Chad Iverson speaks to members of the Canyons School District vote to change the Middle School boundaries during a school board meeting Tuesday, March 6, 2012.
Scott G. Winterton, Deseret News
SANDY — Local school board elections usually don't generate much political heat, but the race for the Precinct 7 seat on the Canyons Board of Education has taken a contentious and mysterious turn.
Draper-area residents this week have been receiving an automated phone message that paints an unflattering picture of Canyons School Board candidate Chad Iverson. In the message, an unidentified woman describes Iverson's campaign as "funded by the labor union" and implies that Iverson opposes a code of ethics that would remove convicted felons from the school board, if elected.
"We don't want to turn our schools over to the union or allow convicted felons to serve on our school board," the message states. "Ask Chad Iverson to stop being controlled by the union, reject their endorsement, refund their campaign money and support a much-needed code of ethics for our Canyons School District."
But the message, Iverson said, is "outlandish" and false. Tuesday night, after hearing the message, Iverson released a statement calling on his opponent, incumbent Paul McCarty, to "disavow these last-minute, anonymous, slanderous attacks."
Automated phone message to Draper residents
McCarty adamantly denied having any involvement in the messages.
"I was very surprised," McCarty said, after hearing about the automated calls. "I did not authorize it. Unequivocally, I did not."
The Canyons School Board's proposed code of ethics, which has been debated publicly, makes no mention of convicted felons. It does include language allowing board members to remove each other from office by a two-thirds majority vote in instances of "high crimes and misdemeanors," but some board members have objected to the provision, saying it runs contrary to state law.
Because school board members are elected officials in a political subdivision of the state, removal from office must be initiated by a "sworn, written accusation to the district court," according to state statute.
McCarty was part of the committee of board members charged with drafting the code of ethics.
Iverson said he has received about 20 calls to his home since the calls went out, and during his door-to-door campaigning, several residents have expressed confusion about the message.
"I don't want a convicted felon on the school board," he said. "It's not saying that, but it could try to tie my name to being a convicted felon."
Iverson said he supports the establishment of a code of ethics but finds certain provisions in the current draft to be contradictory.
The proposed code, in its most recent form, encourages board members to "seek systematic communication" with students, staff and parents, and instructs school board members to "not deal directly with individual subordinate staff members on specific problems."
The ability of board members to communicate with district employees has been a point of debate in the district, and some district critics say the proposed code is a way to muzzle school board members who might stand in opposition of majority opinions.
Last year, school board member Kevin Cromar received a public censure for undermining district Superintendent David Doty and speaking individually with members of the staff.
Iverson said he supports two-thirds of the proposed ethics code, but that further revision is necessary.
"I absolutely think the board needs a code of ethics," he said. "It is something that has been lacking from the current school board."
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$1,000 and a quarter of a candidate's budget is no "small amount of money." Seems there's some truth to the call. The unions should not be controlling our schools. Return the money.
I know mccarty personally and he's the last person who would ever knowingly initiate calls like these. He's got the school board on the right track. The high school looks beautiful.
Actually, the call speaks the truth. Iverson doesn't deny one word and actually confirms its accuracy in an email I got yesterday. Even in this newspaper article, he says he does indeed oppose the ethics code and admits he got funding from the More..