Monday, December 15, 2025
42.0°F

County settles with former director

Keith KINNAIRD<br | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 16 years, 2 months AGO
by Keith KINNAIRD<br
| October 9, 2009 9:00 PM

SANDPOINT — An out-of-court settlement has been reached in a federal lawsuit filed by a former Bonner County employee who claimed her civil rights were violated when commissioners fired her.

The terms of the settlement in Donna Wells’ lawsuit are not disclosed in court documents. Judge Edward J. Lodge approved a joint motion for dismissal on Sept. 17, documents filed in Idaho’s U.S. District Court indicate.

The matter had been set for trial in the summer of 2010.

Wells’ Hayden attorney, Lawrence Beck, did not respond to a request for comment on the outcome. Bonner County commissioners had not seen the settlement and had no comment, according to Pamela Allen, the county’s director of human resources and risk management.

Wells, the county’s former human resources director and risk manager, filed suit last year claiming her rights to due process were violated when she was dismissed without cause in July 2008.

In addition to the county, commissioners Joe Young and Lewis Rich, former Commissioner Todd Crossett and Deputy Prosecutor Scott Bauer were also named as defendants.

Wells, 60, began working for the county as a deputy clerk in 1994 and was promoted in 2001. Wells’ lawsuit alleged that she was railroaded out of her job on fabricated employee conduct and Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act violations.

The suit indicated Wells huddled with commissioners in May to discuss potential vacancies at Bonner Dispatch that were medically related. Wells revisited the matter with a dispatch supervisor a couple of weeks later.

Commissioners, the suit said, admonished Wells for exposing the county to liability for discussing matters protected by HIPPA privacy guidelines and suspended her.

Wells challenged the allegations lodged against her, which allegedly prompted county officials to make additional claims of misconduct. Wells’ counsel argued no evidence was ever produced to substantiate the allegations and there was no HIPPA violation.

Wells’ suit sought compensatory damages for lost wages and benefits, in addition to punitive damages for the “callous indifference” to her constitutional rights.

ARTICLES BY KEITH KINNAIRD<BR

September 30, 2010 9 p.m.

Appeals court rules in cattle truck spill case

SANDPOINT — Idaho’s Court of Appeals is upholding the vacated judgment against a Canadian cattle truck driver accused of spilling a mixture of feces, urine and rainwater on U.S. Highway 95 in Boundary County.

October 21, 2010 9 p.m.

Constitutional amendments on Nov. 2 ballot

SANDPOINT — Idaho voters will get a chance to weigh in on Idaho constitutional amendments concerning funding for the University of Idaho and public airports, hospitals and electrical systems.

May 13, 2010 9 p.m.

Man with child porn arrested by Border Patrol

PORTHILL — A United States citizen was arrested earlier this month after allegedly getting his car stuck while attempting to sneak into Canada with a laptop computer containing child pornography.