High school trustee accused of conflict of interest
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Angelique Flores
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A high school district trustee is being accused of
conflict of interest after she made recommendations to Fountain Valley
school officials on the needs of a special education student.
Last month the Fountain Valley School District wrote a complaint
letter to the Huntington Beach Union High School District accusing its
two-year trustee Sallie Dashiell of conflict of interest.
On three separate occasions in October and December, Dashiell attended
Individual Education Plan meetings for the Fountain Valley student. The
Fountain Valley School District is a member of the West Orange County
Consortium for Special Education, and the Huntington Beach Union High
School District is the responsible educational agency of that consortium.
“In my 10 years on the board, I haven’t seen a letter from another
district before,” said Huntington Beach Union High School Board President
Michael Simons.
The letter states that the Dashiell, 49, acted as an advocate for the
student and her action is “inappropriate and conflicts with her duties
and responsibilities as a trustee.”
“We didn’t know how to cease this behavior without a complaint,” said
Fountain Valley School District Supt. Marc Ecker.
The Fountain Valley district asked that Dashiell withdraw from the
process.
Dashiell contends she acted only as an observer and professional at
the meetings and a board member responding to community complaints.
As a licensed speech pathologist who specializes in communication
problems, Dashiell was asked by the parents of the special education
student to assess their child’s communication abilities.
She did the assessment for free and attended the Individual Education
Plan meetings after hearing complaints from the community about the
process of getting professional services for children with special needs.
Although she did speak about her assessment of the child’s needs,
Dashiell said she was not acting as an advocate.
The child had an advocate, Theodora Parnavelas, who said her role was
clearly different from Dashiell’s.
“I’m there to assist the parents in presenting their views . . . to
talk on behalf of [the family],” Parnavelas said. “I did not provide
services, did not assess the child [as Dashiell did.]
But Fountain Valley officials say Dashiell’s role is not proper.
“We’re not arguing against advocates, just any perceived conflict of
interest,” Ecker said. “The process needs to be as pure as possible.”
Simons said board members usually do not attend Individual Education
Plan meetings, except sometimes as an an observer, which he has done
himself.
These meetings sometimes result in costly decisions, sometimes
precedent-setting decisions, Ecker said.
“You don’t want a situation where an individual is voting on one and
is instrumental in recommending it,” Ecker said. “We’re not attorneys, we
just know and believe that something is not right. There should not be
any conflict -- legal or moral -- when it involves something as important
as decisions that effect students.”
Fountain Valley does not plan on taking legal action and will not
conduct any investigation.
“We just ask that her involvement cease,” Ecker said. “Whether or not
it is a conflict has to be determined. [Huntington Beach Union High
School District] will have to make that determination.”
The Huntington Beach board referred the matter to its attorney to look
into the facts and report back to the board whether there is a conflict
of interest. Attorneys may consult with the Fair Political Practices
Commission to help make the final determination.
The matter may come back for discussion at the next board meeting in
February, said Huntington Beach Union High School District Supt. Susan
Roper.
“When you’re an elected official, you need to be clear beyond a shadow
of doubt that you are not putting yourself in a conflict-of-interest
situation,” Ecker said.
Dashiell feels the community supports her actions by the phone calls
she has received.
“It is unfortunate that some would wish to limit a board member’s
visibility and communication among members of the community,” she said.
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