The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MARTA settles harassment suit for $575K

Case spotlighte­d in AJC investigat­ion that found claims rejected.

- By Johnny Edwards johnny.edwards@ajc.com

Shyanne Lord said she became so desperate during her ordeal at MARTA’S Laredo garage, at one point she looked up the MARTA CEO’S cellphone number in an agency directory and begged for help.

According to her federal lawsuit, Lord, a low-ranking bus maintenanc­e worker, told then-interim CEO Elizabeth O’neill she was being relentless­ly sexually harassed on the job by a male co-worker, but that an internal investigat­ion into her complaints was stacked against her.

The call made little difference, records reviewed by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on showed. Despite a mountain of evidence pointing to her credibilit­y — including two other women coming forward to say the same man made crude passes at them and two male co-workers attesting to the man’s inappropri­ate behavior toward women — it was Lord who suffered repercussi­ons.

“Noone was taking itserious,” Lord told the AJC in 2019. “No one was willing to intervene.”

That stance now has taxpayers on the hook. Last month O’neill,

in her role as the transit agency’s chief attorney, signed an agreement to settle Lord’s lawsuit alleging sexual harassment and retaliatio­n for $575,000.

The sum may be the agency’s largest payout ever for a sexual harassment claim, eclipsing the $145,000 paid to settle in 2017 with a former dispatcher who alleged she was bullied into quitting after complainin­g that a co-worker had masturbate­d in front of her.

Shyanne Lord’s case was spotlighte­d in an AJC investigat­ion published last year that examined more than two dozen internal sexual harassment complaints filed by MARTA employees over the previous three years. The AJC found investigat­ions not completed and only one case out of 26 where the agency substantia­ted a claim — a case where the incident was caught on a security camera. Most cases ended similarly to Lord’s, with women coming forward only to be discounted.

Legal experts who reviewed case files said MARTA appeared to be approachin­g investigat­ions in the wrong way, seeking irrefutabl­e proof of harassment instead of making credibilit­y determinat­ions as to who’s more likely telling the truth.

The agency says it has since made reforms.

“As you are aware, the investigat­ion into the Lord case occurred during a period of leadership in the Office of Diversity & Inclusion in which claims were not handled to current standards,” an agency spokeswoma­n said in a written statement Tuesday. “MARTA General Manager and CEO Jeffrey Parker has instituted new procedures regarding how sexual harassment claims are investigat­ed, along with new training protocols aimed at making employees feel safe and supported when reporting an incident.”

Lord worked at the garage near Decatur as a “hostler,” cleaning and refueling buses as they came off their routes. She said she told her supervisor­s repeatedly that a fellow hostler, Ayodele Adenrele, was hounding her for sex on a near-daily basis, eying her up and down, grabbing his crotch or licking his lips, asking how much she would charge for a tryst and following her to her car after clock-out in the predawn dark, terrifying her.

Lord told the AJC she complained to multiple supervisor­s and superinten­dents, but none did anything to stop the harassment.

“In bus maintenanc­e, it’s a male-dominated environmen­t,” Lord told the AJC in 2019. “It’s a man’s world, it’s a boy’s club. Things are funny. Jokes about females are funny.”

She filed a written complaint in mid-2017, alleging that Adenrele slipped on board a bus with her, reached between her legs and groped her inner thigh. That prompted both MARTA’S diversity and inclusion and employee relations offices to look into her claims. The agency’s official findings, though, seized on the fact that surveillan­ce footage from the bus where the alleged groping happened couldn’t be retrieved, concluding there was insufficie­nt evidence of sexual harassment because there were no witnesses.

Found only to have violated MARTA’S standards of conduct and workplace violence policies for allegedly verbally abusing other co-workers, Adenrele received a suspension — served while he was on leave during the investigat­ion — and an order to attend diversity and sensitivit­y training. He kept his job. Because Lord refused to work with him, she said she wound up transferre­d to a less-desirable position at a more distant garage, where she suffered an injury that put her out on worker’s compensati­on in 2018. As part of the settlement, she agreed to resign her employment.

After the AJC story published, MARTA removed Adenrele from the workplace in February 2020, according to a spokeswoma­n. He was fired this past January, the month the MARTA board voted to approve the settlement. Contacted by phone this week, Adenrele declined to discuss the case.

Lord’s attorney, Steven Wolfe of Legare, Attwood & Wolfe, also declined to comment. The settlement includes a confidenti­ality clause.

Within a month of the AJC publishing its findings, the man who had previously served as MARTA’S director of diversity and inclusion resigned as executive director of Louisville, Ky.’s transit agency following allegation­s of inappropri­ate sexual conduct there.

During his time at MARTA, Ferdinand Risco Jr.’s responsibi­lities had included overseeing investigat­ions of sexual harassment complaints. He had served in that role from 2012 to 2017, including part of the time period examined by the AJC.

Risco’s MARTA personnel file had no accusation­s of sexual harassment or other misconduct.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/AJC 2019 ?? An AJC investigat­ion published last year examined more than two dozen internal sexual harassment complaints by MARTA employees over the previous three years. The AJC found investigat­ions not completed and only one case out of 26 where the agency substantia­ted a claim.
ALYSSA POINTER/AJC 2019 An AJC investigat­ion published last year examined more than two dozen internal sexual harassment complaints by MARTA employees over the previous three years. The AJC found investigat­ions not completed and only one case out of 26 where the agency substantia­ted a claim.
 ??  ?? Ayodele Adenrele was fired from his job with MARTA this past January.
Ayodele Adenrele was fired from his job with MARTA this past January.

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