She's baaaaack...Betty Cox returns with
law degree to fight toxic mold in schools
A school secretary is suing the Rapides Parish School Board with the
help of former school superintendent Betty Cox.
Cox, now a Baton Rouge lawyer, is representing Peggy Bergeron in her
lawsuit that claims toxic mold in her office at the Rapides
Motivational Center made her ill.
Cox served as Rapides Parish school superintendent from 1994 to 1998
before she left the district with a $1.7 million settlement after
legal strife with School Board members.
Cox went on to study law at the Louisiana State University School of
Law and now works for the Walton J. Barnes, II, professional law firm
in Baton Rouge.
In her motion, Bergeron claims a moldy ceiling tile over her desk has
caused a variety of illnesses, including "severely aggravated
gastritis, excruciating epigastric and abdominal pain, persistent
cough, severe headaches, skin rash, lung infection, breathing
difficulties, itching and fatigue," according to the lawsuit.
Bergeron, who has worked for the school system since 1976, said
district maintenance staff replaced moldy ceiling tiles a few times in
response to her complaints, but the mold never was eliminated.
Bergeron sought Cox as her lawyer though the two had never interacted
much before.
"I just knew her all those years as my superintendent and I was
impressed," Bergeron said. "I heard she finished law school, and I
thought, who better? She knows the ins and outs of this school system.
She is very fair."
Cox could not be reached for comment Tuesday.
Bergeron also filed for an injunction to keep the School Board from
tampering with her office before it can be tested for evidence of
toxic mold. The judge scheduled a court date for the injunction on
Aug. 18 at 9:30 a.m.
Bergeron said she hired RTC, an indoor air quality testing company
from Baton Rouge, to evaluate the mold from her ceiling. She showed
paperwork that showed RTC identified the fungus as stachybotrys, a
mold commonly found to cause illness.
She said she never had allergy or sinus problems before she started
working at the Truancy Center last year.
Cox's relationship with the School Board deteriorated shortly after
she was hired in 1994. She ordered an investigation into board
members' use of a school system telephone line for personal and long
distance telephone calls. The board suspended her but she was
reinstated by federal court order eight days later. She then sued most
of the board members.
The legal wrangling continued until Jan. 3, 1998, when the board
agreed to pay Cox $1.7 million in exchange for her resignation.
The Truancy Center was terminated in April's budget cuts, including
Bergeron's secretarial position. However, Bergeron has received no
personal notification of the changes, and she signed a contract
earlier this summer to work somewhere in the school system in the
fall.
Two years ago, school district officials quarantined parts of Mary
Goff Elementary to clear the school of toxic mold. A less-dangerous
mold also was found at North Bayou Rapides Elementary School last
summer.