Thursday, March 26, 2009

Capistrano school district rejects ex-chief's claim of $487,000

Source: Orange County Register


CONTRACT CONTROVERSY: Capistrano Unified Superintendent A. Woodrow Carter is seeking $487,000 in pay and benefits from Capistrano Unified.

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO - The fired superintendent of the Capistrano Unified district is seeking $487,000 in pay and benefits - money he says is due him under the terms of a contract first signed in February 2008.

Trustees fired A. Woodrow Carter on March 9, saying he had materially breached his contract, which ran through June 2011.

He filed his claim on March 13, arguing that the contract entitles him to receive his monthly salary for the number of months left on the contract or 18 months, whichever is less. He also seeks interest at a rate of 10 percent annually on the amount owed, plus compensation for attorney fees and lost retirement benefits.

Carter earned $273,000 annually, meaning he would receive $409,500 over 18 months. The $487,000 he seeks includes benefits.

Trustee Jack Brick said Carter's claim was unanimously rejected by the board of trustees in closed session.

"I just think that the preponderance of material didn't indicate that he should be retained," Brick said.

Attorneys for Carter and the district were not immediately available for comment.

Carter's contract itself was surrounded by controversy. First, the initial contract was modified without the Board of Trustees' knowledge - with the following sentence added: "If the Trustees fire the Superintendent, he is entitled to 18 months compensation pay."

Trustees also adopted the contract in a Feb. 25 closed session and failed to report their action properly - actions the District Attorney's Office later said violated the state's open meeting law.

Trustees corrected both issues in June, rescinding the first contract and adopting a new one with nearly identical language and terms. The new one omitted the questionable sentence, but left in the state law language indicating the superintendent would be eligible to receive up to 18 months' compensation if his contract was terminated before its end date.

Attorney for the district, Cathie Fields, said the state law was intended to set a maximum benefit, not create an entitlement.

“The government code doesn't say you must pay this much (18 months' pay). It says the most you can pay is this much,” Fields said.

Carter’s attorney, Bill Shaeffer, said the former superintendent plans to pursue legal action once he receives legal notice that the claim has been rejected.

“We will file a complaint for breach of contract in Orange County Superior Court,” said Shaeffer.

Fields said that Carter's claim is not provided for in his employment contract.

“We do not believe that the claim has merit,” she said.

More information:

Friday, March 20, 2009

Report: Ex-Capistrano schools chief 'insubordinate'

Source: Orange County Register

A. Woodrow Carter criticized Capistrano Unified trustees Monday, saying their "persistent, malicious actions would have tainted any staff member."

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO - The recently fired superintendent of the Capistrano Unified School District is painted in a scathing, 54-page termination report as an insubordinate, scheming administrator who tried to sway school board elections and double-bill the district for travel expenses.

Former Superintendent A. Woodrow Carter also is accused of showing "disturbing disregard" for student confidentiality matters, violating school board policies and state laws, and deliberately working to undermine and embarrass the school board, according to the report, a copy of which was obtained by the Orange County Register late Thursday.

The termination report, dated March 17 and signed by board President Ellen Addonizio, lists 25 charges against Carter and examples for each charge - as many as nine per charge. The charges, not all of which are deemed significant or substantiated in the school board's findings, were presented to Carter on Feb. 26.

Carter responded with a 23-page rebuttal to all of the charges on March 9, the day he was fired.

Many of the 25 charges appear to stem from Carter's poor working relationship with Capistrano's seven-member board, including personality clashes that led to heated verbal arguments and untimely roadblocks to progress on key district affairs. But the report also contains more serious charges that Carter violated state laws.

Carter's rebuttals are incorporated into his termination report, although the report dismisses those responses for the most part, noting that "a number of statements in Carter's rebuttal are untrue or grossly misleading."

The report offers no indication that Carter will be paid for any of the 28 months remaining on his employment contract.

Phone calls to Carter and Addonizio were not immediately returned.

