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School Board Members Question Former CFO’s Council Testimony

By Jorge Casuso

June 18 -- School Board members last week called into question testimony presented to the City Council Tuesday by former CFO Winston Braham and complained they were not given a chance to respond.

The comments came at the end of a board meeting Wednesday, one day after the council withheld $530,000 in funding until the cash-strapped District halts its policy of requiring parents of special education students to sign confidentiality clauses in their settlement agreements. (see story)

Board member Emily Bloomfield kicked off the public response by calling the council’s
“repeated references to transparency and integrity. . . a bit ironic.”

“I wondered if I was the only one who was struck by a process that brought our former CFO before the council and asked him to speak for close to 45 minutes and share his perspective and memory of events, and yet no one from this district was offered an opportunity to respond,” she said.

Bloomfield then questioned Braham’s testimony that board members had seen a copy of AB 1200, a document certifying the District’s ability to meet the costs of a 5 percent teachers raise submitted to the County Office of Education in October. Braham put a check mark next to the words, “I am unable to certify.” (see story)

“I believe, well, I know, I did not see the AB 1200 before it went to the County,” said Bloomfield, who has announced she will resign from her post because her family is relocating.

Bloomfield also said Braham failed to provide “budget scenarios” reflecting the impacts of different salary hikes.

“We repeatedly asked for the development of budget scenarios with different salary levels, and these requests went unmet,” Bloomfield said.

School Board President Kathy Wisnicki and Board member Dr. Jose Escarce said they agreed with Bloomefield’s “recollections.”

“Unequivocally everything that she said matches my recollection,” Escarce said. “I think it’s easy to think that truth is subjective, and perhaps some interpretations of truth are subjective, but facts are not subjective, and everything that Emily has said is actually factually correct.”

Escarce said Braham failed to come up with a “budget” that reflected the board’s tentative decision to grant the teachers a 5 percent pay raise, which the former CFO said would put the district $7 million in the red over the next three years.

“Our ex CFO stated last night that he developed a recovery plan for us after the decision was made to grant the raise that we gave to the teachers,” said Escarce, adding that it was Interim CFO Dr. Steve Hodgson who had “developed a budget.

“That was an example of the way that you work with the situation to craft a budget that accommodates the salary enhancement or whatever other kind of circumstances arise, working through the needs if the district, the staffing levels that are required, the priories of the district,” Escarce said.

“One of the reasons that we were forced to unveil a budget and an AB 1200 that did not look good was that no process even closely, even remotely, similar to the one that Dr, Hodgson undertook this spring was offered by our ex CFO.”

The three board members also questioned Braham’s testimony that he had made recommendations concerning the settlement agreements with parents of special education children.

“I absolutely never, ever, ever heard a recommendation from our CFO with regard to settlement agreements for services” beyond what are mandated by the State “or confidentiality agreements, never,” Bloomfield said.

Wisnicki, who thanked Bloomfield for her “courage in speaking out,” said Braham was “privy to the financial information regarding settlement agreements between parents and Deputy Superintendent Tim Walker, who was hired by the District to help reduce the legal costs associated with such agreements.

“Mr. Braham was present at every discussion we had in closed session when Mr. Walker presented cases by case number, with services rendered and amounts of those services,” Wisnicki said. “Mr. Braham was also well aware of the reduction in attorneys fees associated with Mr. Walker’s ability to resolve disputes.

“And Mr. Braham also failed to mention the fact that prior to Mr. Walker’s arrival at the District, the County had given us stern warnings to curtail our growth… in the escalating the costs in special education, which were largely due to the number of legal disputes that had occurred prior to Mr. Walker’s arrival.”

Wisnicki then said she shared Bloomfield’s sentiment “that our integrity was attacked as a board and the integrity of our staff.

“We requested to be put on the agenda with the belief that if questions arose from the council, they would be directed to us, rather than to members of the public or have the same sort of council discussion that went on without information provided by district staff,” Wisnicki said.

“I want to share my disappointment in the process last night,” the board president said.

 

“I believe, well, I know, I did not see the AB 1200 before it went to the County.”
Emily Bloomfield

 

“I think it’s easy to think that truth is subjective, and perhaps some interpretations of truth are subjective, but facts are not subjective, and everything that Emily has said is actually factually correct."
Dr. Jose Escarce

 

“I want to share my disappointment in the process last night.” Kathy Wisnicki

 

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