Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Housing board suspends director, orders inquiry

- TESS VRBIN

The governing board of Little Rock’s public housing agency voted unanimousl­y Tuesday to suspend the executive director with pay until the conclusion of a self-authorized investigat­ion into allegation­s of “gross misconduct” that the director levied against the board last week.

The Metropolit­an Housing

Authority board of commission­ers took the vote at a special meeting a day after board Chairman Kenyon Lowe contacted the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, requesting an investigat­ion into the variety of misdeeds Executive Director Nadine Jarmon alleged in a 161-page memo to the federal agency and Little Rock Mayor Frank Scott Jr. on June 23.

Jarmon requested the removal of the entire board, which is self-appointing but subject to approval by the Little Rock Board of Directors and mayor.

Her suspension includes a ban from entering any housing authority buildings or properties until the investigat­ion is complete. The

board spent an hour in executive session before taking the vote publicly.

Lowe said the board believed the suspension was necessary to provide “an air of impartiali­ty” during the investigat­ion.

“That way she can’t do anything, and she can’t say that the board did anything, because neither one of us would be involved,” Lowe said.

The board will still conduct its regular meetings and votes, and Lowe said this is permissibl­e because “we’re not judge and jury.”

The executive director’s access to a variety of documents, including personnel records, could inject bias into the investigat­ion if Jarmon were to work closely with the investigat­or, Lowe said.

Jarmon told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that she believes her suspension was “unfair, unwarrante­d and retaliator­y.”

“I love my job,” she said. “I love what I do, and even though they suspended me with pay, that doesn’t lessen the fact that it makes it appear as if I did something wrong. I did nothing wrong. I will state that a million times for the record.”

The Metropolit­an Housing Alliance has seen four directors in the past three years. Anthony Snell, the executive director before Jarmon, left the post in July 2020, writing in his resignatio­n letter that the board had harmed and micromanag­ed the agency. Jarmon served as interim director until the board chose her to fill the post officially in April.

Arkansas law allows housing authoritie­s “to conduct examinatio­ns and investigat­ions.”

Jarmon said Monday that Lowe’s request for a federal investigat­ion seemed like a “diversiona­ry tactic,” and she said Tuesday that the internal investigat­ion is likely the same.

The board enlisted attorney Leon Jones Jr. to run the investigat­ion. Jones previously served on the Fayettevil­le Housing Authority board of commission­ers, including a stint as board chairman, and has led the Arkansas Department of Labor and the Arkansas Fair Housing Commission. He resigned from the Fair Housing Commission earlier this year when he announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for attorney general in 2022.

Lowe said this is not the first time the board of commission­ers has invoked state statute to authorize an investigat­ion of a personnel matter. The board sought an investigat­ion into “allegation­s of impropriet­y” in 2012, Lowe said. He did not disclose the outcome of the investigat­ion.

On Tuesday, the board also unanimousl­y chose Andy Delaney, the agency’s financial director, as the acting executive director for the duration of the investigat­ion. Commission­er Leta Anthony recommende­d Delaney because “most of what we’re dealing with are financial issues,” and Delaney would already have to work closely with Jones, she said.

Delaney initially asked the board if he could think about the offer, but he agreed when the board urged him to take on the role. Lowe said Delaney “didn’t have a dog in the fight” between Jarmon and the board, so he will not have undue influence on Jones’ investigat­ion.

Jarmon’s allegation­s against the board include unnecessar­y spending, the sidesteppi­ng of necessary federal approvals, and conflicts of interest for commission­ers and parties involved in transactio­ns with the housing authority. Jarmon submitted a collection of emails, bank statements, board minutes, board resolution­s and other documents as evidence.

A regional spokespers­on said last week that the federal department is examining Jarmon’s complaint and supporting documents. The agency will try to substantia­te the claims before initiating an investigat­ion, which could include the inspector general’s office, the spokespers­on said.

A group of anonymous Metropolit­an Housing Alliance employees sent a letter to the mayor’s office in June 2020 with the same request to remove the board of commission­ers. The Little Rock Housing and Urban Developmen­t field office also expressed “serious concerns” about the board last year.

The anonymous letter was not sent to federal housing authoritie­s, and Scott said last week that it lacked supporting documentat­ion, making it difficult to investigat­e.

After receiving the letter last year, Scott said he would move to dissolve the board of commission­ers, but it remains in place. He changed his mind because overseeing and disciplini­ng the housing authority is within the federal housing department’s purview, not the city’s, Scott’s spokeswoma­n, Stephanie Jackson, said Tuesday.

Scott arranged a Freedom of Informatio­n Act training workshop for the board last year “in an effort to remedy some of the problems that people were telling him existed,” Jackson said.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Staton Breidentha­l) ?? The headquarte­rs building of the Little Rock Metropolit­an Housing Authority headquarte­rs at 101 S. Arch is shown Tuesday. The agency’s governing board voted Tuesday to suspend the agency’s executive director with pay while her allegation­s of “gross misconduct” against the board are investigat­ed.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Staton Breidentha­l) The headquarte­rs building of the Little Rock Metropolit­an Housing Authority headquarte­rs at 101 S. Arch is shown Tuesday. The agency’s governing board voted Tuesday to suspend the agency’s executive director with pay while her allegation­s of “gross misconduct” against the board are investigat­ed.

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