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Auon'tai M. Anderson (born July 5, 1998) is an American politician and community organizer from Denver, Colorado.[1] A member of the Democratic Party, he served as a director of the Denver Public Schools Board of Education from 2019 to 2023.[2] In September 2021, he was censured by the board for "behavior unbecoming of a board member" following an investigation of allegations against him.[3] Anderson was not charged as the original claims made against him were found to be unsubstantiated and the individual that was responsible for these allegations was deemed not be credible per investigators. Anderson was subsequently elected the Vice President of the Board of Education and elected the statewide President of the Colorado Black Caucus of School Board Members. After Anderson's term he became an educator in Denver Public Schools.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Anderson was born to Mia Anderson, a single mother who was a teenager when he was born.[1][4] He grew up in Kansas City, Kansas, and moved to Denver to attend high school.[5] He attended two other schools before settling on Manual High School, where he later became student body president. While at Manual, he decided to run to become a director of the Denver Public Schools Board of Education. At the time he was 19 years old, thus becoming the second youngest person to date to run for a Denver school board. (In 1977, Meyer Persow, ne Kadovitz, was 18 years old when he ran for the Denver School Board, finishing 11th out of 18 candidates).

Anderson lost that election, and instead enrolled at Metropolitan State University of Denver to study education and also began working in restorative justice within Denver Public Schools.[6] He decided to run for the Board of Education again in 2019, campaigning on supporting low-performance schools, putting a pause on approving new charter schools, and reforming how punishment was conducted at schools. Anderson decisively won this election, and doing so ushered in Denver's first anti-reform, pro-union school board in over a decade.[7] In a three-way race, he won about 51% of the total vote.[8] He is one of the youngest elected officials in Colorado history, being just 21 at the time of his inauguration.[9]

Early career

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Anderson graduated from Manual High School in 2017.[10] His professional experience includes working as a restorative practice coordinator at Denver North High School.[6] He is affiliated with March for Our Lives - Colorado.[10]

Political career

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Anderson was inaugurated into the Denver School Board on December 4, 2019.[4] The following January, Anderson helped pass a mandate requiring all Denver Public Schools to designate a gender-neutral bathroom, saying it would support the LGBT community.[11] Additionally, Anderson has led an effort to remove the Denver Police Department from public schools within the city.[12] Anderson was a de facto leader of Denver's George Floyd protests.[9][13]

State House candidacy

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On June 12, 2023, Anderson announced he was abandoning his Denver school board re-election campaign and would instead seek the 8th district seat in the 2024 Colorado House of Representatives election. The seat is currently held by Leslie Herod, who is term limited.[14] Later, on January 9, 2024, Anderson announced he was withdrawing from the race, fearing that the number of black candidates in the race would divide the black vote and allow a non-black candidate to win.[15]

Allegations of sexual assault

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On March 26, 2021, Denver's Black Lives Matter affiliate, Black Lives Matter 5280, issued a statement saying a woman approached the organization in the previous month and reported that Anderson sexually assaulted her. The woman's name was not revealed in the statement, but she requested a public apology from Anderson and asked that he "seek help from a licensed professional with relevant expertise." Anderson issued a statement a day later denying the allegations. BLM5280 said Anderson "will not be welcome to share space with BLM5280 physically or on any of our platforms."[16] After it released its initial statement, BLM5280 said "multiple" additional alleged victims had approached the organization to report that Anderson sexually assaulted them too.[17] Anderson again denied wrongdoing, but told Westword magazine that "although I would have never intended for anyone to feel unsafe or uncomfortable around myself or others, I deeply apologize to the women-identifying members of NAC for the impact of my actions."[18]

On May 28, 2021, Denver Public Schools acknowledged that their board and the Denver Police Department were aware of new allegations of sexual assault against Anderson. Testimony before the Colorado State House Judiciary Committee on May 25 alleged the existence of a serial sexual predator within the school district, without naming Anderson specifically. Shortly thereafter police and the school district indicated they had been informed that the accusations were against Anderson specifically.[19]

