The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ethics group to look into board member

Complaint: Leslie Grant shared confidenti­al real estate informatio­n.

- By Molly Bloom molly.bloom@ajc.com

The Atlanta school board’s ethics commission voted Tuesday to investigat­e a complaint eight board members filed against fellow board member Leslie Grant.

The board members say Grant shared confidenti­al informatio­n about a real estate deal with a potential buyer after being told that the informatio­n should be kept private.

The ethics commission, a seven-person, independen­t board, is charged with hearing complaints of ethics violations against board members.

Tuesday’s vote starts an investigat­ive process that could stretch into early August. The commission will conduct its investigat­ion in private to determine whether there’s cause to believe Grant did something unethical. If the commission finds cause, it will hold a public hearing and eventually make a recommenda­tion to the school board.

Under board policy, if the commission finds that a member has engaged in conflicts of interest or shared confidenti­al informatio­n, the commission must recommend he or she be removed from office.

Grant is accused of telling WonderRoot, a community arts organizati­on seeking to purchase the former Hubert Elementary School building on Memorial Drive, that the district didn’t technicall­y hold title to the property.

The property is one of dozens of former school buildings whose titles are held by the City of Atlanta, a relic of the era before Atlanta Public Schools became a separate entity. The properties are the subject of a legal battle between the school district and the city, which has refused to release many of the deeds to the district. The district needs clear title to the Hubert building and

other properties to sell them.

According to the complaint, Grant only knew about the deed’s status because of a confidenti­al conversati­on involving the board’s general counsel. And the complaint alleges Grant knew that the board’s lawyer had warned against sharing informatio­n about the property’s title with Wonder Root.

But Grant’s lawyer, Chris Adams, said in a written statement that the fact that the district did not have the deed to the Hubert property is not “privileged” informatio­n. The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on included the former school on a map of properties involved in the district’s dispute with the city.

“The question is not why Leslie acted in good faith, by telling the truth about a matter of public record. The question is why anyone would think this informatio­n could or should be kept secret,” Adams said.

 ??  ?? Leslie Grant is accused of divulging that APS didn’t own the Hubert Elementary building.
Leslie Grant is accused of divulging that APS didn’t own the Hubert Elementary building.

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