INFLUENCING ELECTIONS

In Capistrano's hotly contested June 2008 and November 2008 school board elections, Carter is accused of using his position as superintendent to illegally influence the outcome of the races. E-mails sent from Carter's official district e-mail address show that he worked to help certain candidates get endorsements, including from Capistrano's teachers union and Orange County's schools superintendent, and instructed a secretary to "prepare an agenda" that allowed a school board candidate "to visit 2-3 schools a day."

Carter confirmed engaging in these activities in his 23-page rebuttal, but argued they did not constitute "political activities." The school board, in its report, didn't buy into Carter's defense.

"After stating, 'I deny that I participated in political activities,' Carter admits providing Peggy Lynch (a retired superintendent from San Clemente) and county Superintendent William Habermehl with names of political candidates to support," the report says. "The denial that doing so constitutes 'political activities' is not credible.'"

The report notes that the law prohibits district employees from using school district time and resources "for the purpose of urging the support or defeat of any ballot measure or candidate."

This is the same law that indicted ex-Capistrano Unified Superintendent James Fleming is accused of violating when he purportedly created "enemies" lists of school board opponents during a failed 2005 school board recall attempt. Fleming is scheduled to be tried next month on those charges.

DOUBLE-BILLING

Carter also is accused of attending at least two conferences in which he improperly billed the district for meal expenses.

On March 9, the day he was fired, Carter attempted to correct these "errors" by handing over a personal check for $130, the report says.

For example, at the three-day Northern and Southern California Superintendents Joint Conference in Napa Valley in May 2008, Carter requested $55 per-diem meal reimbursements for a May 8 dinner and a May 9 lunch and dinner, even though the event already included these meals. Saying it was an inadvertent mistake by his secretary, Carter on March 9 refunded the district $120 for those meals.

"I admit to inadvertently not checking these two vouchers as thoroughly as I should have," Carter wrote in his rebuttal.

POOR FINANCIAL CHOICES

The report also notes that Carter "demonstrated a disregard for district funds at a time of increasing fiscal uncertainty."

At the three-day California Superintendents' Health and Wellness Institute in Temecula in October 2007, Carter was reimbursed a $200 registration fee to attend one-hour seminars on topics like "the advantage of being a green district" and participate in activities including "a day of workout sessions and health screenings" and "networking and wine tasting."

"The trustees knew I had been hospitalized for four days the first week of June with a serious health problem," Carter wrote in his rebuttal. "… This conference had excellent suggestions on how to address job pressure."

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

The report also says that one of the sponsors of the October 2007 institute was Max Medina of Rancho Cucamonga-based WLC Architects. Four months after attending the institute, Carter recommended that Capistrano Unified use WLC as the sole provider of architectural services to the district; previously, three different architectural firms had been used.

Carter denied any improper conduct, but the report said "his failure to disclose that WLC Architects was a sponsor of the Health and Wellness Institute at the time he recommended WLC … likewise demonstrated, at the very least, poor judgment and a failure to keep the board informed."

CONFIDENTIALITY BREACHES

Carter also is accused of using the blind-copy e-mail function to send copies of at least nine district e-mails to his personal friends and colleagues outside the district. This "fundamental breach of trust," the report says, allowed information about students and employees to be viewed by the wrong eyes.

The report also notes that following the district's June 2008 recall election, Carter failed to update the list of e-mail addresses he was using to correspond with trustees, resulting in communication going to some former trustees and not current trustees. Carter called it an oversight, but the report said it demonstrated his "disturbing disregard" for the proper dissemination of important information.

PREVIOUS ALLEGATIONS

Many of the other charges outlined in the report have been covered by the Register during the course of Carter's tumultuous, 18-month tenure:

  • Carter attempts in spring 2008 to alter his employment contract by inserting a lucrative termination clause that was never approved by the school board. The school board, in its termination report, characterizes the act as an attempt at "fraud and deceit." In his rebuttal, Carter says former board President Mike Darnold and the school board secretary inserted the clause because it was inadvertently omitted during the contract negotiations and Carter had "wanted" it from the beginning.

