Mullen v. Town of Tiverton

CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 29, 2020
Docket1:20-cv-00179
StatusUnknown

This text of Mullen v. Town of Tiverton (Mullen v. Town of Tiverton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullen v. Town of Tiverton, (D.R.I. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND emis _ AMY MULLEN and NEA TIVERTON, | ) LOCAL 833, NEARI, NEA ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) ) TIVERTON SCHOOL DISTRICT; ) TIVERTON SCHOOL COMMITTEE, } by and through its members, DR. ) JEROME LARKIN, DIANE ) C.A. No. 20-179-JJM-LDA FARNWORTH, SALLY BLACK, ) DEBORAH PALLASCH, and ELAINE ) PAVAO, in their individual and official ) capacities} and PETER SANCHIONI, ) in his individual capaeity and his ) official capacity as ) SUPERINTENDENT OF TIVERTON } SCHOOL DISTRICT, ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER JOHN J. MCCONNELL, JR., United States District Court Chief Judge. This dispute arises from an adverse employment action taken by the Defendants Town of Tiverton, its School District, and its School Committee (collectively “Tiverton”) against Plaintiff Amy Mullen, a Tiverton special education teacher and president of the teachers’ union, Local 833 of the National Education Association Rhode Island (‘the Union”). Ms. Mullen and the Union sue the Defendants asserting claims of First Amendment retaliation for freedom of speech {Count 1), First Amendment retaliation for freedom of association (Count 2), and

violations of Rhode Island’s Open Mectings Act, R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-46-1 e¢ seq. (Count 3). ECF No. 24 at 10-13.! The Defendants move to dismiss all three counts under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). ECF No. 27. L BACKGROUND? For over twenty-five years Ms. Mullen has been a special education teacher in Tiverton. She received consistently positive performance evaluations from peers and supervisors throughout her career. Ms. Mullen has also served as President of the NEA Tiverton for twenty years. The Union is the exclusive bargaining agent for Tiverton’s teachers. Under the Certified School Teachers’ Arbitration Act, Gen. Laws § 28-9.3, Tiverton must bargain with the Union over all terms and conditions of its teachers’ employment. In July 2018, Peter Sanchioni became the Superintendent for Tiverton. Conflicts between Ms. Mullen and Supt. Sanchioni ensued. In early March 2020, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, school districts throughout Rhode Island began planning for possible school closures and remote learning, Ms. Mullen became aware that Supt. Sanchioni was developing a distance learning plan to enable students to receive instruction remotely, without face-to-face contact with teachers in the classroom. Ms. Mullen, in her role as Union President,

| Ms. Mullen did not bring labor law retaliation claims. 2 These facts are taken from Ms. Mullen’s First Amended Verified Complaint GECF No. 24) and Ms. Mullen’s Affidavit. ECF No. 28:1 at 1-4. Because this is a motion to dismiss, the Court accepts as true all plausible facts as told by the Plaintiffs in their Complaint.

attended a Professional Development Committee meeting. Before the meeting, Ms. Mullen told Supt. Sanchioni she would be sending him an email requesting bargaining over any distance learning plan. Supt. Sanchioni responded that he would not negotiate with her, He told Ms. Mullen she could “go ahead and file a grievance.” Ms. Mullen veplied that she would file a grievance but that she found it unfortunate that Supt. Sanchicni would rather waste Tiverton’s funds on legal fees than collaborate with the Union to ensure an effective distance learning plan. Later that evening, Ms. Mullen sent Supt. Sanchioni an email reminding him that any distance learning plan needed to be negotiated with the Union. The email also asked that Supt. Sanchioni contact Ms. Mullen “as soon as possible to set up a meeting for this purpose.” Days later, a Union member contacted Ms. Mullen and informed her that Supt. Sanchioni was holding a meeting that day to discuss his distance learning plan. The member asked that a Union representative attend. Ms. Mullen, in her role ag Union President, arrived at the meeting early. She advised Supt. Sanchioni that the Union should be part of the discussions about any distance— learning-plan. Supt. Sanchioni raised his voice, told Ms. Mullen she was not invited to the meeting, and told her he would “write her up” for insubordination if she did not leave. Ms. Mullen advised Supt. Sanchioni that he could not “write her up” for insubordination because she was not acting as a teacher, but in her role as Union President. She also informed him that the Union should have input into any distance learning plan before Tiverton submitted it to the Rhode Island Department of

Education (“RIDE”). Supt. Sanchioni informed Ms. Mullen that he had given the plan to RIDE. Ms. Mullen left before the meeting. Supt. Sanchioni emailed Ms. Mullen chastising her for trying to represent her members and placing her on paid administrative leave pending an investigation. He also directed Ms, Mullen to “cease and desist all comnotndeacten with parents, students, school committee members and staff members of the Tiverton Public Schools.” The email also stated that “[flailure to comply will be construed as insubordination, and result in further disciplinary action.” This was not the first time Supt. Sanchioni issued a gag order prohibiting Ms. Mullen from speaking with her Union members. The year before, Supt. Sanchioni placed Ms. Mullen on administrative leave in violation of the parties’ collective: bargaining agreement and directed Ms. Mullen, as Union President, not to communicate with her members during the leave. Ms. Mullen was reinstated, but Supt. Sanchioni’s gag order remained subject to an unfair labor practice complaint issued by the Rhode Island State Labor Relations Board in Case No. ULP 6240. 20, Supt. Sanchioni advised Ms. Mullen by letter (first letter”) that he intended to recommend to the Tiverton School Committee that it suspend Ms. Mullen without

pay until the end of the 2020-2021 school year, and that it terminate her at the end of that school year. According to the letter, “[t]he reason for these actions is [her] persistent disruption and insubordination, particularly as it relates to a plan for distance learning in response to the COVID-19 pandemic that closed the schools.”

The letter said Ms. Mullen’s prior statements at the two meetings was the basis lor her discipline. The Tiverton School Committee voted unanimously to fire Ms. Mullen from her teaching position. ‘The Chairperson, Defendant Jerome Larkin, informed Ms. Mullen that the School Committee had terminated her employment because of the conduct outlined in Supt. Sanchiony’s letter. In response to the suspension and termination, Ms. Mullen filed this lawsuit alleging that her termination violated the First Amendment. Although the School Committee had terminated Mullen’s employment for the reasons stated in his first letter,’ Supt. Sanchioni sent a second letter to Ms. Mullen (“second letter”) advising her that he would be asking the School Committee at its next meeting to suspend her “for a period up to and including the end of the 2020-2021 school year, and then terminate [her] at the end of that 2020-2021 school year.” The letter also said Supt. Sanchioni would provide “additional bases” for his recommendation, including an email Ms. Mullen sent to educators in late March about distance learning and a communication that Ms. Mullen made about educational issues in a Facebook group. According to Supt. Sanchioni, Ms. Mullen’s participation in a discussion of education in a Facebook group violated his previously issued gag order. At the School Committee meeting, Supt. Sanchioni requested that the School Committee amend its previous vote to terminate Ms. Mullen (which had been effective immediately), and recommended that it suspend Ms. Mullen without pay, and then terminated at

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