by Steve Reinbrecht
If Wilson School District’s last superintendent, Rudy Ruth, was a paragon of longevity, working for the district for more than 30 years, the new one is a job changer, working at four districts in the last 10 years.
I’m glad newspapers have reported about this important man, the new Wilson schools chief, Curtis Baker. I’m betting he might like to stay in Wilson and has answers to our questions.
Baker worked at his last job, as superintendent of the Moon School District, near Pittsburgh, for two years.
The Moon School Board voted to put him on paid leave in December.
Funny the Reading Eagle hasn’t mentioned that.
In any case, reading between the lines of coverage by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, it seems a newly elected majority tossed Baker out because they didn’t like his ideas.
In response, Baker has sued the district and seven school board members, claiming a broken contract.
“Curtis Baker claimed "he has been subjected to verbal abuse, sabotage of district image and administration performance, and micromanagement by members of the School Board of Directors and the Board as a whole,"” according to the Post-Gazette.
“Mr. Baker also said in the lawsuit that he had done nothing to warrant termination, was not given written notice of the allegations against him and was not granted a due process hearing, in violation of the Pennsylvania School Code.
“In addition to breach of contract and violation of due process, Mr. Baker is alleging a violation of the state Sunshine Act, tortious interference with contract and wrongful use of civil proceedings.”
That Baker carried out a decision by the previous board to close an elementary school was “a major flash point,” the Pittsburgh paper said.
The Moon district had hired Baker in December 2013 from the Roanoke School District, where he was deputy superintendent for operations, according to an article in the Roanoke Times.
Discussing the re-organization in the Virginia district as Baker and others departed, the article said that Margaret Lindsay would become executive director for fiscal services in Roanoke as the district reorganized as Baker left.
But it appears she followed Baker to Moon – the Post-Gazette says she resigned as that district’s chief financial and operating officer in December.
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