Chicago Sun-Times

IG: City laborer used sick time to cover for time spent in jail on federal drug charges

Inspector general’s report outlines array of corruption, wrongdoing by city employees

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

A city sanitation laborer was accused Friday of taking two sick days and being AWOL for another four while actually being held at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center on federal drug charges.

The Streets and Sanitation laborer was fired and placed on the “do-not-rehire” list for concealing his drug arrest.

Inspector General Joe Ferguson’s thirdquart­er report was dominated by details of an alleged police cover-up of a drinking-and-driving incident that led to former Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson’s firing.

The report also included the usual sordid array of corruption and wrongdoing by other city employees:

♦ A truck driver for the Department of Water Management was “verbally abusive and used misogynist­ic and racist slurs” when a black female security guard asked the driver to present a city ID to enter a worksite. The driver responded to what Ferguson called a “legitimate request” by becoming “irate,” calling the woman a “black b----” and using other “racist and highly offensive comments.”

Ferguson recommende­d the driver be discharged, but the Law Department overruled him, and he was suspended for 10 days.

Three years ago, a shake-up triggered by racist, sexist and homophobic emails swept out then-Water Management Commission­er Barrett Murphy and his top deputies William Bresnahan and Paul Hansen, brother of former Ald. Bernard Hansen (44th).

♦ Ten employees assigned to the Department of Fleet and Facilities Management were accused of stealing scrap copper wire from a branch library, loading it into the personal truck of one of the employees and driving it to a suburban scrap yard, where it was re-sold for a $4,445 profit. The foreman of electrical mechanics and an electricia­n resigned to avoid being fired. The truck driver was fired. Seven other employees were suspended for as long as 10 days.

♦ A head library clerk resigned after being accused of stealing more than $6,200 in cash collected through fines and fees over a two-month period after taking the lock box home. The clerk used the cash for personal and household expenses. The branch manager who “inaccurate­ly represente­d … that the money was in the branch safe, when, in fact, the branch manager did not know the money’s whereabout­s” was suspended for three days.

♦ A building inspector resigned to avoid being fired after being accused of inspecting properties, then “referring property owners to the inspector’s business associates for permitting and constructi­on work to cure the violations.”

♦ A sanitation laborer was suspended for 10 days for responding to an earlier disciplina­ry suspension by threatenin­g violence in the workplace. Specifical­ly, the laborer was accused of saying, “When I come back on Monday, ‘Pop! Pop! Pop!’” The Chicago Police Department was notified of the threat, which wasn’t carried out.

♦ Another Streets and Sanitation laborer resigned to avoid being fired after being accused of forging pay stubs and wage verificati­on forms to qualify for $22,329 in child care assistance.

♦ A land side operations manager at O’Hare Airport retired before being fired after flashing a decommissi­oned Department of Aviation police star during a road rage incident.

♦ An Aviation Department painter made “unwelcome, discourteo­us sexual comments and gestures” toward a contractor’s employee. The contractor’s employee complained to a foreman, but the supervisor failed to report the inappropri­ate conduct to the Department of Human Resources. Neither employee was discipline­d.

 ??  ?? Chicago Inspector General Joe Ferguson
Chicago Inspector General Joe Ferguson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States