Skip to content

Find today's releases at new Decisions Search

opener
101891

Heflin v. Kansas City Kansas Community College

View PDFPDF icon linkimg description
  • Status Published
  • Release Date
  • Court Court of Appeals
  • PDF 101891
1

No. 101,891

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

DR. RUTH J. HEFLIN,
Appellant,

v.

KANSAS CITY KANSAS COMMUNITY COLLEGE,
Appellee.


SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1.

An appellate court's review of a hearing officer's decision pursuant to K.S.A. 2009
Supp. 72-5436 et seq., is made as if the appeal had been taken directly to the appellate
court.

2.

Appellate review of a hearing officer's decision is limited to deciding if: (1) the
decision was within the scope of the hearing officer's authority; (2) the decision was
supported by substantial evidence; and (3) the hearing officer did not act fraudulently,
arbitrarily, or capriciously. The reviewing court may not reweigh the evidence and
substitute its judgment for that of the hearing officer.

2


3.

Substantial evidence is evidence possessing both relevance and substance and
which provides a substantial basis of fact from which the issues can reasonably be
determined. Substantial evidence is such legal and relevant evidence as a reasonable
person might regard as sufficient to support a conclusion.

4.

Insubordination is defined as a willful disregard of an employer's instructions,
especially behavior that gives the employer cause to terminate a worker's employment;
and, an act of disobedience to proper authority, especially a refusal to obey an order that a
superior officer is authorized to give. A single act of disobedience can constitute
insubordination.

5.

In the context of administrative law, an agency action is arbitrary and capricious if
it is unreasonable or without foundation in fact.

3

Appeal from Wyandotte District Court; MURIEL Y. HARRIS, judge. Opinion
filed February 26, 2010. Affirmed.

Steven W. Cavanaugh and Scott A. Grosskreutz, of Cavanaugh & Lemon, P.A., of
Topeka, for appellant.

Douglas M. Greenwald, of McAnany, Van Cleave & Phillips, P.A., of Kansas
City, for appellee.

Before RULON, C.J., ELLIOTT and HILL, JJ.

RULON, C.J.: The petitioner, Dr. Ruth J. Heflin, appeals the due process hearing
officer's decision upholding respondent Kansas City Kansas Community College's
(KCKCC) decision to terminate petitioner's employment. We affirm.

UNDERLYING FACTS

When the events giving rise to this action occurred, petitioner had been employed
as an associate professor of English at KCKCC for about 10 years. KCKCC has a main
campus in Kansas City, Kansas, and a satellite campus in Leavenworth, Kansas, and
offers on-line courses in which the teaching is all done via a computer.

4

In the 5 years leading up to the fall 2007 semester, petitioner had taught primarily
on-line courses. To the extent petitioner taught "on-ground" classes, i.e., in a classroom
on campus, petitioner taught exclusively at the Leavenworth campus. At the start of the
spring 2006 semester there was an agreement reached among petitioner, her supervising
dean, and the director of the Leavenworth campus that petitioner's office would be
located at the Leavenworth campus. Because of petitioner's office designation, she
requested mileage reimbursement for her trips between Leavenworth and the main
campus in Kansas City, Kansas, for committee meetings and curriculum preparation.
Leota Marks, KCKCC's Dean of Human Resources, denied petitioner's requested mileage
reimbursement because, at the time, petitioner was teaching all on-line classes and the
requested reimbursement did not fall within the provost's administrative procedures.
Specifically, Marks referred to the following prohibition: "'Full time faculty are not paid
to drive from their home to their designated work site.'" Petitioner objected to Marks'
refusal to approve petitioner's mileage reimbursement request because petitioner's
understanding was that petitioner's designated work site was the Leavenworth campus.
Petitioner contended she should be paid mileage for her trips between the Leavenworth
campus, as her designated work site, and the main campus in Kansas City, Kansas.

Through a series of e-mails sent in September and October 2006, the disagreement
between petitioner and Marks over the mileage reimbursement escalated. Marks
continued to refuse to pay the mileage on the ground petitioner's travel was not between
work destinations. Petitioner complained of bias against the Leavenworth campus as the
5

"poor sister" and against on-line faculty, and ultimately threatened to file a grievance
over the mileage issue unless her mileage request was paid and the mileage policy was
revised to allow for reimbursement to faculty who drove to the Kansas City campus from
the Leavenworth campus to attend meetings.

