Schools

AG Rules: Foxborough Violated Open Meeting Law

Attorney General Martha Coakley's office ruled that the school committee violated the Open Meeting Law.

The Attorney General Martha Coakley's office ruled that the Foxborough School Committee violated the Open Meeting Law by failing to follow proper procedure in entering executive session at its June 21, 2010 meeting.

The office ruled that the school committee violated the Open Meeting Law twice when the board allowed former Superintendent Christopher Martes to take both his retirement pension and regular town salary. 

The committee has been put on notice by the AG's office and members are ordered to attend training on the Open Meeting Law. The training is given by an attorney or an organization approved by the Attorney General's Office.

The actions in which the committee violated the law included agreeing to a "contract addendum during the executive session, failing to subsequently ratify that agreement in open session, and failing to release the contract addendum to the public." 

Foxboro residents, Andres and Deborah Navedo, whose three children all graduated from Foxboro High School, filed the complaint last year regarding the committee's handling of Martes' closed-door retirement agreement.

At the time, School Committee Chairman Bruce Gardner, then vice chairman, told the Sun Chronicle and Foxboro Reporter that their June meeting was not about a "secret" retirement strategy, but rather was about retaining a proven leader. In a letter addressed to the Chronicle and Reporter last October, Gardner noted that the school committee considered the retirement pension matter a routine renewal of Martes' contract.

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