Pair of 5-0 votes put Library leadership in question as lawsuit looms
The East
Cleveland Board of Education reelected retired judge Una H. R. Keenon once
again as board president at its 2014 organizational meeting tonight. It then
adjourned to a special meeting at which it voted in separate 5-0 votes to
remove East Cleveland Library Board trustees William Fambrough and Devin
Branch.
The
effect of the school board’s actions are in doubt, however, as Fambrough and
Branch, during brief speeches after the votes, said the school board was
without authority under Ohio law to remove them and vowed to continue serving
as library trustees.
The
school board appoints one library trustee each year to a seven-year term and
also makes appointments whenever there is a vacancy. The library board has
resembled a game of musical chairs in recent years, as the school board has
repeatedly had to fill recurring vacancies caused by resignations.
Tonight’s
meeting drew about 40 East Cleveland residents, many of them supporters of
Sheba Marcus-Bey, who was fired last week as library director. Fambrough, who
intends to continue as president of the library’s trustees, and Branch, were
part of the 4-3 majority that voted to terminate her.
While no
reason was publicly stated for Marcus-Bey’s firing, The Real Deal has learned that several board members found her to
be repeatedly insubordinate to them both publicly and privately. There was a
sense that she felt her accountability was to members of the school board and
not to the library board, according to several people who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
Marcus-Bey
attended tonight’s school board meeting, as did three lawyers who identified
themselves as working on her behalf.
Attorneys
representing the school board conceded before the first vote that their
client’s authority to dismiss Fambrough and Branch was debatable. Lawyer Donna
Andrew of Pepple Waggoner law firm said it was a close question and one her
client was prepared to litigate.
Court
action, almost certain to result from the school board’s action, has become a
recurring theme for the library system. Just last month the Cuyahoga County
Court of Appeals dismissed lawsuits brought against Fambrough by two library
employees. The appellate court overturned a lower court finding that Fambrough
was in contempt for calling a special meeting of the board while the lawsuits
were pending and firing the two employees, the library director and chief
fiscal officer.
But Fambrough
was vindicated when the higher court ruled that the trial court had overstepped
its bounds and improperly sided with the two women, who both accused him of
bullying them, a charge Fambrough has denied.
A series
of complaints filed against Fambrough with the Ohio Civil Rights Commission by
unhappy library employees were all dismissed last year for lack of probable
cause.
A
confrontation over whether Fambrough and Branch have been properly removed from
the Board is likely to come soon. The library’s next regularly scheduled board
meeting would normally be Monday, Jan. 20. Since that is a legal holiday, it is
unclear when the meeting will actually take place. School board president
Keenon made clear that the board would take time and follow an orderly process
to select replacements for the ousted board members. But with Fambrough
refusing either to relinquish authority or to turn over the keys to the
building, the question of who is running the library is all but certain to wind
up back in court.
1 comment:
Ultimately, it appears that Mr. Fambrough and Mr. Branch are willing to waste taxpayer money on legal fees to defend a management style that seems autocratic at best—if not wholly incompetent. It makes one wonder why these two men are fighting so hard to retain jobs that pay them nothing. Meanwhile a library that recently celebrated its 100th anniversary continues to wallow in disarray so once again the people of East Cleveland get the short end of the stick.
Post a Comment