  • Carter pushes forward in winter 2008 with construction of a $3 million outdoor stadium at newly opened San Juan Hills High School in San Juan Capistrano on a plot of land not owned the district. The school board says it demonstrated Carter's "inadequate oversight" over the project. Carter says he relied on improper legal advice; the board says it's no excuse - it was his responsibility.

  • Carter tells trustees he and his staff "dropped the ball" on installing two much-needed portable classrooms at San Clemente's Benedict Elementary School in summer 2008, forcing classes to be housed in the school library and music room. Carter cites turnover in staff in the district office as responsible for the oversight.

CAUSE OF POLITICAL STRIFE

Many in the Capistrano community have been quick to defend and praise Carter.

His supporters have said he was extraordinarily dedicated to his job and made great strides to repair the politically fractured district.

At a Dec. 18 meeting in which Carter's performance was evaluated, trustees listened to 3-1/2 hours of testimony from dozens of parents, teachers and community members; all but a handful of the speakers implored the school board not to fire Carter, as was widely believed to be his fate.

But the school board's termination report points the finger of blame for many of the district's political problems on Carter.

In one case, he was responsible for a "deliberate attempt to set up public opposition" to a district proposal in January to permanently shutter a Laguna Niguel elementary school, the report says.

ATTACK ON PERSONAL CHARACTER

Carter's personal character is also called into question in the report.

On Jan. 5, the day before the school board put him on paid administrative leave, Carter used a district-owned computer to e-mail a friend during the work day: "There are 5 trustees who are as cowardly as any group I known [sic], and they backed off trying to fire me. I hope the hell they do, then I would get a nice buy-out and go on an extended golfing vacation!"

"While Carter purports to 'love' the district and care for its students and the community, his apparent certainty that he would receive a 'nice buy-out' and 'an extended golfing vacation' at district expense is insulting and offensive to every member of that community," the report says.

Six days after he was put on leave, Carter again used a district-owned computer to e-mail a friend. At the end of the message, he wrote, "I will call you tomorrow. Where are all the white women?"

The context of that e-mail is unclear, but the board noted that Carter, in his rebuttal, did not "attempt to explain the inappropriate, racially charged language."

More information:

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Capistrano Unified trustees fire superintendent

Source: Orange County Register


A. Woodrow Carter speaks to the Capistrano Unified school board Monday, just hours before they voted unanimously to fire him as superintendent.

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO - Capistrano Unified Superintendent A. Woodrow Carter was fired Monday for "material breach of contract," the culmination of a rocky, 18-month tenure at the helm of Orange County's second-largest school district.

Capistrano's seven-member school board put Carter on paid leave two months ago, and it was widely believed that eventually he would be fired. No interim superintendent was appointed Monday.

School board President Ellen Addonizio announced the unanimous vote for termination about 11:45 p.m., following a closed-door meeting that lasted nearly an hour.

"The board voted for (dismissal based on) material breach of contract and requested that counsel prepare a statement consistent with its decision," Addonizio said.

She declined to elaborate further, and it wasn't immediately clear if he would be paid for any part of the 28 months remaining on his contract. The district will continue to be run without a superintendent, as has been the case since Carter was put on leave Jan. 6.

Carter, who attended Monday's meeting, said the board had presented him with more than 60 charges. He said he had submitted a written response refuting all of the charges, but declined to elaborate on them.

"It's still very much a personnel issue," he said.

However, in a 10-minute speech to the board - his first public appearance since trustees voted 6-1 to put him on leave - Carter talked in broad terms about his tenure at Capistrano, saying he had become a victim of "adult-centered" politics.

"In hindsight, I may have made some inadvertent mistakes, but the board's persistent, malicious actions would have tainted any staff member," he told trustees.

