miami, Florida 33132-1308
1950Deborah K. Kearney, General Counsel
1955Department of Education
1958Turlington Building, Suite 1244
1962325 West Gaines Street
1966Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
1969Dr. Eric J. Smith
1973Commissioner of Education
1976Department of Education
1979Turlington Building, Suite 1514
1983325 West Gaines Street
1987Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
1990Jean Marie Middleton, Esquire
1994School Board of Miami-Dade County
19991450 Northeast Second Avenue, Suite 400
2005Miami, Florida 33132
2008Randy A. Fleischer, Esquire
2012Randy A. Fleischer, P.A.
20168258 State Road 84
2020Davie, Florida 33324
2023NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
2029All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
203915 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions
2050to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that
2061will issue the Final Order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 03/24/2010
- Proceedings: Order Placing Case in Abeyance (parties to advise status by April 21, 2010).
- PDF:
- Date: 03/23/2010
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Unopposed Motion for a Stay and/or in the Alternative, to Place Case in Abeyance filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/03/2010
- Proceedings: Letter to Judge Cohen from L. Garcia regarding enclosed Mandate and Opinion filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/27/2010
- Proceedings: BY ORDER OF THE COURT: The motion for attorney's filed by Appellant is granted and remanded to the trial court to fix amount filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/18/2009
- Proceedings: Final Order of the School Board of Miami-Dade County, Florida filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 04/16/2009
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/03/2009
- Proceedings: Respondent`s Proposed Recommended Order (duplicate filing) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/17/2009
- Proceedings: Order Granting Extension of Time (proposed recommended orders to be filed by March 2, 2009).
- Date: 02/17/2009
- Proceedings: Transcript of Proceedings (Volumes I&II) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/13/2009
- Proceedings: Petitioner`s Motion for Extension to File Proposed Recommended Order filed.
- Date: 01/30/2009
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/02/2008
- Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for January 30, 2009; 9:00 a.m.; Miami, FL).
- Date: 11/25/2008
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
- Date: 11/25/2008
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/24/2008
- Proceedings: Petitioner, Miami-Dade County School Board`s Motion for Final Summary Judgment filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/13/2008
- Proceedings: Opposition to Motion for Protective Order Request for Hearing filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/21/2008
- Proceedings: Respondent`s Response to Petitioner`s First Request for Production filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/21/2008
- Proceedings: Respondent`s Answers to Petitioner`s First Set of Interrogatories to Respondent filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/20/2008
- Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for December 5, 2008; 9:00 a.m.; Miami, FL).
- Date: 10/17/2008
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/17/2008
- Proceedings: Notice of Appearance and Request for Subpoenas (Randy Fleischer).
- PDF:
- Date: 09/12/2008
- Proceedings: Notice of Service of Petitioner`s First Set of Interrogatories to the Respondent filed.
Case Information
- Judge:
- ROBERT E. MEALE
- Date Filed:
- 08/26/2008
- Date Assignment:
- 10/16/2008
- Last Docket Entry:
- 04/26/2010
- Location:
- Miami, Florida
- District:
- Southern
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN TOTO
- Suffix:
- TTS
Counsels
-
Randy A. Fleischer, Esquire
Address of Record -
Luis M. Garcia, Esquire
Address of Record -
Randy Alan Fleischer, Esquire
Address of Record