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Truth!!!!!
Break the rules you suffer the consequences. Hayfield x30, Fairfax x1. Guys like that shouldn’t be hired or allowed to continue to coach in FCPS. |
| I was just forwarded an email where they football coaches have formally asked Dr. Reid and the school board to release the entire Hayfield/Fairfax report. "There is a level of trust between Fairfax County and constituents that needs to be rebuilt, which makes asking the community to essentially “take our word for it” too much to ask in this context." |
This. All coaches don't cheat and they want people to know that. From what i read, Overton basically brought the team with him--which resulted in a lot of in boundary kids not having a starting position on the team. I realize that other people abuse the system--but that does not necessarily involve the coach. |
Fantastic - good for them. Any chance can paste email here? Proud of those guys for standing up for integrity in the system. |
You saw that when you were watching FOX 5 huh? And Overton could never act like Trump because he doesn’t have the protection of white supremacy as the latter. |
Glad to see he's been kicked off some local town boards for other reasons. What a sleeze. Not surprised at all FCPS has used him. |
Overton has other protections. Which is why this got screwed up by FCPS |
That was the CITY of Fairfax. Love how you willfully misrepresent things. Even your beloved wacko Fairfax Times got the details right https://www.fairfaxtimes.com/articles/city-of-fairfax-school-board-fires-lawyer-for-conflict-of-interest-while-coaches-say-they/article_420085dc-a623-11ef-8971-b3f0a8eb047f.html |
| Can someone post the coaches letter? |
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Dear Superintendent Reid & Fairfax County Leaders,
The Fairfax County Football Coaches Association is writing to formally request that a copy of the complete investigative report, commissioned by the Fairfax County School Board, related to the Hayfield and Fairfax football program investigations be made public. We do so with great appreciation of the work that has been done, but with the sincere belief that accountability and meaningful change can only come from releasing the full report to the public. Given the scope and seriousness of the matters investigated, public release of the full report is essential for several reasons. First, understanding with specificity what happened, how it happened and who allowed it to happen is essential to the broader Fairfax County school community including coaches, athletes, families. In the absence of more information, Fairfax County is asking stakeholders to simply trust that decisions were made with the best interest of ALL our students and employees in mind. That is particularly difficult here as many of the issues that were the subject of the completed investigation (at least with respect to Hayfield HS) were documented and flagged by the Coaches Association for FCPS as early as July 2024, and again in November 2024. At neither time did the county appear to have an appetite for taking seriously the concerns that were raised. It wasn’t until the county was presented with incontrovertible facts and documentation last November – and the local press began covering the situation – that it began to seriously examine what had happened. There is a level of trust between Fairfax County and constituents that needs to be rebuilt, which makes asking the community to essentially “take our word for it” too much to ask in this context. Second, the same issues that were the subject of your investigation appear to overlap with multiple coaching personnel decisions and reprimands. To the extent employees of Fairfax County have or have not been adversely impacted by conduct related to the subject of the investigation, it is essential, and equity demands that all affected stakeholders have the opportunity to fully understand the findings, conclusions, and rationale behind those actions, so we don’t find ourselves here again. Who was held to account, and who was not? Accountability is one of the touchstones of successful coaching. Here, accountability might be synonymous with justice. The public (and the coaches) want to know who was held to account – whether there was true equal justice here. Additionally, members of the Fairfax County Football Coaches Association have expressed concern that the school district’s proposed response—tightening transfer regulations and increasing required training for coaches and administrators—places additional burdens on those employees who were already following existing rules and regulations. Without knowing more, it is impossible to conclude whether these remedial measures now being advocated by the county would have prevented past conduct or if they might have an appreciable impact on future bad behavior. The open question is whether rules currently on the books, if fully enforced, would have prevented what happened, and if so, do we really need new rules, regulations and training? Moreover, while the recommendations seem well-intentioned, they do not appear to hold accountable the administrators who turned a blind eye to enforcing the policies that were already in place. While singling out coaches where there were clearly institutional failures might make some of us feel good, it feels grossly inadequate. How are stakeholders to assess whether the district’s proposed corrective actions appropriately address the root causes of the issues identified without knowing specifics of what the investigation revealed. Finally, there is a clear public interest in full transparency. The relevant conduct was a matter of intense media coverage both locally and nationally. The media circus that surrounded these allegations were largely driven by the public’s interest in what had happened. In fact, it would not be an overstatement to say it was this public interest that compelled the county to begin its investigation. Now that the county has finally completed its look into what happened, the county is providing metaphorically – crumbs. The community (who paid for the investigation) deserves more than the cursory information contained in what has been released so far. On November 25, 2024 FCPS School Board members Mateo Dunne, Ryan McElveen, and Richardy Anderson issued a joint statement requesting a comprehensive, unbiased investigation into the Hayfield Football matters. Further stating “…the School Board should commit to publishing the findings of the investigations …” Making the complete investigative report publicly available would demonstrate a commitment to openness, accountability, and fair treatment of district employees, while also supporting meaningful and effective policy decisions moving forward. Thank you for your time and consideration of this request. I look forward to your response and appreciate your attention to this important matter. Sincerely, Fairfax County Football Coaches Association |
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To me, this is the most significant part of the letter.
In the absence of more information, Fairfax County is asking stakeholders to simply trust that decisions were made with the best interest of ALL our students and employees in mind. That is particularly difficult here as many of the issues that were the subject of the completed investigation (at least with respect to Hayfield HS) were documented and flagged by the Coaches Association for FCPS as early as July 2024, and again in November 2024. At neither time did the county appear to have an appetite for taking seriously the concerns that were raised. It wasn’t until the county was presented with incontrovertible facts and documentation last November – and the local press began covering the situation – that it began to seriously examine what had happened. There is a level of trust between Fairfax County and constituents that needs to be rebuilt, which makes asking the community to essentially “take our word for it” too much to ask in this context. |
+100 The coach had the nerve to say the only thing he was guilty of was being a highly effective person. Zero understanding of morality or ethics, right and wrong. People like this SHOULD NOT be influencing young athletes. They will turn into athletes who throw games so they or their friends or the mob can win money. Such a disgusting stance. I'm glad Kraft wasn't voted in to the Hall of Fame, too. It's nice to know at least some people have the backbone to say, we won't reward cheaters (and people who date our granddaughters). |
| Good for the coaches. The one pager FCPS put out was totally insufficient. |
Yes great for them. Well written and objectively reasonable requests/rationale. Well done by them. Important to keep the pressure/media campaign up on this - tired of sweep it under the rug leadership. |
Fox affiliates aren't inherently conservative. Good try attempting to cast someone in a certain light. You're right. He has the soft bigotry of low expectations and useful idiots like you to protect him. |