Follow the Harvard Press on FacebookFollow us on Facebook!  and TwitterFollow us on Twitter!

Thursday, May 24, 2012  ·  Contact Us Register  ·  Subscribe/Renew  ·  Login
 
ExPRESSions
The elephant in the room

Last week’s disclosure in a local newspaper of a grievance letter sent to School Committee Chairman Keith Cheveralls by a group of teachers at Harvard Elementary School sparked a brouhaha at this week’s School Committee meeting that was uncomfortable even by School Committee standards.

When he received the letter, which was signed by his wife and three other teachers, Cheveralls placed a copy in a conflict-of-interest file he is maintaining at Town Hall. In response to questions from a local reporter after the June 22 School Committee meeting, he disclosed the existence of this file, leading to the disclosure of what should have been confidential information.

We think the public disclosure of the grievance letter raises a question that has been an elephant in the room since the 2008 town election: Can someone with a spouse who is a teacher be effective in carrying out the responsibilities of a School Committee member?

A point of contention in Cheveralls’ campaign for a seat on the School Committee in the spring of 2008 was the fact that his wife is employed as a teacher at Harvard Elementary School. During the campaign, Cheveralls assured voters that he had discussed his inherent conflict of interest with the state Ethics Commission and felt confident that he could be effective on the committee despite having to recuse himself from discussions of issues that could directly relate to his wife’s employment.

According to Massachusetts General Laws, the School Committee has three primary responsibilities: to manage the superintendent, to set and approve budgets for the school district, and to set educational goals and policies for the schools. Besides having to recuse himself from teacher contract negotiations, we wonder if Cheveralls should also be recusing himself from discussions relating to the superintendent’s performance, since his wife is under the superintendent’s chain of command. We have to ask: Is it fair to the other four committee members to be burdened with work that should be shared among the five people on the committee?

We believe that Cheveralls has been earnest and sincere—to a fault—in striving for openness regarding any potential conflicts of interest he may have. His release of the grievance letter appears to be a direct breach of the School Committee’s own policies, one of which states that members are obliged “to respect the privileged communication that exists in executive sessions by maintaining strict confidentiality on matters discussed in these sessions … ”

Further, the letter itself breached the communications protocol laid out in the school district’s policies, which state, “All communications or reports to the [School] Committee or any of its subcommittees from principals, supervisors, teachers, or other staff members will be submitted through the superintendent.” Although the superintendent received a copy of the letter, it was addressed and sent directly to Cheveralls. It seems to us that Cheveralls could have avoided much of the controversy in the first place by refusing acceptance of the letter and redirecting the authors to submit it to the superintendent, in keeping with policy.

Now his integrity is being called into question, with committee member Stu Sklar accusing Cheveralls of “gaming the ethics law.” Perhaps that’s a low blow, and Cheveralls really is trying to take the high road, but the inherent conflict of interest lends credence to the question.

Cheveralls is challenged with finding a balance while recusing himself from areas of potential conflicts, disclosing such conflicts, maintaining confidentiality of committee business, and pulling his weight as a member of the committee. The challenge appears insurmountable.

Filed under: Editorial
Comments
 
 
Post Comment
 

Name (required)

Email (required)

Website

CAPTCHA image
Enter the code shown above:


Editorials Archive (available to logged-in paid subscribers)

Numbers in parentheses indicate count of articles in the given month.

May 2012 (1)     April 2012 (2)     March 2012 (3)     February 2012 (1)     
January 2012 (3)     December 2011 (2)     November 2011 (4)     October 2011 (1)     
September 2011 (2)     August 2011 (2)     July 2011 (2)     June 2011 (4)     
May 2011 (3)     April 2011 (4)     March 2011 (1)     February 2011 (1)     
January 2011 (3)     December 2010 (2)     November 2010 (4)     October 2010 (3)     
September 2010 (3)     August 2010 (4)     July 2010 (1)     June 2010 (2)     
May 2010 (2)     April 2010 (8)     March 2010 (6)     February 2010 (4)     
January 2010 (2)     December 2009 (4)     November 2009 (4)     October 2009 (4)     
September 2009 (4)     August 2009 (4)     July 2009 (2)     June 2009 (3)     
May 2009 (5)     April 2009 (4)     March 2009 (4)     February 2009 (5)     
January 2009 (4)     December 2008 (5)     November 2008 (4)     October 2008 (5)     
September 2008 (4)     August 2008 (4)     July 2008 (1)     June 2008 (4)     
May 2008 (6)     April 2008 (7)     March 2008 (5)     February 2008 (6)     
January 2008 (5)     December 2007 (4)     November 2007 (7)     October 2007 (5)     
September 2007 (6)     August 2007 (6)     July 2007 (2)     June 2007 (9)     
May 2007 (11)     April 2007 (8)     March 2007 (10)     February 2007 (9)     
January 2007 (9)     December 2006 (7)     November 2006 (4)     

CLICK AN AD!
Dinner at Deadline
Global Fitness
Merrill Excavating
Inspired Design
Kitchen Outfitters
Turbo Lube
Gingersnap Bakery
Harvard Home & Yard Services
Harvard Custom Woodworking
Bird House Organic Land Care
Copyright 2006–2012 by The Harvard Press LLC  ·  PO Box 284  ·  Harvard, Massachusetts 01451  ·  Phone 978.456.3700  ·  Fax 978.274.5605  ·  Terms Of Use  ·  Privacy Statement  ·  Site Credit