
The town administrator brought in to help clean up a scandal in Coventry is leaving her post early, amid talk of hostility directed at town employees by Selectboard members.
Amanda Carlson stepped into the role in 2016, becoming the townโs first full-time administrator. Since September, she had been working remotely from Rhode Island and was expected to leave her position in the spring.
But during a Selectboard meeting Monday, she said she had accepted an offer for another job starting immediately. Instead of explaining her early departure, she referred to comments made earlier in the meeting by a citizen who expressed concern about Selectboard membersโ treatment of town employees.
In the days since, town officials have declined to identify a specific Selectboard member behind the strife. But they all acknowledged the conflict exists.
โIt’s become a hostile work environment,โ Kate Fletcher, town assessor and delinquent tax collector, said in an interview Tuesday. Fletcher works in the town offices.
Two people familiar with the conflicts said privately that selectboard member David Gallup is the source of the recent problems. They noted other problems in the past involving other board members.
Gallup could not be reached Wednesday or Thursday after repeated attempts to contact him for comment.
Carlsonโs departure could spell more uncertainty for a town still rebuilding after a yearslong scandal in which $1.4 million of town monies went missing and a federal investigation of the former town clerk ensued.
Carlson announced her resignation during a Selectboard meeting attended by two board members, Chair Scott Briere and Phil Marquette. The third member, Gallup, who also works for the town as the road commissioner, was absent.
Carlson said she had hoped to stay on longer and didn’t explain why she was leaving, telling the board members she wanted to avoid โrestating everything.โ
Comments made earlier in the meeting by Martha Sylvester, who serves as clerk of Coventry Fire District, โvery well summed up the feelingsโ driving her departure, she said.
Sylvester told the board she was concerned how Selectboard members treat town employees. โHow do we make them realize that โ so what (if) youโre an elected official? Youโre still a boss. Youโre still an employer,โ Sylvester said.
Carlson told Sylvester she agreed with the concerns, but said any policy the town drew up wouldnโt be enforceable because elected officials are ultimately responsible to the voters.

โSo what happens if you have one board member who goes awry and that board member is doing detrimental things to the town and continually being out of control with employees?โ Sylvester asked. โHow is an employee supposed to feel comfortable underneath of that when there’s no clear guidelines, no clear anything?โ
Carlson again said she agreed, โbut the only thing you can do with an elected official … is bring it to a public meeting and bring it to the voters.โ
Sylvester added she feels the town is โgoing back to where we were four years ago.โ
In 2016 โ when Carlson was hired โ Coventry was reeling from a controversy that drew statewide attention. Cynthia Diaz, the former town clerk, treasurer and tax collector, was alleged to have written checks to herself from town accounts and to have collected cash tax payments that were not deposited to town bank accounts.

Diaz was ousted in 2017 and has been the subject of at least four fraud investigations since 2005, after approximately $1.4 million went missing from town coffers. She denied embezzling money from the town and was convicted on two counts of state income tax evasion, for which she did community service.
In May 2017, the town won an insurance claim of nearly $500,000 to cover losses associated with the alleged fraud from the Vermont League of Cities and Towns, the maximum payable.
As of August 2019, federal investigators were still questioning people in Coventry about the missing funds.
Officials have sought to rebuild the townโs standing, and finances, in the years since. Without Carlson, considered a key part of that effort, the Orleans County town of about 1,000 may face further challenges ahead.
โShe’s been the entire foundation of the change and the building block of bringing our town out of the abyss,โ Fletcher said of Carlson. โIt’s a tremendous void.โ
Using a chess metaphor, Fletcher said the town avoided โcheckmateโ when the money went missing years ago. Losing Carlson, she said โnow weโre down without our queen, so to speak.โ
Like Fletcher, Sylvester in an interview would not identify the specific board member who she said was creating the hostile environment, concerned it would fuel the conflict.
But โnobody wants to come into a job where you know you are going to be belittled, you know you are going to be bullied,โ she said.
Sylvester said she had witnessed a selectboard member swear at and talk down to employees during the past six months. In her role with the local fire district, she shares space with board members and town employees, and she said she doesnโt like going to the town offices herself.
โThis has been going on repeatedly for months and months and months,โ she said.
โThere seems to be one current Selectboard member that doesnโt seem to be able to pull his head out of his ass,โ Sylvester said.
Briere, the board chair, said Wednesday he doesnโt think there have been any extraordinary problems among officials.

โThereโs some differences in opinion between certain people and thereโs a member on our board who also isโ a town employee, Briere said before pausing. โItโs, I guess, complicated.โ
Briere disputed whether those differences were a large factor in Carlsonโs early departure and declined to be specific on the problems he saw.
Marquette, the other Selectboard member who attended Mondayโs meeting, gave similar answers to those of the board chair.
โItโs personnel things that are going on,โ he said Wednesday. โOther than that, not much to say about it.โ
Carlson on Tuesday said she had moved to Rhode Island weeks ago for personal reasons and had applied for work there. She will continue to help with town business until another administrator is hired.
Working remotely made it difficult to resolve office conflicts, she said, a point echoed by Briere and Marquette.
โIt’s just really difficult to have those relationships and have that connection with them working remotely,โ she said.
Asked if a Selectboard member had been hostile toward her, Carlson said she couldnโt answer personnel-related questions.
She spoke optimistically about the townโs future.
โI think we’ve done so much work over the last four years to completely change how the town functions,โ she said. โSomebody coming in now just has to maintain that all.โ
