15-003022TTS
Broward County School Board vs.
Elaine Jaffe
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Monday, April 11, 2016.
Recommended Order on Monday, April 11, 2016.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8BROWARD COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD,
12Petitioner,
13vs. Case No. 15 - 3022TTS
19ELAINE JAFFE,
21Respondent.
22_______________________________/
23RECOMMENDED ORDER
25This case came before Administrative Law Judge John G.
34Van Laningham for final hearing by video teleconference at
43sites in Tallahassee and Lauderdale Lakes, Florida, on
51September 8 , 20 1 5 ; the hearing reconven ed on November 16 , 2015 ,
64and concluded the following day, on Novembe r 17 th .
75APPEARANCES
76For Petitioner: Tria Lawton - Russell , Esquire
83School Board of Broward County
88600 Southeast Third Avenue
92Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33 3 01
98For Respondent: Robert F. McKee , Esquire
104Robert F. McKee , P.A.
1081718 Eas t Seventh Avenue, Suite 301
115Post Office Box 75638
119Tampa , Florida 33 6 05
124STATEMENT OF THE ISSU ES
129The issues in this case are w hether Respondent, a teacher,
140failed to implement a student's Individual Educational Plan ,
148made offensive comments to the same student's parent, and/or did
158not collect data to measure another student's response to
167interventions for purposes of determining eligibility for
174Exceptional Student Education services, as Petitioner alleges;
181and, if so, whether just cause exists to suspend Respondent
191without pay for five days.
196PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
198At its regular meeting on May 19 , 201 5 , Petitioner Broward
209County School Board voted to approve the superintendent's
217recommendation that Respondent Elaine Jaf fe be suspended for
226five days, without pay , from her job as a teacher. The reasons
238for t his action were spelled out in an Administrative Complaint
249that had been issued on or around April 23 , 201 5 , in which
262M s . Jaffe was accused of having failed to fulfill her
274obligations towards two of her students, and of having spoken
284rudely to one of the students ' mother s .
294M s. Jaffe timely requested a formal administrative hearing
303to contest Petitioner's intended action. On May 27 , 201 5 , the
314matter was referred to t he Division of Administrative Hearings
324("DOAH") for further proceedings.
330At the final hearing, which took place on September 8,
340November 16, and November 17 , 20 1 5 , Petitioner called the
351following witnesses: Mr. M.N., Ms. P . F., Ms. M.P., Colleen
362Forde, D onna Schwartz, Katelynn Breighner, Michal Waskowiak,
370Tameka King, Ronald Adam, Cory Smith, Susan Leon - Leigh, and
381Susan Cooper. Petitioner's Exhibits 1 through 1 8 were received
391in evidence without objection . M s. Jaffe testified on h er own
404behalf and called Gary Itzkowitz and Jaclyn Merchant as
413additional witnesses.
415T he four - volume final hearing transcript was filed on
426January 11, 2016 . Each party timely filed a Proposed
436Recommended Order on the deadline , which had been extended to
446February 25 , 20 1 6 , at Petitioner's request .
455Unless otherwise indicated, citations to the official
462statute law of the state of Florida refer to Florida Statutes
4732015, except that all references to statutes or rules defining
483disciplinable offenses or prescr ibing penalties for committing
491such offenses are to the versions that were in effect at the
503time of the alleged wrongful acts.
509FINDINGS OF FACT
5121. The Broward County School Board ("School Board"),
522Petitioner in this case, is the constitutional entity auth orized
532to operate, control, and supervise the Broward County Public
541School System.
5432. At all relevant times , Respondent Elaine Jaffe
551(" J affe ") was employed as a reading teacher at Coral Springs
564High , a public school in Broward County .
