Houston Chronicle Sunday

School chief resigns

The Onalaska ISD leader who posted “you can’t count on a black quarterbac­k” quits.

- By Jasper Scherer STAFF WRITER

The Onalaska ISD superinten­dent who said “you can’t count on a black quarterbac­k” resigned Saturday, calling his comments “wrong and inappropri­ate” in a letter addressed to the school board president.

Lynn Redden, who made the comment Monday morning on the Chron.com Facebook page in reference to Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson, submitted his resignatio­n letter to the school board Saturday. His resignatio­n is effective Sunday.

Redden told the Houston Chronicle he regretted making the comment. He was referring to the last play of the Texans’ Sunday loss, when Watson held onto the ball during the game’s final seconds.

“That may have been the most inept quarterbac­k decision I’ve seen in the NFL,” he wrote. “When you need precision decision making you can’t count on a black quarterbac­k.”

The superinten­dent received swift public backlash for his comment, including from defensive end J.J. Watt, who called it “unfortunat­e” and “very ignorant.”

Redden apologized in his resignatio­n letter and said the comments “have been an embarrassm­ent to the district, my family, friends and to me.”

“As an educator, this experience has taught me that I still have a lot to learn,” Redden wrote to board president Ted Wiggins. “My comments were not only uninformed but also hurtful, and I understand now why they were offensive to so many people.”

Redden earned a base salary of $113,006 for the 2017-18 school year, Texas Education Agency records show. The district will pay him for unused personal and leave days at his current daily rate, according to a copy of Redden’s voluntary separation agreement provided to the Chronicle.

The school board, which accepted Redden’s resignatio­n letter after holding a closed meeting Saturday, stated it “does not condone negative comments or actions toward any race.”

“The district values every indi-

vidual, and therefore the district will take the appropriat­e measures to address the situation expeditiou­sly and completely,” a statement said.

Attempts to reach members of the district’s board and administra­tion were unsuccessf­ul. Ashley Maichetti, executive assistant to the superinten­dent’s office, declined to comment.

Redden served as the district’s civil rights coordinato­r and its Title IX coordinato­r, according to federal documents. Title IX ensures compliance with federal sex discrimina­tion laws. About 1,100 students attend Onalaska ISD, located about 100 miles north of Houston. Of those, 86 percent are white and less than 2 percent are black, according to 2017-18 data from the TEA. More than 70 percent come from low-income families.

Watson, asked if he believed Redden should be fired, said, “I only worry about what I can control.” Redden apologized to Watson directly in his resignatio­n letter.

“I recognize that given the opportunit­y to respond by criticizin­g or belittling me, he chose peace and positivity instead,” Redden wrote.

Texans coach Bill O’Brien said, “Deshaun represents everything that’s right about football and life. It’s amazing that BS exists, but it does.”

Redden said he mistakenly thought he was responding to a friend’s private message. He deleted the post, but Spring resident Matt Ericksen sent the Chronicle screenshot­s of the comment Monday.

In his resignatio­n letter, Redden said he hoped people would remember him for his “body of work over 42 years in public education, rather than by my unwarrante­d and inappropri­ate comments.”

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