According to petitioner, Marks eventually approved petitioner's reimbursement
request in an amount close to $234. In July 2006, a new master contract between the
Board of Trustees and faculty of KCKCC went into effect, covering the period of July 1,
2006, to June 30, 2009. A significant new requirement in this contract was the following
provision related to professional work load:

"No work load will exceed thirty (30) semester hours for the two-semester
academic year. The load will consist usually of between thirteen (13) and
seventeen (17) hours of instruction per semester, together with at least 10 clock
hours per week of regularly scheduled office hours for student conferences, paper
checking, supervision and preparation.

"Professional Employees who teach at off-campus sites may keep office hours
where they meet students. Such office hours should be for the benefit of the off-
campus students. For those Professional Employees who teach online courses, no
less than 50% of the required office hours shall be held on campus. Office hours
of Professional Employees shall not interfere with the responsibilities of
Professional Employees to participate in campus-based activities. Faculty will
make arrangements with supervisors for participation in campus-based activities,
including but not necessarily limited to division meetings and in-services."
6


On December 13, 2006, KCKCC Provost Morteza Ardebili notified petitioner via
e-mail that petitioner's assigned work destination and office location, effective January 8,
2007, would be at the main campus in Kansas City, Kansas.

On January 9, 2007, petitioner filed a grievance challenging the provost's action in
changing petitioner's work destination and office to the main campus. Petitioner's
grievance was forwarded from Level Three (Faculty Unit Grievance Committee) to Level
Four (College President), where petitioner's remedy sought: "To restore the Grievant's
'work destination' and office as the Leavenworth campus, as per the agreement made
between the former Dean of Humanities, the Executive Director of the Leavenworth
Center, and the Grievant in January 2006."

Petitioner's grievance was denied at Level Four in February 2007 and petitioner
appealed to Level Five (Board of Trustees). Although the Board of Trustees ultimately
issued a final determination sustaining the Level Four denial of petitioner's grievance, the
issuance of the determination occurred after the deadline for such determination, and
petitioner claimed to have won the grievance based on the untimeliness of the Board of
Trustees' determination. Petitioner claimed she won her grievance and was entitled to
have her office officially located at the Leavenworth campus.

7

In late June 2007, petitioner sent the Board of Trustees a memorandum stating
petitioner's understanding that the Board of Trustees had failed to respond to the
grievance within the proper time limit and petitioner's remedy should be granted.
Petitioner stated: "Therefore, I will continue to maintain my office at the Leavenworth
campus, as per the agreement made between the former Dean of Humanities, the
Executive Director of the Leavenworth Center and myself in January 2006."

The Board of Trustees responded with a letter disagreeing with petitioner's
interpretation, maintaining petitioner's grievance was properly and timely denied, and
informed petitioner her "primary place of duty will be the main campus in Kansas City,
Kansas, not the Leavenworth facility." Eventually, petitioner's contract was renewed for
the July 1, 2007—June 30, 2008, contract year in accordance with the terms and
conditions of the master contract.

For the fall 2007 semester, petitioner was assigned to teach four on-line courses
and one course at the main campus in Kansas City, Kansas. Petitioner was not assigned
to teach any courses at the Leavenworth campus. Before classes started for the fall 2007
semester, petitioner's new supervising dean, Tamara Agha-Jaffar, learned petitioner had
turned in her office key for the Kansas City campus and intended not to hold office hours
on the Kansas City campus during the semester. Agha-Jaffar e-mailed petitioner on
August 9 to confirm petitioner's intentions. Petitioner replied her office was located at
Leavenworth, per petitioner's grievance remedy, where she would be holding part of her
8

on-ground office hours. Petitioner stated she would arrange office hours in or near the
classroom, before or after class, for students in her class on the Kansas City campus.

Agha-Jaffar responded that petitioner's office hours arrangement did not make
sense, because petitioner was not teaching any courses at the Leavenworth campus that
semester. Agha-Jaffar expressed concern petitioner would not be serving her Kansas
City students well by meeting "in the hallway" before or after class, noting petitioner's
classroom hosted another class immediately following petitioner's class. Agha-Jaffar
noted the master contract required 5 hours of on-ground office hours for the purpose of
meeting with on-ground students. Agha-Jaffar directed petitioner to hold office hours at
the Kansas City campus and suggested petitioner could do so before and after petitioner's
class to minimize any burden on petitioner.

