The Sun (San Bernardino)

Superinten­dent agrees to step down amid controvers­y

Randal S. Bassett has worked for the district for more than 24 years, the past five as its top administra­tor

- By Joe Nelson jnelson@scng.com

Randal S. Bassett, superinten­dent of the Fontana Unified School District for the past five years, has abruptly agreed to step down from his position Aug. 1.

Following a two-hour closed session meeting of the Board of Education on Wednesday, President Jennifer Quezada announced that the board voted 4-1, with member Mary Sandoval dissenting, to approve Bassett’s resignatio­n agreement “for the purpose of retirement.”

Bassett’s resignatio­n comes amid an administra­tive investigat­ion into allegation­s that Fontana School Police Detective David Wibert has been insulated by his superiors and school district administra­tors against allegation­s of violent and inappropri­ate conduct involving students and fellow officers spanning more than a decade.

Wibert, who started as an officer at the department in 2008 and earns more than $103,000 a year, has been on paid leave since April after the allegation­s surfaced in an April 8 letter by Officer Christian Shaw to Bassett, citing multiple incidents of alleged misconduct involving Wibert.

Bassett, a district employee of more than 24 years with more than 30 years of management experience in education, was making $250,000 in base pay and $328,231 in total compensati­on as recently as 2020, according to Transparen­t California, a public pay database.

His retirement package includes 11 months of salary and benefits, plus medical benefits for eight years, the district said Thursday.

Quezada did not respond to multiple emails requesting comment Thursday.

Monica Mankiewicz, the district’s associate superinten­dent of teaching and learning, will serve as acting superinten­dent, subject to approval of an employment contract at the next board meeting, according to the district. Mankiewicz has been with the district since November 2020 and has 27 years of education experience, according to the district.

Under Bassett’s leadership, the district expanded its career technical education program, providing students with cuttingedg­e experience in bio-animatroni­cs, aviation and mechatroni­cs and launched the district’s 1:1 technology program. Last year, Bassett’s leadership was recognized by the UC Davis C-STEM Center, which named him its 2021 Superinten­dent of the Year, according to the district.

Bassett was appointed to the district’s top position in December 2016. He began his career at

the district in April 1998 as a media services assistant, working his way up the ladder to internet informatio­n coordinato­r, director of technology, chief technology officer, associate superinten­dent of business services, interim superinten­dent and, finally, superinten­dent. Wibert is the son of former Fontana City Councilwom­an Lydia Salazar Wibert, who works as a liaison in the district’s child welfare attendance office. It is Wibert’s mother and his close friendship with his immediate supervisor, Sgt. Dennis Barnett, that his current and former colleagues believe he has been shielded from discipline.

David Wibert’s wife, his two sisters and his sisterin-law also work for the district.

Among the most serious allegation­s against Wibert was that he allegedly punched a student at Summit High School in the stomach about a decade ago. Although the incident was witnessed by two fellow officers and reported to Wibert’s superiors, he was never discipline­d or investigat­ed for potential criminal conduct.

As an officer assigned to the Fontana Leadership Interventi­on Program, or FLIP, Wibert also allegedly bullied a student who was doing push-ups, threatenin­g to kick him in the face and throwing a water bottle at him while he was running, according to an officer who witnessed the incident.

The investigat­ion is ongoing.

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