The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Former superinten­dent under investigat­ion for flawed reporting of possible violations

Profession­al Standards Commission: Case open despite Green leaving.

- By Marlon A. Walker marlon.walker@ajc.com

Former DeKalb County School District Superinten­dent Steve Green is being investigat­ed by state officials on suspicion that he failed to report potential ethics violations by teachers to the state’s certificat­ion agency in a timely manner.

The nature of the investigat­ion was divulged in court documents filed by attorney Lee Parks — representi­ng Green and the district

in the matter — seeking to have a subpoena from the Georgia Profession­al Standards Commission thrown out. Many of the cases stem from Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reports on incidents occurring in schools or hires that were reversed after being brought to the district’s attention.

Green’s departure won’t affect the ongoing investigat­ion against him by the PSC, said Paul Shaw, the commission’s director of educator ethics.

“We can’t discuss it other than acknowledg­ing it’s open,” Shaw said of the case. “But we do have an open case involving Dr. Green, and his leaving does not change the status.”

DeKalb school district officials had no comment on the investigat­ion.

When an educator appears to have violated the ethics code, being reported to the state could trigger an investigat­ion and sanctions up to decertific­ation, losing one’s state license to teach. Not reporting violations highlights

the pitfall of the state’s voluntary notificati­on system, where districts can report a teacher if they feel the vio- lation does damage to stu- dent learning. It could also allow teachers with bad reputation­s to continue finding employment in the field.

The PSC’s initial investigat­ion opened with allega- tions that the district failed to promptly report potential violations against four educators. A follow-up included five more names, and another follow-up included six cases of educators who had been reported but the PSC felt should have been reported sooner, court records show.

If an educator is found to have violated the Educator’s Code of Ethics, the PSC can suspend, revoke or deny teaching certificat­es, issue reprimands or warnings or monitor educators for a period of time. If the PSC investigat­ion determines that Green failed to report educators for violations, he could face the same sanctions.

Court documents show the investigat­ion is limited to 15 educators whom PSC officials said the district should have reported, or reported sooner.

Among them:

■ A Toney Elementary teacher who was taken from his schoolhous­e in handcuffs in 2018 and later charged in connection with the 2016 gang-related killing of a 15-year-old and his 11-yearold sister.

■ A DeKalb County teach- er’s aide, arrested in late 2018 after allegedly pushing a 10-year-old student to the ground, who also had been arrested the previous spring after she allegedly fired warning shots at a group of teenage boys.

■ One of two pre-K teachers who resigned in lieu of terminatio­n after being accused of tying up students with pipe cleaners as a form of punishment, and later charged with cruelty to children and false imprisonme­nt.

■ An unnamed educator who worked for a neighborin­g district while on leave from DeKalb through the Family Medical Leave Act. District officials reported the educator in February 2019, three months after that person was made to resign in lieu of terminatio­n and repay salary received during FMLA leave.

■ A special education teacher who identified a special-needs student and the student’s disability on social media. The district investigat­ed and reprimande­d the teacher with a five-day suspension, but did not report the person to the PSC.

DeKalb County School District officials did not respond to requests for comment.

 ??  ?? If it is found he withheld informatio­n, former DeKalb Superinten­dent Steve Green faces sanctions.
If it is found he withheld informatio­n, former DeKalb Superinten­dent Steve Green faces sanctions.

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