After a third-party investigation was conducted, it was found that Fleming "had inconsistencies in her story, used inappropriate humor, and timed her report for Sexual Assault Awareness Month", leading the investigation to state the sexual assault allegations were unsubstantiated and "objectively implausible." Fleming refused to talk with the investigators, and nobody came forward to corroborate her allegations. The investigation also found "behavior unbecoming of a board member" which included "online flirtations with a 16-year-old student and coercive social media posts." Over 1000 students walked out of classrooms in protest of Anderson remaining on the board.[20] The Denver school board voted 6–1 to censure Anderson for his behavior. Anderson was the sole vote in opposition to the measure, which was the first time the board had censured one of its own members.[21]

Anderson later pursued a defamation lawsuit (2021CV33673) against BLM5280, Fleming, and another political activist related to their public statements. In 2022, a Denver District Court judge dismissed the lawsuit, ruling that BLM 5280 "did not act with malice or reckless disregard for the truth." Following the dismissal of the case, the defendants filed for reimbursement of their legal fees under Colorado's Anti-SLAPP law. The judge agreed, and Anderson was ordered to pay $61,060 to BLM 5280 and Amy Brown.[22]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Auon'tai "Tay" Anderson is an American community organizer and former at-large director of the Denver Public Schools Board of Education, serving from December 2019 to December 2023.[1] Elected at age 21, he became the youngest African American to hold elected office in Colorado history.[2] Born in Kansas City, Kansas, and a graduate of Denver's Manual High School, Anderson rose to prominence as a teenage activist leading local chapters of March for Our Lives and participating in protests following the deaths of George Floyd and Elijah McClain.[1][3] He founded the Black Santa Project to deliver holiday gifts to children in underserved communities and advocated for education reforms emphasizing equity and reduced policing in schools, including the 2020 decision to phase out school resource officers.[2][4] Anderson's tenure drew national attention amid multiple allegations of sexual misconduct leveled by former colleagues, activists, and an anonymous accuser claiming assaults on dozens of students; a third-party investigation commissioned by Denver Public Schools in 2021 found no substantiation for the gravest claims but confirmed he engaged in flirtatious social media contact with a 16-year-old district student and posted intimidating messages targeting critics.[5][6][7] The board voted 6-1 to censure him in September 2021, and Denver's district attorney declined to pursue criminal charges, citing insufficient evidence.[8][9] He temporarily stepped back from daily duties during the probe but resumed them and completed his term, later dropping a reelection bid to pursue a state House seat.[10][11] In November 2024, Anderson was hired by Denver Public Schools as a guest teacher and support staff at a middle school, prompting renewed criticism from parents and former students over the prior findings.[7] He has since relocated to Aurora, Colorado, and maintains involvement in community initiatives.[12]

Early life and education

Childhood and family background

Auon'tai M. Anderson, known as Tay Anderson, was born in Kansas City, Kansas, to Mia Anderson, a single mother who was a teenager at the time of his birth.[1][13] His family has a longstanding tradition in education, with multiple members serving as educators; his grandmother, who played a significant role in raising him, was a retired teacher with 35 years of experience, and the family collectively marked over 115 years of involvement in education by 2020.[14][15] As a child, Anderson assumed responsibilities for caring for his grandmother from a young age, reflecting the close-knit family dynamics amid limited resources.[16] He later experienced housing instability, including periods of homelessness during his teenage years, and resided with a foster family in Denver's Whittier neighborhood while attending high school.[17][18] Anderson moved to Denver from Kansas City to pursue his education, eventually graduating from Manual High School in 2017 as a product of the Denver Public Schools system.[1]

Academic pursuits and early influences

Anderson attended Thomas Jefferson High School as a freshman after moving to Denver from Kansas City in 2012, before transferring to Manual High School, from which he graduated on May 27, 2017.[19][20] As a product of Denver Public Schools, Anderson drew from a family legacy spanning over 100 years in education, which informed his early commitment to educational equity.[19] Following high school, Anderson enrolled at Metropolitan State University of Denver to study education, positioning himself as a student-activist focused on public school reform.[21][22] His academic pursuits emphasized practical involvement in schooling, as he later worked as a union educator in Aurora and Denver public schools.[1] Early influences included mentorship from Colorado State Representative Leslie Herod, a Denver Democrat, who supported Anderson's entry into political advocacy amid his focus on issues affecting Black and brown students.[3] This guidance complemented Anderson's self-directed activism, shaped by personal experiences in under-resourced schools and a drive to address systemic disparities firsthand.[23]