5723. The events at issue involve two students, C.N. and N.P.
583Although the School Board alleges, in brief and broadly
592speaking, that Jaffe failed to fulfill obligations towards each
601of these students, there is no factual overlap between the
611situations of C.N. a nd N.P. ÏÏ each student is the subject of a
625separate occurrence or occurrences. Further, the alleged
632wrongdoing in reference to C.N. took place (if at all) during
643the 2013 - 14 school year, while the disputed events concerning
654N.P. transpired the following ye ar, 2014 - 15.
6634. C.N. was an eleventh grade student in 2013 - 14 who
675received Exceptional Student Education ("ESE") services pursuant
684to an Individual Educational Plan ("IEP " ). Jaffe had taught
695C.N. the previous year (2012 - 13) , when C.N had been in Jaffe's
708reading class for special education students. For 2013 - 14, C.N.
719was placed in a less restrictive , albeit remedial, reading
728class, which included students from the general population.
736Unhappy with her assigned teacher, however, C.N. (or her
745parents) requested that C.N. be transferred to Jaffe's class
754(Jaffe taught the same course), which was done.
7625. The fact that C.N. voluntarily transferred to Jaffe's
771class is significant for two r easons. First, it gives ri se to
784the reasonable inference ÏÏ confirme d by Jaffe's credible
793testimony ÏÏ that Jaffe was aware, in 2013 - 14, of the
805supplementary aids and services ("accommodations") prescribed in
814C.N.'s IEP , with which her teachers were to provid e her , having
826afforded the same (or substantially similar) accommodations to
834C.N. the previous year . Second, from the voluntary transfer the
845undersigned reasonably infers that neither C.N. nor her parents
854had concerns about Jaffe's alleged inability, fail ure, or
863refusal to implement C.N.'s accommodations; more than that ,
871since they requested that C.N. be moved into Jaffe's class, the
882reasonable inference, hereby drawn, is that C.N. and her parents
892were satisfied with Jaffe's instructional performance in
8992012 - 13 , including the provision of accommodations .
9086. In its Administrative Comp laint, the School Board
917alleges that Jaffe failed to provide C.N. the following three
927acco mmodations (as described in C.N.'s IEP):
934Flexible Setting - Small group for testing
941Flexible Presentation - Oral presentation of
947test prompts (if allowable)
951Flexible Scheduling/Timing - Add'l time for
957task (Total time = twice the allotted time)
965This alleged default , according to the School Board, was
"974demonstrated by [Jaffe's] failure to se nd C.N. " to the Support
985Room , i.e., a separate classroom where special education
993students can take tests or complete other assignments in a small
1004group under the supervision of an ESE teacher who serves as the
1016s upport c oordinator.
10207. C.N. did not report to the Support Room from Jaffe's
1031class at any time during the 2013 - 14 school year. This fact
1044means little, however, in light of other circumstances. C.N.
1053went to the Support Room 13 times in 2013 - 14 at the instance of
1068a teacher . Ten of those referrals were from C.N.'s American
1079History class, which means that one teacher (Watson) accounted
1088for 77 percent of C.N.'s trips to the Support Room. C.N.'s
1099s cience teacher (Eyerman) sent her for support twice in November
11102013 , and a geometry te acher (Myers) sent C.N. to the Support
1122Room once, in March 2014. Like Jaffe, C.N.'s English teacher
1132(Merchant), American Sign Language teacher (Nesser), and an other
1141geometry teacher (Barr) did not account for any documented
1150visit s by C.N. to the Support Room during the 2013 - 14 school
1164year.
11658. Jaffe's utilization of the Support Room vis - à - vis C.N. ,
1178in short, was no different, or p ractically indistinguishable ,
1187from that of all the rest of C.N.'s teachers except one (who
1199might have o verutilized this resource for all the record shows) .
1211That being the case, the undersigned rejects the School Board's
1221contention that Jaffe's "failure" to send C.N. for support
1230constitutes persuasive proof that she failed to implement C.N.'s
1239IEP.
