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FUSD Superintendent Says Board Should Deny Slatic Censure Claim

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Superintendent Bob Nelson

Fresno Unified Superintendent Bob Nelson is advising trustees to deny a claim for damages submitted in February by trustee Terry Slatic, who maintains that his board censure was unlawful.
Update: The board voted 6-0 Wednesday evening, with Slatic absent from the dais, to deny the claim.
Slatic said previously that filing the claim was a necessary step before he could sue the district over the censure resolution, which he says disenfranchises the voters of Area 7 because of the limitations it imposes on him.
The censure limits his access to school facilities and employees, removes his legal protection from claims filed against him as a trustee, and requires him to take an anger management class.

Slatic Says Suit Could Take Months To File

Slatic’s claim is unlimited, meaning the damages would be in excess of $25,000. He told GV Wire on Wednesday that it might be several months before a lawsuit would be filed in the Fresno County Superior Court.
The censure resolution came after a series of incidents involving Slatic, then in his first year on the school board, and students, staff, and an Army recruiter at Bullard High School. Slatic’s Area 7 encompasses the Bullard High area.
Slatic met in July with Bullard cheerleaders over their social media postings criticizing fellow cheerleaders for their roles in a blackface video posting, and the district’s decision not to remove them from the squad. That meeting prompted an outcry from parents and community members, and led to the board’s vote approving the censure.
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Restraining Order Request Followed Meeting

One of the Bullard cheerleaders later sought a restraining order against Slatic, claiming that he had bullied the cheerleaders in the meeting and that she felt unsafe.
After a two-day hearing in October, a Fresno County Superior Court commissioner denied the teen’s request for the restraining order.
And, because the cheerleader did not prevail in her lawsuit, Commissioner Noelle Pebet ruled that she was responsible for a portion of Slatic’s legal costs and ordered her to pay $1,000, plus $285.68 in court costs. Slatic had told the court his legal costs were $10,000.
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