Petitioner told Agha-Jaffar to reconsider the order directing petitioner to hold
office hours at the main campus in light of petitioner's grievance victory, or else the issue
would "go directly to court." Petitioner told Agha-Jaffar to contact petitioner's attorney
before "attempting any such Breach." Petitioner then told Agha-Jaffar that petitioner
only had to hold 17% of her on-ground office hours at the Kansas City campus, which
represented the equivalent percentage of her on-ground class to petitioner's total teaching
load. Agha-Jaffar informed petitioner, "You have left me no choice but to forward your
decision to the Provost, Dr. Morteza Ardebili," and petitioner again responded, "[Y]ou
should contact my attorney."
9


On August 13, 2007, Provost Ardebili e-mailed petitioner to inform petitioner he
had received copies of petitioner's e-mail correspondence with Dean Agha-Jaffar. The
provost reiterated that, per the master contract, petitioner was required to hold 5 office
hours per week on campus. The provost continued:

"Furthermore, since your station has been designated as the KCKCC main
campus, you are not permitted to have an office at the Leavenworth Center. You
are hereby directed to hold your five office hours per the KCKCC Master Contract
on the main campus.

"If I am not informed in writing by noon Tuesday, August 14, 2007, that you have
complied with this directive, I will immediately recommend your termination to
President Tom Burke and the KCKCC Board of Trustees."

On August 14, petitioner replied: "As I told Dean Agha-Jaffar, and as I have been
instructed to tell everyone who questions my winning of my grievance about this very
issue (of where my office is located), you may contact my attorney[.]" The same day,
Dean Leota Marks mailed petitioner a letter informing petitioner her employment with
KCKCC had been suspended without pay, pending termination, due to petitioner's refusal
to comply with the expectations and directives of her dean and the provost.

10

Petitioner requested a review of her suspension by the Board of Trustees, stating
petitioner's belief the directives regarding petitioner's office hours were in violation of the
remedy petitioner had received via her grievance.

On October 11, 2007, the Board of Trustees adopted a resolution of intent to
terminate petitioner's employment, setting forth the following reasons for termination:

"a) That Ruth J. Heflin was insubordinate by refusing to accept the
reasonable and proper work assignment from her supervisor concerning the
location of her office.
"b) Her office had been assigned at the main campus of Kansas City
Kansas Community College, and according to the Master Contract, 'For those
Professional Employees who teach online courses, no less that [sic] 50% of the
required office hours (i.e. five hours per week) shall be held on campus'.
"c) In spite of repeated attempts on behalf of the Dean of Humanities and
Fine Arts and the Provost to resolve the issue, Ruth Heflin blocked the channel of
communication."

Petitioner was provided with notice of the resolution and was informed of her
opportunity to request a hearing before a hearing officer. Eventually petitioner requested
a due process hearing.

The hearing was held on January 25 and 29, 2008. The witnesses at the hearing
included Agha-Jaffar, Marks, Ardebili, and the petitioner. KCKCC provided 100
11

exhibits and petitioner provided nearly 30 exhibits. Most of the exhibits consisted of
letters and e-mails between the parties and minutes of various Board of Trustees
meetings.

On March 25, 2008, the due process hearing officer issued his decision. The
hearing officer set forth 12 relevant facts before engaging in a detailed discussion of the
case. The hearing officer found "neither party comes to this case with clean hands,"
citing petitioner's history of conflict and confrontation and KCKCC's failure to timely
respond to petitioner's grievance.

While recognizing petitioner achieved a "technical win" as to her grievance, the
hearing officer found the win was limited in scope to petitioner's contract for the Fall
2006-Spring 2007 school year, when petitioner was teaching all courses on-line or at the
Leavenworth campus. The hearing officer found the college's provost retained the sole
authority to assign class schedules and office locations, and therefore to "infer from [the
grievance remedy that] KCKCC is now bar[r]ed from ever making changes in class
assignments or office assignments is an error."

The hearing officer found the reason for petitioner's termination articulated by the
Board of Trustees was made in good faith; was rational, reasonable, and relevant to the
Board's task; was supported by substantial evidence; and constituted good cause for
termination. The hearing officer accordingly affirmed petitioner's termination.
12


Petitioner timely filed a notice of appeal and petition for judicial review.
Following the submission of briefs and oral argument, the district court denied the
petition for judicial review in an order filed December 30, 2008. The district court held
the hearing officer's finding that petitioner was insubordinate in refusing to perform
office hours at the Kansas City campus was reasonable and supported by substantial
evidence.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

This court's review of a hearing officer's decision pursuant to K.S.A. 2009 Supp.
72-5436 et seq. is made as if the appeal had been taken directly to this court. See In re
Due Process Hearing of McReynolds, 273 Kan. 514, 517, 44 P.3d 391 (2002).

