Knox County taxpayers are footing the bill for a Knox County Schools hire the county attorney says was conducted improperly.
Documents
WBIR obtained show superintendent Jim McIntyre signed the grant
agreement allowing for this hire, when County Law Director Richard "Bud"
Armstrong believes McIntyre has no authority to do so.
The grant agreement is between Knox County Schools and the Broad Center for the Management of School Systems, which runs the Broad Academy.
That,
essentially, is a training program for people with executive leadership
experience aspiring to become school district superintendents and other
leaders within large education systems.
McIntyre himself was a
participant in the Broad Academy, and now, some KCS Board of Education
members say, he has created a pipeline for other Broad fellows to come
take high-paying jobs with the district.
PDF: Law Director's Memo
In September of last
year, McIntyre signed a grant agreement with the Broad Center for the
Management of School Systems. In it, the Broad Center agreed to give
Knox County Schools a grant totaling up to $29,700, to be put toward the
Broad fellow's -- or Broad resident's -- salary.
In exchange, the district would foot the rest of the fellow's salary, plus pay benefits on top of that.
The
baseline salary for a Broad fellow, according to the Broad Academy in
its grant agreement with KCS, is $90,000. The Broad grant would pay for
up to $29,700 of that.
That means KCS - and therefore taxpayers -
have to foot the bill for not only the difference ($90k - $29.7k =
$60,300), but also for the cost of benefits.
The Knox County
Finance Department, Armstrong said, generally uses a figure of 30
percent of an employee's salary to calculate the additional expense for
benefits and taxes.
That would put the Broad fellow's position at a
total of $117,000. The center is paying for nearly $29,700 of that,
putting taxpayers on the hook for the remaining $87,300.
BOE member Amber Rountree said that's a dollar figure that, roughly, could support two teacher hires.
"Is
it the best way for us to spend limited funds?" Rountree said to WBIR
in a phone interview Saturday afternoon. "We need to be making wise
decisions with what little funds we have."
Armstrong, however,
believes the contract is unenforceable, since he says McIntyre has no
authority to accept a grant, especially one that requires matching
funds.
In a memo to board members this week, Armstrong said, "The
superintendent, under statute, is given no authority to unilaterally
accept grants and to sign grant contracts. Further, the statute requires
a resolution by the BOE and notification to the County Commission."
But
McIntyre says he was acting in accordance with Knox County Board of
Education policy and that the document he signed is "a grant agreement,
not a procurement contract."
In an email to WBIR, he wrote,
"Through written School Board Policy, the Board of Education has
delegated the acceptance of grants, in some circumstances, to the
Superintendent. In accepting this grant, I acted in good faith and in
accordance with my understanding of School Board policy."
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