12409. There is, moreover, no persuasive evidence in the
1249record to support the charge that Jaffe otherwise ignored C.N.'s
1259accommodations. On the contrary, Jaffe testified credibly that
1267she read aloud test "prompts" or directions as appropriate , and
1277tha t she always offered C.N. ad ditional time to complete a task
1290or test , which C.N. regularly declined.
129610. Finally, there is no persuasive evidence demonstrating
1304that Jaffe ever failed to provide an accommodation to C.N. on a
1316particular occasion when such an accommodation was requested or
1325required under the circumstances .
133011. In sum, the School Board presented in sufficient
1339evidence in support of its allegations that Jaffe failed to
1349implement C.N.'s IEP.
135212. The School Board also alleges that Jaffe made
1361d isparaging comments about C.N. to C.N.'s mother (P.F.) during
1371the course of an IEP meeting on April 11, 2014. There is no
1384dispute that Jaffe attended the meeting in question, and that
1394Jaffe was excused from the meeting before it concluded because
1404she need ed to get back to her classroom. When Jaffe left, P.F.
1417followed her out of the room, and the two spoke briefly and in
1430private. Each gives a different, and conflicting, account of
1439what was said.
144213. Based entirely on P.F.'s version of the event, the
1452Scho ol Board alleges that Jaffe told P.F. that C.N. is "not
1464college material" and her plans to attend college "were
1473ridiculous and a complete waste of time." Allegedly, Jaffe
1482further recommended to P.F. that C.N. concentrate on learning a
"1492skill" for which sh e might get paid.
150014. Jaffe denied having made these remarks . H er testimony
1511in this regard is corroborated by additional persuasive evidence
1520demonstr ating that P.F. was not visibly upset when she returned
1531to the meeting following her one - on - one conversation with Jaffe ,
1544and that she did not say anything to the other participants
1555about Jaffe's allegedly offensive comments. Indeed, P.F. first
1563complained about the alleged remarks more than a month after the
1574IEP meeting , contacting the assistant pri ncipal in late May 2014
1585to lambaste Jaffe. P.F.'s email to the administrator following
1594their telephone c onversation included such intemperate opinions
1602as: "[A] higher level of thinking . . . is beyond [Jaffe's]
1614intellectual capacity."
161615. The undersigne d discounts the accuracy of P.F.'s
1625recollect ion of her private conversation with Jaffe ÏÏ her memory
1636is likely corrupted by personal animus ÏÏ and finds that Jaffe did
1648not make the alleged remarks attributed to her in the
1658Administrative Complaint . Rather, based on the evidence
1666presented, it is likely that during the IEP meeting Jaffe
1676expres sed the view , which she evidently held, that pursuing a
1687college degree might not be in C.N.'s best interests .
1697Expressing such an opinion during an IEP meeting involving a
1707high school student seems neither remarkable nor objectionable ,
1715so long as it is tactfully and respectfully offered . Obviously,
1726the student is free to disagree and pursue whatev er course of
1738action or study is both desirable and available to him or her.
175016. At bottom, the School Board presented insufficient
1758evidence in support of its allegations that Jaffe made offensive
1768remarks about C.N. to C.N.'s mother.
177417. As mentioned above, t he other student whom Jaffe
1784allegedly underserved is named N.P. After his sophomore year,
1793N.P.'s mother decided that N.P. would benefit from ESE services ,
1803which she resolved to secure . T o that end, she brought her son
1817to a private psychologist for an evaluation in the summer of
18282014 . The report of that study (dated June 9, 2014) was
1840presented to Coral Springs High for consideration at the start
1850of the next school year. Then a junior , N.P. was a student in
1863Jaffe's reading class during 2014 - 15.
187018. The administration referred N.P. to a Child Study
1879Team to evaluate h is eligibility for ESE services. On
1889September 2, 2014, the guidance counselor sent an email to
1899N.P.'s teachers asking them to begin providing N.P. with
"1908Tier 1" and "Tier 2" interventions and collecting data from
1918such interventions pursuant to the response to interventions
1926("RtI") procedure used in determining ESE eligibility.
