Oct. 31 last day for administrator in Region One

FALLS VILLAGE — At a special meeting Thursday, Oct. 30, the Region One Board of Education voted unanimously to approve an early retirement deal for Assistant Superintendent Diane Goncalves. 

Goncalves’ last day on the job was Friday, Oct. 31.

The vote came after an executive session that lasted about an hour. Attending the executive session were Superintendent Patricia Chamberlain and the All Board Chairs committee members (the chairmen of the six town school boards, plus Region One Chairman Andrea Downs).

After the vote, Downs read the following statement:

“The board has reached an agreement with Diane Goncalves concerning her early retirement from the school district. Her last day of working in the district will be Friday, Oct. 31, 2014. On behalf of all of the employees, students and residents of the Region One School District we thank Diane for her service to our schools and students and wish her well.

“Unfortunately, over the past few years events have often competed for the attention of board members and educators, providing a distraction from our primary purpose of ensuring a quality educational experience for all of our students. It is our hope that we can now return to this essential work on behalf of our children.”

The board’s motion made no mention of the financial aspects of the agreement, nor of a lawsuit Goncalves filed against a Board of Education member in 2013. In an email Friday, Downs said the details were being finalized and  would be made public “in the very near future.” 

Chamberlain said in a phone interview on Friday that for the immediate future she would assume the bulk of Goncalves’ responsibilities.

Rumors and lawsuit

Goncalves’ tenure at Region One was stormy. She was hired in November 2008, amid rumors and controversy about how she had interacted with the school community during her time as the director of special education in the Orange, Conn., school district.

In early August 2010, Housatonic Valley Regional High School (HVRHS) Principal Gretchen Foster and Assistant Principal Mary Anne Buchanan resigned abruptly, days before the beginning of the school year, forcing Chamberlain and the Region One school board to scramble to find temporary replacements for the 2010-11 school year.

In September 2010, the Region One board, spurred on by board member Gale Toensing of Falls Village (one of Goncalves’ most vocal critics), hired attorney Jeffrey C. Pingpank to investigate the circumstances surrounding the resignations of Foster and Buchanan.

The resulting report, released in January 2011, mentioned  Goncalves by name several times and recommended she be asked to “moderate her behavior.” 

In July 2013, Goncalves filed a lawsuit against Toensing. The lawsuit is for one count of defamation, one count of intentional infliction of emotional distress, one count of negligent infliction of emotional distress, one count of tortious interference with a contractual relationship, one count of invasion of privacy (unreasonable intrusion upon seclusion) and one count of invasion of privacy (false light).

The lawsuit was dropped Oct. 31.

Her contributions

As assistant superintendent, Goncalves was involved in curriculum development and a number of major changes in public school eduction, including new standardized testing and implementation of the Common Core State Standards.

At the Sept. 8, 2014, Region One board meeting, Goncalves talked about one of the initiatives she was a part of at the high school, the “seminar program,” which began in the 2010-11 school year.

The program was designed to reduce the number of students who have to repeat the ninth grade, and to help students adjust to high school and to provide them with extra guidance, encouragement and monitoring in all aspects of school life, not just academics.

It has had a positive impact, Goncalves reported in September: In the 2009-10 school year, HVRHS had 14 freshmen who had to repeat the year. In 2010-11, the year the seminar program began, there were nine, and there were only four in 2011-12.

In the past two years, 2012-13 and 2013-14, there were none.

 


 

Settlement details for Goncalves

FALLS VILLAGE — Former Region One Assistant Superintendent Diane Goncalves will be paid her salary and employee benefits through June 30, 2105, according to the text of the early retirement agreement signed by Gonacalves; Andrea Downs, chairman of the Region One Board of Education; and Electra Tortorella, chairman of the All Board Chairs committee, on Oct. 30.

In addition, Goncalves’ health insurance will be maintained through June 30, 2018, and she will receive a lump sum of $30,000 no later than Jan. 15, 2015, from the Connecticut Interlocal Risk Management Agency, the insurance company for the school board.

For her part, Goncalves agreed to drop her lawsuit against former Region One board member Gale Toensing and waive any future claims against the board.

The agreement does not prevent Goncalves from filing charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or the Connecticut Commission on Human Rights for discrimination, although she “specifically waives her right to recover any damages” in such a situation.

The Goncalves v. Toensing suit was dropped Friday, Oct. 31. Goncalves’ salary in the 2014-15 budget is $140,976.

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