DULUTH – City Attorney Gunnar Johnson resigned Thursday, almost two months after officials placed him on administrative leave to investigate complaints filed against him.
A highly redacted version of a report from the Wiley Law Office, the Twin Cities-based firm hired to conduct the investigation, said that it found evidence backing allegations that Johnson "made inappropriate statements" in the workplace and "had lax management practices and failed to address many interpersonal conflicts within the city attorney's office."
The report also said it did not find evidence to substantiate complaints that Johnson had harassed employees for the use of protected leave or exhibited retaliatory behavior.
"I don't want to contribute to any distraction for the city or the hardworking city staff," Johnson said in an interview Thursday, explaining his decision to resign. "While I strongly disagree with the way things have been handled in the past couple months, it is time to move on. And we have found an amicable way to do so."
Johnson said he was "blindsided by unstated allegations" when he was notified in mid-February that city officials were placing him on paid administrative leave. The report says the investigation was launched following "a number of complaints" that were provided to the city's human resources office or the mayor over several months.
Among the complaints investigators found substantiated was the claim that Johnson made statements like "I can't fire people, but I can make their lives miserable" and "I will work you like sled dogs until someone can't make it any further and then we will move on."
"If you looked at 12 years and you cherry picked discussions within an office like that, certainly someone could say I'm too blunt or too forthright in the way I talk to people," responded Johnson, who is a musher in his spare time.
Investigators also wrote that he encouraged employees to keep complaints in-house to avoid political repercussions. "When you go directly to the Mayor, that can cause problems, including this investigation," the report quotes Johnson saying.