Review of the hearing officer's decision is limited to deciding if: (1) the decision
was within the scope of the hearing officer's authority; (2) the decision was supported by
substantial evidence; and (3) the hearing officer did not act fraudulently, arbitrarily, or
capriciously. 273 Kan. at 517. The reviewing court may not reweigh the evidence and
substitute its judgment for that of the hearing officer. U.S.D. No. 500 v. Robinson, 262
Kan. 357, 361, 940 P.2d 1 (1997).

13

In making his or her decision, the hearing officer should be guided by three
factors: (1) the school board has the burden of proof, (2) the board's reasons for
termination must constitute good cause, and (3) the decision must be supported by
substantial evidence. 262 Kan. at 361.

SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE

On appeal, petitioner first argues the hearing officer's decision was not supported
by substantial evidence. Specifically, petitioner asserts there was not substantial
evidence supporting the following findings made by the hearing officer:
petitioner's grievance remedy was limited to the 2006-2007 contract year;
the provost's order to hold office hours on the Wyandotte campus was reasonable
under the circumstances;
petitioner refused to comply with the provost's order and was therefore
insubordinate; and
petitioner engaged in conflict instead of interacting as a professional.

Respondent contends the hearing officer's finding of good cause for termination
based upon petitioner's insubordination in refusing to hold 5 office hours per week at the
Kansas City campus during the fall 2007 semester was supported by substantial evidence.

"Substantial evidence" is evidence possessing both relevance and substance and
which provides a substantial basis of fact from which the issues can reasonably be
14

determined. Evenson Trucking Co. v. Aranda, 280 Kan. 821, 836, 127 P.3d 292 (2006).
Put another way, "substantial evidence" is such legal and relevant evidence as a
reasonable person might regard as sufficient to support a conclusion. Williams v. Lawton,
288 Kan. 768, 803, 207 P.3d 1027 (2009).

Ultimately, petitioner's contention is that because petitioner won her grievance,
she was entitled to keep her office location in Leavenworth until some point in the future
when petitioner and KCKCC may mutually decide to relocate petitioner's office.

KCKCC contends the provost has sole authority for determining faculty office
location; the master contract required petitioner to provide 5 hours of on-ground office
hours at the campus where petitioner taught; and the provost accordingly issued a
reasonable order for petitioner to locate her office and conduct office hours at the Kansas
City campus for the fall 2007 semester. Respondent further contends petitioner was
insubordinate and thus her termination was justified.

Helpful to our analysis is to restate the grounds provided by the Board of Trustees
for petitioner's termination:

"a) That Ruth J. Heflin was insubordinate by refusing to accept the
reasonable and proper work assignment from her supervisor concerning the
location of her office.
15

"b) Her office had been assigned at the main campus of Kansas City
Kansas Community College, and according to the Master Contract, 'For those
Professional Employees who teach online courses, no less that [sic] 50% of the
required office hours (i.e. five hours per week) shall be held on campus'.
"c) In spite of repeated attempts on behalf of the Dean of Humanities and
Fine Arts and the Provost to resolve the issue, Ruth Heflin blocked the channel of
communication."

REASONABLENESS OF PROVOST'S ORDER

Although the hearing officer found the petitioner's remedy was limited to the fall
2006-spring 2007 contract year, there is no indication in the master contract or the
grievance that petitioner's remedy was actually limited to this period. However, while
this finding by the hearing officer may have been technically incorrect, it does not
necessarily undermine the hearing officer's findings supporting petitioner's termination.
Although the petitioner's grievance remedy was not necessarily limited to one contract
year, the grievance remedy did not establish that petitioner's office location was to be set
at the Leavenworth campus in perpetuity, never to be changed. The hearing officer
found: "To infer from [the grievance remedy that] KCKCC is now bar[r]ed from ever
making changes in class assignment or office assignments is an error."

The KCKCC provost has the ultimate authority to assign faculty members to work
locations. This authority is recognized by the KCKCC faculty association. At the
16

hearing, petitioner was unable to cite any rule or provision supporting her belief that
work locations could be changed only with the faculty member's consent.

