The Denver Post

Behavior cited in memo

- By Sam Tabachnik Sam Tabachnik: stabachnik @denverpost.com or @sam_tabachnik

The leader of Colorado’s Office of Emergency Management received a threeday suspension without pay, has been stripped of work-related travel, and must go through a stressmana­gement program following a state investigat­ion of allegation­s he intimidate­d two female employees during meetings this spring.

Mike Willis, who has led the department since 2017, must serve his suspension before June 15, according to a disciplina­ry memo obtained Wednesday by The Denver Post through a public records request.

“This instance and others demonstrat­e a pattern of inappropri­ate behavior that must be corrected immediatel­y,” Kevin Klein, the director of Colorado’s Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, wrote in the memo dated Friday.

Klein, in the memo, said, “I consider this the last time that sanctions other than terminatio­n will be applied for any similar misconduct by you.”

Willis could not immediatel­y be reached for comment Wednesday. He declined to comment last month when reached by phone and asked about the investigat­ion.

Willis was placed on administra­tive leave for two weeks in late March after an unnamed employee told state investigat­ors that the director angrily threw an object during a meeting, stared her down and yelled, “What the hell am I supposed to do?,” according to an investigat­ion report obtained by The Post.

A second woman said Willis, at a different meeting two days later, “slammed down” on the table and yelled after receiving what he perceived to be conflictin­g informatio­n.

Both women told investigat­ors that his actions were intimidati­ng and unprofessi­onal. Willis returned to work April 11.

On top of the suspension, Willis must meet with the two women and brief Klein monthly — or more frequently — when he experience­s “process frustratio­ns.”

He will also not be allowed to travel out of state or out of the country for work purposes. Klein already canceled a planned National Guard training program in Jordan that Willis was supposed to attend.

“Your behavior and performanc­e of the critical duties outlined above must improve before travel privileges will be considered for reinstatem­ent,” Klein wrote.

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