Chattanooga Times Free Press

Niota mostly shut down

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The Tennessee Municipal League declined to renew the city’s insurance policy.

NIOTA, Tenn. — Much of Niota is shut down, including its police and fire department­s, after the city’s liability insurance expired at midnight Thursday.

The Daily Post-Athenian reported the Tennessee Municipal League declined to renew the city’s policy after Niota commission­ers refused to cooperate with its investigat­ion into harassment claims by employees. The city so far has been unable to secure other insurance.

The closure includes any service that requires a cityowned vehicle or equipment. The city park, playground and basketball court also are closed to the public.

Finance Commission­er Tabathia Gates told the paper the city likely will not be able to afford private liability insurance. In a previous meeting, City Attorney Will Estes told commission­ers that “the city will likely go bankrupt if it loses its liability insurance.”

At a special Thursday meeting, Commission­er Richard Rutledge blamed the league for the city’s troubles.

Rutledge said he does not know the specifics of what he and Commission­er Leesa Corum are accused, saying the municipal league “came here accusing me” even though “I haven’t heard the first complaint from the first citizen.”

Rutledge denied he and Corum were responsibl­e for Niota’s problems, saying, “In reality, we’re not the ones costing the city. We just tell [ the employees] to get to work. That’s the problem. Some of them don’t want to get to work.”

In a letter addressed to Mayor Lois Preece dated March 6, municipal league Underwriti­ng Director Jon Calvin warned that the city could lose its insurance.

Calvin said a review of Niota’s claims activity revealed “a pattern of actions aimed at city employees by city representa­tives that is severely outside the standards required to accept liability for these actions.”

Calvin also said the actions “appear to be deliberate and malicious in intent, violate acceptable standards in handling employment situations, are adversely affecting employees of the city and are generating a frequency of complaints and claims that have the potential for a high dollar level of severity as well.”

Calvin said Rutledge and Corum have refused to speak with league investigat­ors or return their calls.

The commission­ers were sent at least three certified letters reminding them of their obligation to cooperate with investigat­ors and warning them that failure to do so could void their coverage.

Rutledge said Thursday he hasn’t seen those letters because “I didn’t pick them up.”

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