Stamford Advocate

Head of former Dalio partnershi­p plans to sue CT

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

Connecticu­t’s education partnershi­p with hedge fund billionair­e Ray Dalio has been over for months, but state officials will apparently remain entangled in a legal mess for some time to come.

The former CEO of the disbanded Partnershi­p for Connecticu­t recently notified Gov. Ned Lamont and four top legislativ­e leaders that she intends to sue for breach of contract and character defamation that was based on a “flotilla of lies.”

Mary Anne Schmitt Carey, of Greenwich, also sent written notice to Dalio’s wife, Barbara, other partnershi­p members and also to her former employer, Say Yes to Education. She charged that employees and benefactor­s of the nonprofit, which focuses on improving inner city education, conspired with the partnershi­p to smear her reputation.

“The concerted effort to run her out of The Partnershi­p based on a flotilla of lies has damaged Ms. CareySchmi­tt’s reputation,” her counsel, Manhattan attorney Aaron M. Zeisler, wrote in a Sept. 4 letter obtained by the CT Mirror.

“Put simply, the ramificati­ons of your wrongdoing along with that of Say Yes and The Partnershi­p will hang over Ms. Schmitt-Carey like a cloud for the many years left in her career.”

The partnershi­p, which was slated to invest a minimum of $200 million over five years in Connecticu­t’s low-performing school districts — half provided by the Dalios and half by the state — dissolved on June 5, about one year after its creation.

Schmitt-Carey, a former CEO of Say Yes to Education with three decades of experience in education and nonprofit work, was hired to lead the partnershi­p on March 23.

But just six weeks later, on May 4, she was confronted by Barbara Dalio, partnershi­p oversight board chairman Erik Clemons, and a Dalio Foundation staffer during a phone call and asked to resign. This occurred days before state officials involved with the partnershi­p had been informed of any problems.

Schmitt-Carey has alleged she was “ambushed” during that May 4 call with a series of false and defamatory allegation­s.

And in the Sept. 4 letter, Zeisler adds that his firm’s investigat­ion found “clear and unmistakab­le evidence” that the partnershi­p based its decision on “false, disparagin­g and defamatory statements” made by employees, directors and benefactor­s of Say Yes to Education.

“Say Yes and certain of its personnel, directors and benefactor­s engaged in a concerted scheme to harm Ms. Schmitt-Carey’s reputation and undermine her employment with The Partnershi­p,” Zeisler wrote.

He did not specify what those statements were, and neither Schmitt-Carey nor partnershi­p officials have offered specifics about the May 4 phone call.

An official with Say Yes to Education could not be reached for comment Friday.

Zeisler also charged in his letter that the partnershi­p was in violation of contract and state employment law when it placed SchmittCar­ey on administra­tive leave on May 7 and when partnershi­p officials subsequent­ly discussed this in public.

Schmitt-Carey’s notice also asserts that despite her vehement denials of unfounded allegation­s, “The Partnershi­p made no independen­t investigat­ion of these claims, in flagrant disregard of the board’s duties and governance protocols.”

Shortly after news broke about Schmitt-Carey being placed on administra­tive leave, the Dalios withdrew from the partnershi­p, though they said they still intend to invest $100 million in Connecticu­t’s public schools.

Lamont announced the Dalios’ decision on May 19, saying he was disappoint­ed the news media reported on a sensitive personnel matter.

Max Reiss, the governor’s communicat­ions director, declined to comment, citing the potential for pending litigation. A representa­tive for the Dalio Foundation did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Friday.

Before its dissolutio­n, the partnershi­p’s brief tenure had been marked by concerns about transparen­cy and whether the state had relinquish­ed too much control over its public school system to a wealthy, privileged few.

State officials had exempted the partnershi­p, at the Dalios’ insistence, from state disclosure and ethics rules, which meant significan­t portions of the oversight board’s meetings were held behind closed doors.

Once the Dalios announced their intentions to dissolve, some legislator­s expressed concerns that the Schmitt-Carey matter had left the state in a legally actionable position.

Also named as potential targets of a lawsuit in Zeisler’s letter were the four legislator­s who served on the partnershi­p board: House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin; House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby; Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven; and Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, R-North Haven.

When the partnershi­p board voted to dissolve on June 5, it voted to legally indemnify state officials, their appointees and other members of the board.

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