Rockford Register Star

Former athletic director files wrongful terminatio­n lawsuit

- Jeff Kolkey

Former Rockford Public Schools athletic director Mathew Parker has filed a wrongful terminatio­n lawsuit in federal court saying that school officials knew he was suffering a mental health crisis when he was fired in December 2021.

The case filed by Northbrook attorney Steven Glink in U.S. District Court in Rockford says Parker suffers from bipolar disorder, anxiety and depression. Glink argues Parker was experienci­ng manic symptoms when he was fired and much of the erratic behavior cited as the basis for his terminatio­n was a result of his illness.

“They knew he was hospitaliz­ed and suffering from bipolar disorder, and we asked them to delay the dismissal process until he was better,” Glink said. “They didn’t.”

Parker’s request for leave under the Family & Medical Leave Act was rejected.

His “wife, attorney, co-workers, colleagues and various family members” told officials including Superinten­dent Ehren Jarrett and Human Resources Director Zediker about his mental health condition. They pleaded with the officials to delay a pre-terminatio­n hearing and a Board of Education vote to fire him until after he could be hospitaliz­ed and treated, Glink said.

“The BOE refused and voted to terminate his employment,” Glink said.

Parker worked a decade for Rockford Public Schools after being hired in August 2011. He was removed as athletic director with little explanatio­n in 2021 with Parker saying “it’s not my choice.” Parker was credited with bringing elite boys basketball teams from California, Florida, Ohio, Indiana and Michigan to Rockford with the 205 Tip-Off Classic and the Chicagolan­d Summer Showcase.

A December 2021 terminatio­n letter from Rockford Public Schools says that in the weeks before Parker was fired, he had made unusual demands and sought a second job working as a consultant for a sports company.

It said he had wanted to work for the private sports company while remaining “on the clock” at his Rockford Public Schools job. It also cites an incident in which Parker is alleged to have berated a Rockford Convention & Visitors Bureau employee in an email for not promoting an event to his liking.

Parker was accused of taking time off from his job on a “date” with his wife without requesting vacation time and then refusing to report to work. There were also allegation­s that he had made unauthoriz­ed purchases such as transporta­tion for students from East St. Louis to Rockford for the Tip-Off Classic tournament. And also paying for meals and hotel stays for non-district personnel and students for the tournament.

Rockford Public Schools officials declined to comment on a pending legal matter.

Glink said those purchases were made through proper school district

channels. Other school district allegation­s “were a manifestat­ion of his disability” and others were a “pretext for Parker's dismissal.”

The lawsuit says the terminatio­n was a violation of Parker's rights to reasonable accommodat­ions under the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act by not delaying a hearing or the vote on his firing.

Parker is seeking about $300,000 in damages, back pay and attorney's fees.

Jeff Kolkey writes about government, economic developmen­t and other issues for the Rockford Register Star. He can be reached at (815) 987-1374, via email at jkolkey@rrstar.com and on Twitter @jeffkolkey.

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