KCKCC deans cannot assign faculty members to work locations, although they
can send recommendations, or a faculty member's request as to work location, to the
attention of the provost for consideration. In considering a requested work location, the
provost examines the college-wide impact of the assignment, both financially and in
relation to other faculty members. Clearly the purported agreement as to the
Leavenworth office location underlying petitioner's grievance was made only between
petitioner, her dean, and the Leavenworth campus director. We conclude the KCKCC
provost had the authority to assign petitioner's work locations, even in light of petitioner's
successful grievance.

Provost Ardebili determined that, in his best judgment, it was not necessary "at
this point or in the near future to station any full-time faculty at Leavenworth center."
Ardebili provided various reasons supporting this determination: The Leavenworth
center is a single building with one-fifth of the students of the Kansas City campus; there
are a variety of satellite facilities similar to the Leavenworth center; once a faculty
member is stationed at the Leavenworth center, other faculty will want to be stationed at
satellite centers close to their homes; all faculty activities, committees, assessment, in-
services, and divisions are on the Kansas City campus; and full-time faculty are needed
17

on the Kansas City campus. In light of these considerations, the provost determined he
could not station petitioner at the Leavenworth center.

Importantly, the terms of the master contract require faculty who teach on-line
courses to hold at least 5 office hours per week on campus. The hearing officer actually
interpreted this provision to require faculty to hold 10 office hours unless they only teach
on-line courses. However, the master contract does not include language limiting the
required office hours this way, and the mutual understanding of the parties appears to be
that the contract requires only 5 on-ground office hours if a faculty member teaches any
on-line course during a semester. As the hearing officer noted, this difference in
interpretation does not really impact the resolution of the issues in this case, as the
petitioner refused to hold even 5 office hours at the Kansas City campus per week.
Under either interpretation of the master contract, because petitioner's only on-ground
teaching assignment for the fall 2007 semester was at the Kansas City campus, it was
reasonable for the provost to direct petitioner serve the on-ground office hours required
by the master contract at the Kansas City campus.

The evidence supports the hearing officer's determination the provost's order as to
petitioner's office hours and office location was reasonable. There were reasonable
grounds for the order, even in light of petitioner's successful grievance. The next
question is whether there was substantial evidence supporting the finding petitioner
refused to comply with the provost's order and was therefore insubordinate.
18

PETITIONER'S INSUBORDINATION

Petitioner asserts she did not refuse to hold office hours at the main campus, but
rather only refused to move petitioner's office to the main campus per her grievance
remedy. Petitioner argues she reasonably offered to hold some of her office hours at the
Kansas City campus.

"Insubordination" is defined as: "1. A willful disregard of an employer's
instructions, esp. behavior that gives the employer cause to terminate a worker's
employment. 2. An act of disobedience to proper authority; esp., a refusal to obey an
order that a superior officer is authorized to give." Black's Law Dictionary 870 (9th ed.
2009). A single act of disobedience can constitute insubordination. See Leaming v.
U.S.D. No. 214, 242 Kan. 743, 750 P.2d 1041 (1988); Gaylord v. U.S.D. No. 218, 14
Kan. App. 2d 462, 465-66, 794 P.2d 307 (1990).

Having concluded there was sufficient evidence the provost's order was
reasonable, we further conclude there was sufficient evidence petitioner refused to
comply with this order and so was insubordinate.

Petitioner freely admits she refused to move her office to the main campus, in
compliance with the provost's order. As to petitioner's required on-ground office hours,
petitioner contends she was in compliance with the master contract by offering to split
19

these hours between the Kansas City and Leavenworth facilities, resulting in less than an
hour of office hours per week at the Kansas City campus. Petitioner justified this offer as
consistent with "past practice," but admitted such practice was not necessarily supported
by the terms of the master contract.

More relevant for our analysis, however, is that petitioner's "offer" was contrary to
the provost's directive to hold all on-ground office hours at the Kansas City campus.
Petitioner's only on-ground class was at the Kansas City campus. Clearly, it was
reasonable to expect petitioner to conduct her on-ground office hours at the Kansas City
campus in order to be accessible to the students there.

We are firmly convinced there is substantial evidence petitioner directly refused
to comply with the provost's reasonable order. Petitioner's refusal constituted
insubordination.

PETITIONER'S PROFESSIONALISM

Finally, petitioner argues there was not substantial evidence supporting the hearing
officer's finding that petitioner "decided to engage in a conflict rather than interact as a
professional." According to petitioner, she was just attempting to uphold her grievance
remedy in the face of KCKCC's refusal to acknowledge her victory. Petitioner maintains
20

she requested the dean and the provost contact her attorney in an "attempt to open
discussions."