Pre-political activism

Community organizing beginnings

Auon'tai M. Anderson, known as Tay Anderson, initiated his community organizing efforts during his high school years at Manual High School in Denver, where he assumed leadership roles that honed his activism skills. As a sophomore, he joined Project VOYCE, a youth leadership program founded by Candi CdeBaca, which focused on developing public speaking and organizational abilities among students.[23] By his senior year in 2017, Anderson served as student body president, leveraging the position to advocate for school-related issues and build a foundation for broader community engagement.[23] A pivotal motivation for his shift toward gun violence prevention organizing came in 2016 following the police shooting of Philando Castile, which prompted Anderson to participate in anti-gun violence initiatives as a high school student.[24] This led to his leadership in Never Again Colorado, a youth-led group advocating for gun control measures, where he eventually served as president prior to his 2019 school board campaign.[23] Concurrently, Anderson worked in Denver Public Schools roles including teacher's aide, security officer, and restorative justice coordinator, applying his organizing experience to address disciplinary and equity concerns within the district.[23] Anderson's initial forays into public protests emerged in late 2017, organizing against gentrification in Denver's Five Points neighborhood amid controversy over ink! Coffee's signage perceived as mocking community displacement. He coordinated the "We don’t drink ink" rally and boycott, drawing over 550 participants via social media and leading chants to highlight economic inequities in areas like Five Points, Globeville, Elyria-Swansea, and Montbello.[25] These efforts marked his transition from school-based leadership to street-level community mobilization, emphasizing unity against perceived city policies exacerbating neighborhood changes.[25]

Involvement in Black Lives Matter and social justice campaigns

Anderson began his involvement in the Black Lives Matter movement during the summer of 2016, motivated by the police killing of Philando Castile.[26] As a high school student at Manual High School, he organized protests aligned with Black Lives Matter, focusing on racial justice and police accountability.[23] His activism extended to broader social justice campaigns, including demonstrations supporting the Standing Rock protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline in 2016–2017, which highlighted indigenous rights and environmental concerns.[23] Following Donald Trump's election in November 2016, Anderson participated in anti-Trump protests in Denver, contributing to local organizing efforts against perceived threats to marginalized communities.[27] In addition to racial and indigenous justice initiatives, Anderson engaged in youth-led campaigns addressing gun violence, serving as president of Never Again Colorado, a group formed in response to the 2018 Parkland school shooting.[23] This role involved front-line participation in Colorado's gun control movement, advocating for legislative reforms through rallies and community outreach prior to his 2019 school board campaign.[26] These efforts positioned him as an advocate for black and brown youth, drawing on personal experiences of injustice within Denver's public systems.[23]

Political career

Election to Denver Public Schools Board (2019)

Auon'tai "Tay" Anderson, then 21 years old, announced his candidacy for an at-large seat on the Denver Public Schools Board of Education in early 2019, emphasizing advocacy for students of color and opposition to the district's long-standing reform policies favoring charter schools and standardized testing.[23][28] His campaign raised $13,912 in its initial six months, primarily from individual donors, positioning him as a strong fundraiser among the nine candidates vying for three open seats.[28] Anderson received key endorsement from the Denver Classroom Teachers Association, aligning him with a slate of union-backed candidates seeking to shift board control away from reform-oriented members.[29][30] The election on November 5, 2019, saw these candidates secure all three seats, with Anderson defeating opponents including former students and established educators in the at-large race, contributing to a union majority on the seven-member board for the first time in over a decade.[31][32] The victory marked a pivotal change in district governance, ending the dominance of policies associated with the 2008 "Reform Board" era and signaling a potential pivot toward increased teacher input and reduced emphasis on market-based reforms.[29][32] Anderson assumed office on December 4, 2019, as one of the board's youngest members ever elected.[1]

