Fired: RI Board of Elections Employee Who Alleged Discrimination is Terminated

Kate Nagle, GoLocal Contributor

Fired: RI Board of Elections Employee Who Alleged Discrimination is Terminated

Andi Skipworth
Andreza Skipworth, who in December alleged discrimination and retaliation against the Board of Elections, has said that she was terminated from her position on Friday, January 16 -- and plans on fighting it.  

"I want my job back, I want my raise that I should have gotten back in April, and want a written apology," said Skipworth, who has one complaint filed with the Human Rights Commission, and now anticipates taking further action.  

In December, Skipworth filed a discrimination and retaliation suit with the HRC against against her now former employer, alleging she has been passed over for raises -- and was facing recrimination for broaching the issue with other state agencies, and now the press.  

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"I've got the current charge with the [HRC], and they told me that since I was fired while my case was still ongoing, that that's now separate retaliation charge," said Skipworth.  

Latest Developments

In December, Skipworth said that she contacted the HRC documenting what she said was the lack of a raise since starting work at the Board of Election in 2006, while coworkers has gotten them.  

"I'm the only person who hasn't gotten a raise beyond the basic COLA that everyone gets," said Skipworth in December.  "We had someone retire in 2009, so we went from 12 full time equivalents down to 11.  We hired temps, but had to fire most of them due to lack of work.  I know what our budget is, and where our needs are."

Skipworth said that following her complaints, the work environment had become hostile.  

"Following that, things had gotten worse at work," said Skipworth. "I was written up following the [last piece] -- I've got copies of everything."

"I was called on my cell phone 11:45 AM [last] Friday," said Skipworth, who was not at work having called in sick.  "I was told I was terminated from [Executive Director] Robert Kando.  He said effective as of today you're terminated.  I was told not to come in over the weekend. I said OK, and he hung up."

Skipworth said that events that transpired at the recent board meeting on Thursday

"Kando was requesting funding for new [voting] machines, which is supposed to go out to bid, but was going to be written into a new contract with ES&S," said Skipworth.  "I've got paperwork showing I'd received lower bids, but they changed the scope of the order so that ES&S would get it.   During the election they ordered ballot marking pens and voting booths although ES&S was the highest bidder."

"[Chairmain] was asking [Kando] about the $10 million for the voting machines," said Skipworth.  "I knew that [Kando] would be mad following the meeting."  

Next Steps

"I've gotten a lawyer -- I've retained Casby Harrison," said Skipworth, in addition to the the initial complaint she filed through the Human Rights Commission, and the relation suit she said she intends to file with the HRC.

"I hope that people see what's going.  I just want justice," said Skipworth. "I don't understand how he was able to just fire me."


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