193519. On September 4, 2014, the guidance counselor informed
1944N.P.'s teachers by e mail that the RtI process was being
1955accelerated and that, accordingly, they were each immediately to
1964commence a "Tier 3" intervention with the student. Tier 3
1974interventions are more involved than Tier 2 interventions, which
1983latter are a n intermediate step up from the Tier 1 interventions
1995commonly provided to all students . A Tier 3 intervention ,
2005therefore, at least generally speaking, require s the teacher to
2015spend more time on, and devote more attention to, the subject
2026student than otherwise would be the case .
203420. The guidance counselor gave N.P.'s teachers notice of
2043yet another change of plans regarding the RtI in an email dated
2055September 12, 2014, which stated: "Many of you are expressing
2065that you don't see any issues/concerns with [N.P.] and that's
2075fine. Because of this, Mrs. Forde (the ESE specialist) would
2085like you to now log ONLY Tier 1 interventions " into the
2096electronic database.
209821. Nearly three months later, on December 8, the ESE
2108s pecialist, Coleen Forde, emailed Jaffe to complain that "ther e
2119is no data [on N.P.] for a Tier 3 intervention" and to assert
2132that "[n]ot having this data will prevent him from being
2142eligible for ESE." Ms. Forde advised Jaffe as follows:
2151Being in an intensive class [such as yours]
2159is a Tier 2 intervention and doing smaller
2167groups in class is a Tier 3 intervention.
2175What you do in that small group can be
2184monitored and data can be collected and
2191graphed.
219222. Jaffe replied later that day to Ms. Forde's email,
2202writing in relevant part:
2206On September 12, [2014,] we received an
2214email that addressed the lack of
2220issues/concerns regarding [N.P.]'s behavior
2224and academic work. We were instructed that
2231since we did not have issues with [N.P.],
"2239Mrs. Forde would like you to now log ONLY
2248Tier 1 int erventions on [the database]. " I
2256did this.
2258Your email today is a bit confusing. Tier 3
2267interventions were written, not inputted
2272into [the computer] due to malfunctions of
2279the [database] program. Both [the guidance
2285counselor] and I have tried to input d ata
2294into Tier 3 but it did not work, and then we
2305were told to only put in information for
2313Tier 1.
2315* * *
2318I believe I have done all that I have been
2328asked to do. Please let me know if you need
2338other information.
2340Ms. Forde did not reply.
234523. Almost two more months passed. Jaffe received an
2354email notifying her that a meeting of the Child Study Team , of
2366which Jaffe was a member, would be held on February 2, 2015, to
2379determine whether N.P. was eligible to receive ESE services.
2388Jaffe was not ins tructed to bring any materials to this meeting.
240024. The meeting was held as scheduled. In its
2409Administrative Complaint the School Board alleges that "because
2417Ms. Jaffe had failed to collect Tier 3 data, the team was unable
2430to find [N.P.] eligible for E SE and had to reschedule."
2441Allegedly " [a]s a result, N.P.'s ESE eligibility determination
2449had to be postponed for another month."
245625. The School Board failed to prove that Jaffe was
2466solely, or even largely, responsible for the ensuing one - month
2477delay in N.P.'s being deemed eligible for ESE services. (He
2487would be approved at a meeting on March 2, 2014, after Jaffe
2499collected Tier 3 data ÏÏ the only one of N.P.'s teachers to do
2512so.) While it is true that Jaffe did not bring Tier 3 data to
2526the February 2nd me eting, the facts are that no one else did
2539either, and that Jaffe had not been directed to bring such
2550information. Moreover, the evidence fails persuasively to
2557establish that Jaffe was ever clearly directed t o resume
2567collecting Tier 3 data after being told unambiguously on
2576September 12, 2014, to "log ONLY Tier 1 interventions."