The school board's majority flipped in June 2008 in favor of those who ran on Capistrano's politically popular "reform" platform.

The "reform" movement, which grew out of a failed 2005 recall movement, had long promised to clean house, ridding the district of what it characterized as mismanagement and corruption. The "reformers" now occupy all seven school board seats.

Carter, who had led the 52,000-student district since September 2007, was working under a three-year, $974,850 employment contract approved by trustees in June 2008. Like other superintendents, he served at the pleasure of the school board and could be fired at will.

Standing before Capistrano's seven trustees and about 100 audience members, Carter said he was the victim of a smear campaign waged on blogs and in e-mails as the school board's composition changed over the past year.

"Get a life," Carter said as about 100 of his supporters in the audience applauded enthusiastically. "And I mean that in the most sincere and affirming way possible."

Carter came to the meeting accompanied by his lawyer but did not stay to hear the 11:45 p.m. decision announced.

He said he was given the list of more than 60 charges Feb. 27 detailing why he was put on paid administrative leave. He received documentation supporting the charges March 4, he said.

In an interview after his speech, he declined to elaborate on the nature of the charges, but said he had prepared a 22-page rebuttal to all of the charges.

"The only thing I can say is that we have refuted all these accusations," Carter said. "We have had very little time."

Rumors the board intended to fire Carter began swirling in August 2008. Board members held a closed-door discussion of his performance in that month and again in December.

More than 250 parents, teachers and community members attended the Dec. 18 meeting, speaking passionately about Carter for 3 1/2 hours. Carter himself gave an emotional, 10-minute speech, saying he felt his tenure would "almost assuredly" be over.

That night, trustees announced no action and Addonizio said the purported firing was a rumor spun wildly out of control.

"The board has confidence in the superintendent," she said at the time.

Then, at a Jan. 6 meeting, she said the lengthy comments in December had prevented the board from finishing their evaluation. At the end of the second meeting, he was put on paid leave.

After his speech on Monday, Carter received a standing ovation from an audience of about 100 supporters. He mingled briefly with some parents and staff members and hugged a few of them. Then he left.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

The Schoolhouse Lawyer Who Helped Hire His Overseer

Source: Voice of San Diego
By EMILY ALPERT

Monday, March 2, 2009 | Lawyers from a firm that has received millions of dollars in business from a public agency that handles lawsuits for school districts have, at least twice in recent years, helped it screen potential employees who later oversaw outside attorneys' work.

The Risk Management Joint Powers Authority, a public agency composed of dozens of local school districts and run through the San Diego County Office of Education, has paid the law firm of Stutz, Artiano, Shinoff & Holtz nearly $7 million between July 2002 and July 2008 to handle lawsuits brought against school districts.

Two shareholders in the firm, Daniel Shinoff and Jeffery Morris, have helped screen job applicants for the agency by sitting on the first of two interview panels that candidates undergo before being hired. Such interviewers don't make the final hiring decisions, but they narrow the hiring pool by asking predetermined questions provided by the human resources department and ranking candidates based on their responses.

Including the attorneys in the interview process means that in at least two instances, an employee has owed his or her job, in part, to one of the firms that he or she is hired to monitor.

The practice is among a bevy of complaints lodged in a lawsuit by a former authority employee, Rodger Hartnett, who alleges that the Stutz Artiano firm received a disproportionate share of work "based on personal relationships" in the office rather than merit. Harnett, who was interviewed for his job by a panel that included Shinoff, claims in his wrongful termination suit against the County Office of Education that he was fired because of his complaints about Stutz Artiano.

Several legal and ethics experts cautioned that the practice of having the contracted attorneys aid in the hiring process was fraught with the risk that employees would feel they owed loyalty to the attorneys.

"The lawyer's incentive is clearly to hire a 'yes' person, a person who won't challenge their costs and will stick with and approve the lawyers they already have," said University of San Diego law professor Shaun Martin.

