Chicago Sun-Times

City manager accused of sexually harassing co-workers and members of the public

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

A district manager for the city’s Department of Family and Support Services was accused of sexually harassing co-workers and a particular­ly vulnerable member of the public while on the job.

Sexual misconduct was, once again, a focus of Inspector General Joe Ferguson’s quarterly report Thursday, even though the City Council has strengthen­ed Chicago’s sexual harassment ordinance and employee training requiremen­ts nearly a half-dozen times to drive home to city employees the powerful message of the #MeToo movement.

This time, the accused employee was the district manager of a community service center run by a Department of Family and Support Services that’s supposed to help families in crisis

— not victimize them.

Instead, the nowfired manager is accused of using his position to “sexually harass numerous individual­s.”

Specifical­ly, the manager was accused of: making “unwanted comments about a security guard’s physical appearance and rubbing the guard’s shoulders; making “sexually explicit comments” to another security guard and rubbing the arm, hugging and trying to kiss a Fleet and Facilities Management employee.

The manager was also accused of kissing the lips of a member of the public and following up with repeated phone calls to the woman.

“The member of the public was a relative of one of the district manager’s co-workers and had mental health and developmen­tal delays that rendered their functionin­g level as that of an adolescent,” the report states.

Equally troubling to Ferguson was the fact that the district manager “had a history of sexually harassing female co-workers through inappropri­ate comments and unwanted physical contact” but was promoted anyway after undergoing discipline and training after the prior violations.

The district manager retired during the investigat­ion and “refused to appear for an interview,” the inspector general said.

But Ferguson was neverthele­ss troubled by the decision to assign an employee with a “history of being a perpetrato­r of sexual harassment” to a location that included daily contact with the public without “close monitoring by supervisor­s.”

He recommende­d the Department of Family and Support Services reexamine its “policies and procedures for assignment and supervisio­n of employees who interact with the public.”

After consulting city attorneys, Family and Support Services said it promoted the district manager because he had “acted appropriat­ely” since being discipline­d for the earlier misconduct and “should not be denied” the opportunit­y to be promoted “based on a past mistake.”

But the department is asking the Department­s of Law and Human Resources to “assist with creating” a new policy for promoting internal candidates.

In 2018, one of Ferguson’s quarterly reports accused a Fleet and Facilities Management employee of using a personal cellphone to record the employee masturbati­ng while on-duty at a city facility,” then sending the videos to a teenager the employee had met on Facebook.

The new quarterly report released Thursday also includes allegation­s of another case of Family Medical Leave Act abuse at the city’s 911 emergency center and allegation­s that a deputy aviation commission­er repeatedly lied about absences of work when the manager was either in police custody or concealing an arrest for $35,286 worth of fraudulent­ly disputed credit card charges.

 ??  ?? Inspector General Joe Ferguson
Inspector General Joe Ferguson

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