The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

911 center controvers­y gets debate at Fayette meeting

- Chris Joyner

Fayette County administra­tors are standing behind their embattled 911 director, Bernard “Buster” Brown following a 7-hour meeting Thursday where current 911 employees defended him against charges of harassment.

Others, including former center employees, restated their complaints against Brown, signaling the controvers­y is not over yet.

The meeting came amid complaints from former 911 employees of harassing and profane behavior by Brown. The accusation­s have roiled county government for months, stoked in part by division among county commission­ers and staff on how or whether to investigat­e.

Seventeen uniformed 911 center employees attended the meeting in support of Brown, several of

whom spoke in his defense and attacked his accusers, often to loud applause.

“Buster is a very caring manager on a day-to-day basis,” said 911 Supervisor Heather Brown, also no relation. “Fayette County 911 is moving forward. The county citizens should be very proud of the men and women who are working there.”

The allegation­s against Brown and the unveiling of months of discord in the center caught some commission­ers unprepared. Commission­er Steve Brown, no relation to the 911 director, spent weeks poring over personnel files and investigat­ive notes and wants the board to launch an independen­t investigat­ion, but the board tabled that request until a later meeting.

Local activist Martine Yancy urged commission­ers to act.

“Now is the time to fix it,” she said. “When you know that you have a loose cannon in your department you are liable when it explodes.”

Bernard Brown received a written reprimand last February after a profanity-laced tirade directed at a female supervisor. Notes from a human resources investigat­ion last year into his conduct indicated a pattern of inappropri­ate behavior.

County Manager Steve Rapson confirmed that a discrimina­tion complaint has been filed with the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission regarding the 911 center, but he gave no further details.

Terrence Williamson, president of the Fayette County NAACP, said his organizati­on became aware of the allegation­s against Brown last summer when three employees who had been fired by Brown came to them with complaints. Williamson said his organizati­on was preparing to file a federal discrimina­tion complaint when the women accepted a deal offered by Rapson to resign with severance pay and keep their 911 certificat­ion.

“Our expectatio­n was that the county administra­tor and commission­ers would follow up with appropriat­e action to address the underlying faults. In the intervenin­g

months apparently those expectatio­ns did not come to pass,” Williamson said.

‘No crisis in 911’

Most of the comments during Thursday’s meeting came from county employees, most of whom lined up to defend Rapson, Bernard Brown or their own job performanc­e. Two former 911 center employees, one of whom flew in from Texas to attend the meeting, restated their complaints against their former boss.

“I do hope you open an independen­t investigat­ion, so you can learn the facts,” said former 911 supervisor Nicole Smith, who was among those who first aired complaints against Bernard Brown at a commission­ers’ meeting in December.

Brown spent the evening sitting behind Rapson and county attorney Dennis Davenport. He left quickly after the meeting and declined to answer questions.

“Buster is widely known

to be an animated person,” said Katie Vogt, a member of Brown’s management staff. Brown has no “inside voice,” she said.

Vogt acknowledg­ed that Brown had been discipline­d for berating a subordinat­e but she said she had seen a change in him over the past year and had witnessed “no further outbursts aimed at employees.”

Sharon Battle, another of Brown’s administra­tors, offered perhaps the most nuanced portrait of Brown, even acknowledg­ing the truth to some of the allegation­s against him.

“Did Director Brown have a bad day and yell and curse at employees? Yes,” she said. “That is not a crisis.”

Battle said turnover went up under Brown, but only by a few employees compared to the prior administra­tion.

No further investigat­ion, county says

The county released

turnover statistics in the center prior to the meeting showing 33 employees have left the center — either through resignatio­n, terminatio­n or retirement — in the two and half years since Brown took the position. That’s nearly a complete turnover for the center, but not unpreceden­ted. Thirty employees left in the two and half years prior to Brown’s arrival.

What is notable is that most of the people who left during tenure were more seasoned employees, a difference from the turnover prior to his arrival.

Hours of public accusation­s and airing of grievances left Davenport, the county attorney, visibly disturbed. “None of this has been prudent,” he said.

At the end of the meeting, Rapson said he had no plans for further investigat­ion into Bernard Brown’s claimed past behavior.

“It depends on how you feel about that. My family would be perfectly fine with some of the things he’s doing because we tend to be kind of a loud,” he said. “My wife’s family is more Southern, so she would probably take offense at somebody who’s loud a lot.”

As AJC Watchdog, I’ll be writing about public officials, good governance and the way your tax dollars are spent. Help me out. What needs exposing in your community? Contact me at cjoyner@ajc.com.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Fayette County 911 communicat­ions center director Bernard “Buster” Brown (right) listens as former employees make public comments that allege he created a hostile work environmen­t during a county commission­ers meeting Thursday.
ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Fayette County 911 communicat­ions center director Bernard “Buster” Brown (right) listens as former employees make public comments that allege he created a hostile work environmen­t during a county commission­ers meeting Thursday.
 ??  ?? “I do hope you open an independen­t investigat­ion, so you can learn the facts,” said former 911 supervisor Nicole Smith, who was among those who first aired complaints against Bernard Brown at a commission­ers meeting in December.
“I do hope you open an independen­t investigat­ion, so you can learn the facts,” said former 911 supervisor Nicole Smith, who was among those who first aired complaints against Bernard Brown at a commission­ers meeting in December.
 ??  ??
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Employees of the Fayette County 911 communicat­ions center sit together in support of their director, Bernard “Buster” Brown, during a Fayette County commission­ers meeting Thursday.
ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Employees of the Fayette County 911 communicat­ions center sit together in support of their director, Bernard “Buster” Brown, during a Fayette County commission­ers meeting Thursday.
 ??  ?? Janika Terrell was in attendance Thursday. She no longer works at the center and has moved out of state.
Janika Terrell was in attendance Thursday. She no longer works at the center and has moved out of state.

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