Shinoff said he personally has only interviewed employees for one position, the claims coordinator job that ultimately went to Hartnett five and a half years ago; Morris likewise said he had interviewed employees for just one position, that of a claims adjuster, and couldn't recall the date. Both claims coordinators and claims adjusters analyze the agency's legal exposure, oversee litigation and create plans with attorneys on how to pursue and resolve cases, according to job descriptions.

Neither of the two employees would choose which attorneys get which cases. But they are one layer of oversight in an agency that handles millions of dollars in legal work annually. They help ensure that attorneys do not run up unreasonable bills.

County Office of Education spokesman Jim Esterbrooks said that including the attorneys in the interviewing process wasn't problematic. In a written statement, he said it is common practice at his agency for vendors to help screen employees because they are familiar with the work. The practice could be continued in the future, he said.

"Such a position has negligible impact," Esterbrooks said. He added that Shinoff "doesn't have any hiring clout or even close."

The amount of money paid to Stutz Artiano from July 2002 to July 2008 dwarfs what was paid to two other firms that handle lawsuits for the agency — $1.56 million and $324,000, respectively — in the same time period. The firm has decades of experience handling school cases, and its attorneys are reputed to be aggressive litigators and have earned praise from school officials across the county. Some school districts request them by name.

Superintendent Describes Practice as Common

Job applicants at the agency typically undergo two panel interviews before they are hired. The first is a screening interview in which a panel of interviewers asks predetermined questions provided by the human resources department, listens to the candidates, and ranks them based on their answers. The panels have ranged in size from two to four interviewers in recent years, according to the human resources department. Some applicants also take tests relevant to their work. Shinoff and Morris said they have only sat on that first panel.

The second and final interview for risk management jobs is performed by a panel that includes Executive Director of Risk Management Diane Crosier, and the ultimate authority on all hiring decisions is county Superintendent of Schools Randolph Ward.

The County Office of Education initially said it could not answer questions about the hiring process because of the Hartnett lawsuit and referred voiceofsandiego.org to the transcript of his disciplinary hearing, which gave limited information about the process. It later supplied some basic information about the hiring process through written statements and a brief comment provided by its spokesman.

Ward and other County Office employees declined to be interviewed on the topic. Simple questions sometimes took a week or more to answer. And the agency required voiceofsandiego.org to file a written request for economic disclosure forms that are supposed to be readily available with no questions asked.

Numerous former agency employees did not return calls or declined to speak on the hiring process and the Stutz Artiano attorneys' involvement. Testimony at the Hartnett disciplinary hearing was sometimes difficult to reconcile with other statements.

"We often ask some of the technical contractors who have expertise in that area to come in and participate on a hiring committee because they have the kind of expertise that we don't as lay people," Ward said, according to the transcript of Hartnett's disciplinary hearing. He added, "It's common that you will bring somebody from the private sector to give you that perspective."

Yet information supplied by the agency dating back to July 2005 shows no other attorneys or vendors sitting on the interview panels, which typically have included business analysts from the county office and managers from school districts. No earlier records were available from the human resources department, said Pam Gilles, senior director of internal business services.

Ward declined to be interviewed to clarify how his remarks could be reconciled with the information supplied by human resources staff, and Esterbrooks said that Crosier had declined to provide examples of other agencies that used the practice.

Risk management experts from across California said such a hiring policy was not standard, but there are few fixed standards for hiring in such agencies. James Marta, accreditation manager for the California Association of Joint Powers Authorities, said he didn't know of any other agencies that use their panel attorneys to help interview applicants, but did not think the practice was inherently problematic.

"You will have the pressure that, if you see something they are doing, you don't want to disclose it because they hired you," Marta said. But the same pressure would exist if the employee saw their boss doing something improper, he said, adding, "It's a natural thing that happens. I don't think that's extraordinary."