2585(M s. Forde's December 8th email contained only an implied (not
2596express) directive to implement Tier 3 interventions ÏÏ one which
2606conflicted , at that, with the emphatic command of the
2615S eptember 12th email. Ms. Forde's failure to timely co ntradict
2626Jaffe's assertion ÏÏ that, as of December 8, 2014, she (Jaffe) had
"2638done all that I have been asked to do " ÏÏ increased the
2650ambiguity.)
265126. In conclusion, the School Board presented insufficient
2659evidence in support of its allegations that Jaffe failed to
2669carry out her duties respecting the RtI process as it pertained
2680to N.P .
2683Determinations of Ultimate Fact
26872 7 . The greater weight of the eviden ce fails to establish
2700that Jaffe is guilty of the offense of misconduct in office,
2711which is defined in Florida Administrative Code Rule 6A -
27215.056(2). 1 /
272428. The greater weight of the evidence fails to establish
2734that Jaffe is guilty of incompetency, 2 / which when proved affords
2746just cause for suspension or dismissal from employment.
275429. The evidence does not support a determination that
2763Jaffe violated School Board Rule 4008(B), which essentially
2771directs teachers and other employees to obey all applicable
2780statutes, rules, and policies.
278430. The greater weight of the evidence fails to establish
2794that Jaffe is guilty of gross insubordination . 3 /
280431. The evidence does not support a finding that Jaffe
"2814intentional [ly] or reckless [ly] fail [ e d] to carry out required
2827duties , " which if proved constitutes a disciplinable offense
2835under rule 6A - 5.056(5) (defining "willful neglect of duty").
2846CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
28493 2 . DOAH has personal and subject matter jurisdiction in
2860this proceeding pursuant to s ections 1012.33(6)(a)2., 120.569,
2868and 120.57(1), Florida Statutes.
28723 3 . A district school board employee against whom a
2883disciplinary proceeding has been initiated must be gi ven written
2893notice of the specific charges prior to the hearing. Although
2903the notice "need not be set forth with the technical nicety or
2915formal exactness required of pleadings in court," it should
"2924specify the [statute,] rule, [regulation, policy, or coll ective
2934bargaining provision] the [school board] alleges has been
2942violated and the conduct which occasioned [said] violation."
2950Jacker v. Sch . B d . of Dade C nty. , 426 So. 2d 1149, 1151 (Fla. 3d
2968DCA 1983)(Jorgenson, J. concurring).
29723 4 . Once the school board, in its notice of specific
2984charges, has delineated the offenses alleged to justify
2992termination, those are the only grounds upon wh ich dismissal may
3003be predicated . See Lusskin v. Ag . for Health Care Admin . , 731
3017So. 2d 67, 69 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999); Cottrill v . Dep ' t of Ins . ,
3034685 So. 2d 1371, 1372 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996); Klein v. Dep ' t of
3049Bus . & Prof ' l Reg . , 625 So. 2d 1237, 1238 - 39 (Fla. 2d DCA 1993);
3068Delk v. Dep ' t of Prof ' l Reg . , 595 So. 2d 966, 967 (Fla. 5th DCA
30871992); Willner v. Dep ' t of Prof ' l Reg ., B d . of Me d . , 563 So. 2d
3109805, 806 (Fla. 1st DCA 1990), rev. denied , 576 So. 2d 295 ( Fla.
31231991).
31243 5 . In an administrative proceeding to suspend or dismiss
3135a member of the instructional staff, the school board, as the
3146charging party, bears the burden of proving, by a preponderance
3156of the evidence, each element of the charged offense(s). See
3166McNeill v. Pinellas Cnty . Sch . Bd. , 678 So. 2d 476, 477 (Fla. 2d
3181DCA 1996); Sublett v. Sumter C nty . Sch . Bd. , 664 So. 2d 1178,
31961179 (Fla. 5th DCA 1995); MacMillan v. Nassau Cnty . Sch . Bd. ,
3209629 So. 2d 226 (Fla. 1st DCA 1993).
32173 6 . The instructional staff member's guilt or innocence is
3228a question of ultimate fact to be decided in the context of each
3241alleged violation. McKinney v. Castor , 667 So. 2d 387, 389
3251(Fla. 1st DCA 1995); L angston v. Jamerson , 653 So. 2d 489, 491
3264(Fla. 1st DCA 1995).