Respondent contends the hearing officer's finding of petitioner's insubordination
was supported by petitioner's e-mail correspondence with KCKCC's administration.

Having already determined there was substantial evidence petitioner was
insubordinate in refusing the provost's reasonable order regarding office hours and office
location, our analysis suggests this isolated statement from the hearing officer's decision
bears little significance for the resolution of this case. Whatever the petitioner's specific,
subjective intent in refusing to comply with the provost's order, the end result was that
petitioner was insubordinate.

Nevertheless, the record reflects petitioner acted in an antagonistic manner toward
her dean and the provost throughout the period in question. When Dean Agha-Jaffar
requested petitioner hold her office hours at the Kansas City campus, asking petitioner to
think of the students' interests and showing there would be no additional burden,
petitioner replied by implying the dean's order was a "direct Breach of Contract, which
means we go directly to court." Petitioner then supplied her attorney's name and phone
number. Petitioner's two subsequent responses to the dean and the provost were
essentially, "Call my attorney."

21

As the hearing officer recognized, KCKCC did not help matters by its casual
handling of petitioner's grievance and by then denying petitioner had prevailed on her
grievance. However, petitioner's grievance victory did not provide petitioner with the
authority to decide whether or not to follow her superior's orders. Rather than engaging
in discussion and attempting to resolve the disagreement over her fall 2007 office
location and office hours through dialogue with the administration, petitioner chose to
stake her employment with KCKCC on her interpretations of the grievance and the nature
of her remedy.

We are convinced there was substantial evidence supporting the hearing officer's
finding that petitioner was insubordinate by refusing to comply with the provost's
reasonable order.

ARBITRARY OR CAPRICIOUS

Petitioner next argues the hearing officer's decision was arbitrary and capricious
because the hearing officer found petitioner was insubordinate for reasons other than
those given by the Board of Trustees in the notice of intent to terminate. The petitioner
further argues the hearing officer's decision was arbitrary and capricious because the
findings of insubordination were not supported by substantial evidence.

22

In the context of administrative law, an agency action is arbitrary and capricious if
it is unreasonable or without foundation in fact. See Chesbro v. Board of Douglas
County Comm'rs, 39 Kan. App. 2d 954, 970, 186 P.3d 829, rev. denied 286 Kan. 1176
(2008).

Petitioner's argument here is that the hearing officer's decision was unreasonable
because the decision violated due process by relying on grounds other than those given
by the Board of Trustees in the termination resolution. See Haddock v. U.S.D. No. 462,
233 Kan. 66, 78, 661 P.2d 368 (1983) (school board could not base decision to non-
renew teacher, made in the board's quasi-judicial capacity, on reasons differing from
those given in notice to teacher); see also Robinson, 262 Kan. at 370-71 (due process
requires teacher be given sufficient notice of reasons for nonrenewal so that teacher has a
fair opportunity to respond at hearing).

Petitioner contends the "only expressed reason" given by the Board for terminating
her contract was for refusing the order concerning the location of her office and, possibly,
"allegedly blocking channels of communication." Petitioner contends the hearing officer
instead relied on petitioner's refusal to hold office hours on the Kansas City campus.

Petitioner's argument is not supported by the record or by the hearing officer's
decision. The communications between the parties leading to petitioner's termination and
the three paragraphs set out by the Board of Trustees as its reasons for termination made
23

clear one of the issues was petitioner's refusal to hold 5 office hours per week on the
Kansas City campus. The hearing officer was not arbitrary or capricious in considering
this issue.

Further, the hearing officer's decision clearly discussed the other two reasons for
termination given by the Board of Trustees. The decision addressed petitioner's office
location issue when the decision discussed the limits of petitioner's grievance as to this
issue, and the decision addressed the blocking communication issue when finding
petitioner's history of conflict, defiant attitude, and "refusal to even discuss the new
circumstances."

The hearing officer found "that the reason for termination articulated by the Board
of Trustees was made in good faith and is rational, reasonable and relevant to the Board's
task of building up and maintaining an efficient school system." (Emphasis added.) The
hearing officer then found "that the reason for termination is supported by substantial
evidence and constitutes good cause for termination of a tenured teacher."

The hearing officer properly reviewed and based his decision on the reasons for
termination set forth by the Board of Trustees. We conclude the hearing officer's
decision was not arbitrary or capricious.

Affirmed.
Kansas District Map

Find a District Court