Other legal experts and ethicists were wary of the practice. Screening employees for the same department that sends the attorneys business and tracks their costs "certainly raises ethical questions," government ethicist Bob Stern said, even if the specific employees themselves do not assign legal work. Martin, the USD law professor, said it was extremely rare for a law firm to be involved in hiring people who would monitor them. It is not categorically wrong, Martin said, but is "fraught with danger."

Stern said, "The problem is, I'll hire you, you hire me."

University of San Diego public interest law professor Robert Fellmeth found the practice counter-intuitive. He wrote in an e-mail that the agency employees would naturally view their attorney interviewers as people "to whom you owe some loyalty." That runs exactly counter to the actual obligation from the attorneys to their clients and overseers in the agency, Fellmeth wrote. Consulting an attorney during hiring would only make sense if there are legal questions about the hiring process, he wrote.

Former Employee Alleges 'Insider Dealings'

While employed for the agency, Hartnett complained that Stutz Artiano was getting a disproportionate share of work and expressed concern about its billings, according to an internal memo and testimony at his disciplinary hearing.

In his lawsuit and a mediation brief, Hartnett alleges that he was fired for blowing the whistle on "insider dealings" to the firm and specifically to Shinoff. He wrote in his lawsuit that he came to believe that "Mr. Shinoff was receiving business or a disproportionate volume of business based on personal relationships within our department rather than on merit."

The agency counters that Hartnett was fired for negligence, insubordination and dishonesty, including discussing a confidential file with an outside attorney and lying about it. He thus "violated specific SDCOE Risk Management procedures regarding confidentiality of claims files," according to his initial August 2007 termination notice. An internal Office of Education commission found that his termination was "for good cause and not excessive" and that he was not the victim of retaliation.

"These were very serious violations of trust which had the potential, if repeated, of seriously harming the relationship between the [agency] and its member districts and the districts' legal interests," wrote the three-member commission of Mary Beall, Miriam Rothman and Bert Seal in a decision signed by Rothman. It concluded, "Hartnett did not prove that the legitimate reasons (for his termination) were a pretext for retaliation."

Shinoff called Hartnett's allegations "vulgar accusations" that there was no point rebutting, and declined to comment on whether they were true.

"You work hard for people," he said. "Your work speaks for itself."

Hartnett is appealing the finding in Superior Court. "I discovered and reported a culture of corruption within my department involving conflicts of interest and interpersonal relationships," Hartnett wrote in his suit.

He has questioned whether it is appropriate for employees to retain the same legal firms for their personal use that they hire for the agency. Stutz Artiano has represented Rick Rinear, the employee who makes the ultimate decision of which attorneys to assign to handle cases, in at least two cases including a dispute over a plot of land in Jamul that was settled last year. Hartnett alleges that Rinear could have gotten discounts on services because he has the power to steer business toward Stutz Artiano, but could not provide evidence that a discount had been given.

Rinear declined to be interviewed and didn't respond to a request for his private legal bills to check the allegation. Esterbrooks said he was unable to provide any details about the process by which Rinear was hired in 1992.

Hartnett also alleged in his suit and interviews that Shinoff regularly bought lunches for employees, including senior claims investigator John Vincent, senior claims adjuster Lisa Jensen, and Crosier, who worked briefly for Stutz Artiano 14 years ago. She also had worked alongside Shinoff at a previous job, according to her testimony at Hartnett's hearing. Crosier reported no gifts on financial disclosure forms between 2004 and 2007; the agency said employees in Vincent and Jensen's positions aren't required to file such forms under San Diego County Office of Education board policies.

Under state law, gifts that exceed more than $50 annually from a single source typically must be disclosed, said Roman Porter, executive director of the Fair Political Practices Commission.

Few Standards on Assigning Legal Work

Sixty-eight school districts and charter schools largely in San Diego County have joined the Risk Management Joint Powers Authority to insure themselves against claims and lawsuits for liability, property damage and workers' compensation. The authority analyzes claims and hires attorneys in suits against the school districts and charters. Members pay into their own funds with the authority to cover the costs of their claims.

