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Superintendent could lose job over gag video

A school superintendent says he was only trying to be funny when he took videotaped interviews with his new teachers, spliced in his own gag questions and made the faculty members look like killers, strippers and drug users.
This image taken from video provided by WBBM-TV in Chicago shows Rich Mitchell, the superintendent of the Bremen High School District, holding a martini glass in a mock documentary he created and posted on the district's Web site.
This image taken from video provided by WBBM-TV in Chicago shows Rich Mitchell, the superintendent of the Bremen High School District, holding a martini glass in a mock documentary he created and posted on the district's Web site.AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

A suburban school superintendent says he was only trying to be funny when he took videotaped interviews with his new teachers, spliced in his own gag questions and made the faculty members look like killers, strippers and drug users.

Now he could lose his job.

“How do you like to unwind?” Bremen High School District Superintendent Rich Mitchell asks in the mock documentary that he later posted on the Internet. The tape cuts to a teacher who replies: “I enjoy a lot of leisure activities.”

“Such as?” Mitchell asks.

“Killing,” says the teacher.

Mitchell asks another teacher: “What were the results of the last drug test that you took?”

The reply: “It was positive.”

'Bad idea gone wrong'
School board president Evelyn Gleason said Mitchell could be fired over the stunt, though she said the seven-member board will first have to conduct an investigation.

“I personally think he stepped over the line when it went on the Web site,” Gleason said. “We’re a great district, we have wonderful teachers and students and this is not representative of them. I think it was a bad idea gone wrong.”

Mitchell first aired the video for a back-to-school staff seminar on Aug. 24. About 500 faculty and staff members from the district’s four high schools in the large Chicago suburbs of Tinley Park, Midlothian, Country Club Hills and Oak Forest were there for a discussion about how to inject humor and laughter in the workplace.

“I thought it was in poor taste when it was shown,” Gleason said. “I leaned over to someone and said, ‘I don’t think this is funny.’ What was I going to do, stand up and scream and tell him to shut it off?”

Afterward, Mitchell, who has been superintendent since 2004, posted the video and outtakes on the district’s Web site for people who were not able to attend the seminar. All the clips were pulled from the Web site by last Thursday.

Lawyer: District trying to distract
Mitchell was on a planned vacation Monday and referred questions to his lawyer, Lambda Legal staff attorney Jim Madigan.

Madigan said a burned DVD of the video found its way to the media soon after Mitchell, who is openly gay, told the board he intended to file a sexual discrimination claim under the Illinois Human Rights Act. Mitchell has had a lawsuit pending against the board regarding the length of his contract.

“It’s quite clear that this has been done in an effort to distract people and create a smoke screen,” Madigan said.

Mitchell made the video to boost morale, said Madigan.

“The only thing he had received from teachers, from board members, from anyone, was positive reaction and laughter,” Madigan said.

Apology expected
Gleason said that at the start of the last school year, Mitchell also made a joke video and showed it to the faculty. But she said this year’s video offensive, and her main objection was that Mitchell posted this one on the Web, where “the whole world” could see it.

On the Web site, Mitchell wrote: “Each year we try to use a mix of humor and sincerity to welcome everyone back. We hope it provides an opportunity for you to meet some of our staff and perhaps, to laugh with us as we continue to carry out our critical work in changing and improving kids’ lives.”

Mitchell is expected to face board members at a previously scheduled meeting on Tuesday evening.

“I think at the very least an apology should be made,” Gleason said.