The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Dekalb Schools battles suit filed by rejected superinten­dent finalist

- By Wilborn P. Nobles III

A year ago, Rudy Crew interviewe­d with the Dekalb County School Board, hop- ing to become its new super- intendent. Weeks later, the job appeared in hand as the school board named him as the lone finalist.

But two weeks later, the board reversed course and voted 4-3 not to hire him. Months later, the district remains embroiled in a lawsuit in which Crew alleges that he was discrimina­ted against because of his age and race.

Crew, 70, the president of Medgar Evers College in New York since 2013, also names Dekalb board member Joyce Morley as a defendant in the lawsuit. It accuses her of disparagin­g Crew because his late wife was white. Both Crew and Morley are Black.

The suit also alleges Morley undermined Crew’s selec- tion out of “racial animus and suspicion” toward the white board members who supported him.

“Anybody reading the lawsuit would see that we have the facts to back up what we are saying,” Steven Wolfe, Crew’s attorney, recently told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

Crew’s suit seeks compensati­on due to alleged discrimina­tion, back pay, compensati­on for “emotional distress” and punitive damages against Morley.

A school system spokeswoma­n said the district cannot comment on pending liti- gation. the district and Morley deny Crew’s alle- gations in court documents. The actions taken by Morley and the district were “based on legitimate, non-discrimina­tory, and non-retaliator­y grounds,” such as “reasonable business factors other than age,” the documents said.

Morley recently told The AJC that the allegation­s are “all lies” and that Crew’s late wife had nothing to do with her vote. She said that she voted against him due to his “haughtines­s” and question- able past actions.

“I’m a Black woman and he’s a Black man,” she said. “We’re basically at the same level and he can’t ever say I talked about age because he’s not too much older than me.”

Crew held numerous high-profile positions over the years, including Oregon’s chief education offi- cer and the superinten­dent of Miami-dade County Public Schools in Florida. He also led the New York City Department of Education.

But his leadership has been marked by contro- versy, which led Michael Erwin, Stan Jester and Diijon Dacosta to join Morley in voting against him for the Dekalb job. (Erwin and Jester are no longer on the board.)

Jester had voiced concerns over past allegation­s that Crew bullied subordinat­es, spent taxpayer dol- lars on personal trips and furniture, and obstructed a sexual assault investigat­ion.

But Marshall Orson, a board member who supported Crew, said the controvers­ies “do not distract from the positive leader- ship we think he’s going to provide for Dekalb County.”

Crew’s lawsuit alleges Deka lb board members made “ageist” remarks to him and to constituen­ts in favor of younger candidates, according to the 26-page lawsuit. It stated Dacosta, for instance, “expressed ageist stereotype­s” by asking if Crew knew how to use text messaging.

In a court document, the district said Dacosta brought up text messaging because that’s his preferred method of communicat­ion.

ekalb’s nation w ide search for a superinten­dent last year produced 68 candidates — an unusually high number for the district’s top job. The board ultimately hired Cheryl Watson-harris, 49, second-in-command at the New York City Department of Education.

Morley was the only board member to oppose her hiring.

When board mem er Orson announced the selec

of Watson-harris last June, he referred to her as “part of the next generation of outstandin­g leaders in pub- lic education.” Crew’s lawsuit cites this as evidence that the board “selected her instead of Crew because of age bias.”

Crew’s contract at Medgar Evers College was renewed last summer, despite protests from students and objection from Myrlie Evers, widow of the civil rights activist murdered in Mississipp­i in 1963. Last July, hundreds of stu- dents reportedly marched in the streets near the college chanting, “Crew must go.”

■ Online:“can You Catch the Leprechaun? Escape Room” by Gwinnett County Public Library. Monday. Do you have what it takes to catch the leprechaun before St. Patrick’s Day on March 17? Solve puzzles and use your wits to find out. St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, died on March 17, 461. britannica.com/topic/saint-patricksDa­y Watch for the link to appear on Monday at gwinnettpl.libnet. info/event/4800628.

■Online live: Southside Sidekicks Virtual Improv Show by Southside Theatre Guild. 7 p.m. Saturday. Free. For this family-friendly event, join the chat and submit suggestion­s (locations, occupation­s, objects, characters, etc.) to be incorporat­ed into the games. Facebook Live: facebook. com/southsidet­heatreguil­d

■Call for artists ages 1 to 12: Virtual Junior Art Show by Peachtree City Library. Deadline is Sunday. The artwork can be a drawing, sculpture, sketch, coloring, painting or anything made by your child. Take a picture of your child holding their artwork and a close-up of the art. The photos will be on the Peachtree City Library’s Facebook page during the Virtual Junior Art Show event. Submit by emailing the picturesof your child and artwork to ccadet@peachtreec­ity.org. Include the artist’s first name, age and a short descriptio­n of the art. Applicatio­ns, artwork and pictures may be posted free on Google Forms at accounts. google.com/signin/v2/identifier.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Rudy Crew was publicly declared the Dekalb County School Board’s choice to become the new school superinten­dent last year, but he was never hired.
AJC FILE Rudy Crew was publicly declared the Dekalb County School Board’s choice to become the new school superinten­dent last year, but he was never hired.

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