32683 7 . In its Administrative Complaint, the School Board
3278advanced five theories for suspending Jaffe : Misconduct in
3287Office (Count 2 ); Incompetency (Count 3 ); Violati on of School
3299Board Rule 4008(B) (Count 4 ) ; Gross Insubordination (Count 5);
3309and Willful Neglect of Duty (Count 6) .
33173 8 . Each of the School Board's charges depends up on
3329allegation s that Jaffe failed to fulfill her obligations to
3339implement C.N.'s IEP and to participate fully in the RtI process
3350that was initiated to evaluate N.P.'s eligibility for ESE
3359services , and that she spoke rudely to C.N.'s mother . The
3370School Board, however, failed to prove th ese essential
3379allegation s of material fact by a preponderanc e of the evidence.
3391Thus, all of the charges against Jaffe necessarily fail, as a
3402matter of fact. Due to this dispositive failure of proof, it is
3414not necessary to render additional conclusions of law.
3422RECOMMENDATION
3423Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions
3432of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the School Board enter a final
3444order exonerating Jaffe of all charges brought against h er in
3455this proceeding and awarding h er back salary (if she has
3466already served the five - day suspension) as required under
3476section 1012.33(6)(a) .
3479DONE AND ENTERED this 11th day of April , 201 6 , in
3490Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
3494S
3495___________________________________
3496JOHN G. VAN LANINGHAM
3500Administrative Law Judge
3503Division of Administrative Hearings
3507The De Soto Building
35111230 Apalachee Parkway
3514Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 3060
3519(850) 488 - 9675 SUNCOM 278 - 9675
3527Fax Filing (850) 921 - 6847
3533www.doah.state.fl.us
3534Filed with the Clerk of the
3540Division of Administrative Hearings
3544this 11th day of April , 20 1 6 .
3553ENDNOTES
35541 / The rule provides as follows:
3561(2) "Misconduct in Office" means one or
3568more of the following:
3572(a) A violation of the Code of Ethics of
3581the Education Profession in Florida as
3587adopted in Rule 6A - 10.080, F.A.C.;
3594(b) A violation of the Princ iples of
3602Professional Conduct for the Education
3607Profession in Florida as adopted in Rule 6A -
361610.081, F.A.C.;
3618(c) A violation of the adopted school board
3626rules;
3627(d) Behavior that disrupts the student's
3633learning environment; or
3636(e) Behavior that reduces the teacher's
3642ability or his or her colleagues' ability to
3650effectively perform duties.
36532 / Rule 6A - 5.056(3) defines "incompetency" as "the inability,
3664failure or lack of fitness to discharge the required duty as a
3676result of inefficiency or incapacity."
36813 / Rule 6A - 5.056(4) defines "gross insubordination" as "the
3692intentional refusal to obey a direct order, reasonable in
3701nature, and given by and with proper authority; misfeasance, or
3711malfeasance as to involve failure in the performance of the
3721required dut ies."
3724COPIES FURNISHED :
3727Tria Lawton - Russell, Esquire
3732School Board of Broward County
3737600 Southeast Third Avenue
3741Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301
3745(eServed)
3746Robert F. McKee, Esquire
3750Robert F. McKee, P.A.