Some of its employees oversee attorneys and work out litigation plans with them; Hartnett said in interviews that he also reviewed cases to make sure that legal bills were reasonable. The authority is administered by the county superintendent of schools and the San Diego County Office of Education, which hires and supervises its employees.

Attorneys at the Joint Powers Authority are selected for each case by Rinear, who defers to school districts if they choose an attorney first, according to the hearing transcript. He chooses from three firms: Stutz; Winet, Patrick & Weaver; and Kleindinst, Fliehman & McKillop. Agency policies say only that cases are assigned to the attorney who is most qualified to handle them with consideration given to the school district or charter school's wishes. It doesn't specify what would make an attorney more or less qualified to handle a case.

During the Hartnett hearing, Crosier said she believes that Shinoff gets more work simply because school districts often ask for him in employment cases, which tend to be more expensive. The same explanation was given by Lora Duzyk, assistant superintendent of business services, in a memo to Hartnett in 2007.

Crosier's claim cannot be verified because Esterbrooks said the agency does not routinely document whether school districts ask for a specific lawyer. Crosier described Shinoff as the most experienced of the three attorneys they hired. Some school districts said they have specifically requested Shinoff; others said they trust the judgment of the agency and would rarely demand an attorney by name.

Government agencies such as the Joint Powers Authority are free to select professionals, including attorneys, without competitive bidding. Some choose to do competitive bidding anyway to reduce costs and foster competition. Harold Pumford, chief executive officer of the Association of Governmental Risk Pools, said there are no firm standards on how to assign cases to attorneys.

"The fact that one firm gets more work than others is not, per se, an improper practice," said Jose Gonzales, deputy general counsel for San Diego Unified, which is not part of the Joint Powers Authority. "It's up to the clients to make that decision."

School district leaders such as Encinitas Superintendent Lean King said Shinoff had a solid reputation for defending school districts on cases in which a lot of money is at stake. Mike Castanos, assistant superintendent of business for National School District, said the district has specifically requested the "highly regarded" firm in the past. And Carlsbad Superintendent John Roach called him simply "good."

"He is aggressive, and if you have a case that fits that, I could see requesting Dan," Roach said.

In his more than 25 years of work with the agency, Shinoff has defended Fallbrook schools for yanking an article and a student editorial on sex education from a school paper; he fended off a negligence claim against Grossmont schools from grieving parents of two teens shot dead by a classmate. And school districts that do not contract with the agency have also used Stutz Artiano, as well as Shinoff. San Diego Unified, for instance, hired the firm to help negotiate a contract for former Superintendent Carl Cohn.

Not everyone is satisfied with the firm. Critics abound at MiraCosta College, where Shinoff was involved in the controversial aftermath of an investigation of the illegal sale of palm trees at the college. Several college trustees complained that Shinoff pressured them to award a roughly $1.6 million settlement package to then-President Victoria Richart after faculty and staffers criticized her handling of a costly investigation of the palm tree scandal.

"I share in [another trustee's] belief that Stutz, Artiano, Shinoff & Holtz failed to properly represent the College," wrote board member Judy Strattan in a legal declaration.

Stutz Artiano was also criticized by Julie Hatoff, the former vice president of the college, who unsuccessfully sought to have the attorneys disqualified from representing MiraCosta in her suit against the school. She claimed that the firm never told her it was representing the college — and not her — in their conversations. Shinoff was also mentioned in a lawsuit against the college by resident Leon Page, who argued that the attorney placed the interests of Richart ahead of those of taxpayers and the board and prodded them to approve an excessive buyout that he believes violated state law.

A judge ruled in September that the payout was not illegal; Page is appealing the ruling.

Please contact Emily Alpert directly at emily.alpert@voiceofsandiego.org with your thoughts, ideas, personal stories or tips.