The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Schools chief

-

federal funds without her knowledge, according to a report from The Young Group dated May 3.

“Superinten­dent Watson-harris acknowledg­ed that she supervises 16,000 people in the DCSD, and it is ultimately her responsibi­lity to know what was going on,” the report said, “but trusted in her staff to do their jobs correctly.”

It is not clear who authorized the operations inquiry. It was requested based on concerns expressed by the Board of Education, according to the report. The Young Group is a private investigat­ion firm retained by the school board’s attorney.

Between March and May, the firm interviewe­d 13 district employees, including Watson-harris. They

discussed promotions and bonuses dating back to 2020. Watson-harris started her job in July that year.

Dozens of employees received supplement­s, or extra pay, for their work during the pandemic without the required approval from the school district’s director of federal funds, the investigat­ion found. Most of those went to employees in human resources. Six were for more than $5,000, which required the superinten­dent’s approval as well. Watson-harris was not notified.

Employees in the human resources department were eligible to earn pay supplement­s that were “not reasonable and not within guidelines,” the director of federal funds told investigat­ors. For example, employees who answered a seven-question survey unrelated to the pandemic were eligible for $1,000. That initiative was stopped.

Board Chair Vickie Turner proposed at an April board meeting that the district conduct an audit of all pay supplement­s distribute­d to employees. By this time, the independen­t investigat­ion had already begun.

“Those who are giving out supplement­s have awarded themselves lump sums to the tune of $10,000 or more,” Turner said. “We need to do a deeper dive.”

Turner did not respond to a request for comment from The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

Watson-harris said at that meeting that federal pandemic relief funds paid for more than $80 million in pay supplement­s for Dekalb employees. She also said that the process for distributi­ng those supplement­s had been communicat­ed to the district’s leaders.

But two employees in the superinten­dent’s cabinet did not follow procedures, the report said. Michelle Jones, interim chief of human resources, did not get the appropriat­e approval for distributi­ng the pay supplement­s. Jones became head of the department within Watson-harris’ first six months on the job.

Chief of Staff Antwyn Brown should have notified Watson-harris of potential red flags with Jones’ requests for pay supplement­s, the report said. He also approved the promotion of two executive-level employees — the deputy chief financial officer and the chief of continuous improvemen­t and accountabi­lity — without Watson-harris’ or the Board of Education’s knowledge as required.

Those were the only positions investigat­ors found between 2020-2022 that should have been brought to the school board for approval but were not.

As chief of staff, Brown was allowed to approve things on behalf of the superinten­dent’s office, Watson-harris told investigat­ors. Brown’s tenure with the school district began three months before Watson-harris became superinten­dent. He previously was chief of staff for the Dekalb County Board of Commission­ers.

Watson-harris was terminated the same day she was interviewe­d for the investigat­ion. Jones and Brown are still employed by the district.

 ?? ?? Antwyn Brown
Antwyn Brown
 ?? ?? Vickie Turner
Vickie Turner

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States