37541718 East Seventh Avenue, Suite 301
3760Post Office Box 75638
3764Tampa, Florida 33605
3767(eServed)
3768Matthew Mears, General Counsel
3772Department of Education
3775Turlington Building
3777325 West Gaines Street, Suite 1244
3783Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 0400
3788(eServed)
3789Robert W. Runcie, Superintendent
3793Broward County School Boar d
3798600 Southeast Third Avenue, 10th Floor
3804Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301 - 3125
3810Pam Stewart, Commissioner of Education
3815Department of Education
3818Turlington Building
3820325 West Gaines Street, Suite 1514
3826Tallahassee, Florida 32399 - 0400
3831(eServed)
3832NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
3838All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
384815 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions
3859to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that
3870will issue the Final Order in this ca se.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 04/11/2016
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
- PDF:
- Date: 04/11/2016
- Proceedings: Recommended Order (hearing held September 8, 2015, and November 16 and 17, 2016). CASE CLOSED.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/19/2016
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Motion for Extension of Time to File Proposed Recommended Order filed.
- Date: 01/11/2016
- Proceedings: Transcript of Proceedings (not available for viewing) filed.
- Date: 11/16/2015
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/13/2015
- Proceedings: Notice of Filing Additional (Proposed) Exhibits (exhibits not available for viewing) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/29/2015
- Proceedings: Respondent's Response to the Petitioner's Motion for Continuance filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/14/2015
- Proceedings: Amended Notice of Hearing by Video Teleconference (hearing set for November 16 and 17, 2015; 9:00 a.m.; Lauderdale Lakes and Tallahassee, FL; amended as to hearing dates ).
- PDF:
- Date: 09/21/2015
- Proceedings: Order Re-scheduling Hearing by Video Teleconference (hearing set for November 16, 2015; 9:00 a.m.; Lauderdale Lakes, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 09/08/2015
- Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance (parties to advise status by September 15, 2015).
- Date: 09/08/2015
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Partially Held; continued to September 15, 2015; 9:00 a.m.; Fort Lauderdale, FL.
- Date: 09/04/2015
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Motion Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 09/02/2015
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Motion to Amend the Joint Pre-hearing Stipulation filed.
- Date: 09/02/2015
- Proceedings: Respondent's (Proposed) Hearing Exhibits filed (exhibits not available for viewing).
- Date: 09/01/2015
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Proposed Exhibits filed (exhibits not available for viewing).
- PDF:
- Date: 08/26/2015
- Proceedings: Respondent's Response to the Petitioner's Motion to Continue Hearing filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/24/2015
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Motion to Exclude Witness Deposition in Lieu of Live Testimony filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/21/2015
- Proceedings: (Respondent's) Notice of Objection to Petitioner's Notice of Taking Depositions Duces Tecum filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/21/2015
- Proceedings: Petitioner's Notice of Taking Deposition Duces Tecum (of Elaine Jaffe and Courtney Eyer) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/11/2015
- Proceedings: Respondent's Answers to Petitioner's First Set of Interrogatories filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 07/22/2015
- Proceedings: Petitioner School Board's First Request for Interrogatories to Respondent filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/15/2015
- Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing by Video Teleconference (hearing set for September 8, 2015; 9:00 a.m.; Lauderdale Lakes, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 06/05/2015
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing by Video Teleconference (hearing set for July 6, 2015; 9:00 a.m.; Lauderdale Lakes and Tallahassee, FL).
Case Information
- Judge:
- JOHN G. VAN LANINGHAM
- Date Filed:
- 05/28/2015
- Date Assignment:
- 05/28/2015
- Last Docket Entry:
- 06/16/2016
- Location:
- Lauderdale Lakes, Florida
- District:
- Southern
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN TOTO
- Suffix:
- TTS
Counsels
-
Tria Lawton-Russell, Esquire
The School Board of Broward County
14th Floor
600 Southeast Third Avenue
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
(754) 321-2655 -
Robert F McKee, Esquire
Kelly & McKee
Post Office Box 75638
Tampa, FL 33675
(813) 248-6400 -
Robert F. McKee, Esquire
Address of Record