Tenure on the board (2019-2023)

Anderson assumed office as an at-large member of the Denver Public Schools Board of Education on December 4, 2019, representing the district amid ongoing debates over equity and reform. Early in his term, the board, with Anderson's support, passed a comprehensive LGBTQIA+ inclusion resolution in early 2020, mandating that every school provide at least one all-gender restroom and permitting students to self-identify for facility use without requiring parental consent.[33] [34] This policy aimed to foster inclusivity but later drew federal scrutiny for potential Title IX violations.[35] In October 2020, Anderson backed the unanimous adoption of the Know Justice Know Peace Resolution, which directed the district to overhaul its curriculum to emphasize narratives from Black, Indigenous, and other people of color, incorporating student-led input on Black history and social justice topics.[36] That same year, the board, including Anderson, voted unanimously to eliminate school resource officers from campuses by June 2021, citing disproportionate impacts on minority students and a desire to disrupt the school-to-prison pipeline; this decision was reversed in 2023 amid rising safety concerns.[37] [38] Anderson also supported the 2021 reunification of West High School, reversing its prior division into smaller programs to restore community ties and neighborhood identity.[39] During the COVID-19 pandemic, Anderson advocated for measures to sustain school operations and food distribution for families, aligning with board efforts to balance health protocols and educational continuity. In January 2022, the board approved a policy ensuring free menstrual products in all school bathrooms to address access barriers, a step Anderson later cited as combating period poverty.[40] Later that year, the district implemented a minimum wage increase to $20 per hour for paraprofessionals and certain support staff, part of broader compensation adjustments including teacher raises negotiated amid union pressures.[41] [42] Anderson also pushed for universal dyslexia screenings, which the district began rolling out by 2023 for early elementary students.[43] Anderson served as board vice president during parts of his term and participated in governance amid internal divisions, though his involvement was interrupted in May 2021 when he voluntarily stepped back from daily duties during an external investigation into unrelated allegations, resuming full participation by July.[44] [45] The board censured him in September 2021 for policy violations stemming from the probe's findings.[8] His tenure emphasized equity-focused reforms, often drawing from student activism, but faced criticism for prioritizing ideological changes over core academics in a district grappling with achievement gaps.[33]

State House District 6 candidacy (2022)

In 2022, Auon'tai "Tay" Anderson did not announce or pursue a candidacy for Colorado State House District 6, which encompasses parts of southeast Denver and was retained by Democratic incumbent Steven Woodrow in the general election after he prevailed in the primary against challenger David Hooten. Woodrow secured 72.5% of the vote in the June 28 Democratic primary, defeating Hooten's 27.5%, before winning the November general election against Republican Kyle Witter with 68.3% to Witter's 31.7%.[46] Anderson remained focused on his at-large position on the Denver Public Schools board that year, where he faced mounting scrutiny over sexual misconduct allegations that had surfaced in 2021, including an independent investigation concluding in May 2022 that found credible evidence of inappropriate relationships with subordinates. No public records or campaign filings indicate any involvement by Anderson in District 6's race, which centered on issues like education funding and housing affordability in the district.[47] Anderson's entry into state legislative politics occurred later, in June 2023, when he suspended his reelection bid for the school board and declared his candidacy for House District 8 in the 2024 cycle, a northeast Denver seat vacated by term-limited Rep. Leslie Herod due to his advocacy for progressive policies on education equity and criminal justice reform.[11] That campaign, launched amid his board censure and ongoing legal disputes over the misconduct findings, emphasized community organizing roots and criticism of establishment Democrats but was suspended on January 9, 2024, before the primary, with Anderson citing personal and strategic reasons without endorsing another candidate.[48][49] The absence of a 2022 District 6 bid aligns with Anderson's tenure challenges, including a December 2022 board vote to bar him from personnel matters following the investigation's substantiation of claims by at least three women.[50]

Policy positions and legislative advocacy

Anderson advocated for policies centered on racial equity in education during his tenure on the Denver Public Schools Board from December 4, 2019, to December 1, 2023. He emphasized reducing disciplinary disparities, noting that students of color faced suspension rates three times higher than white students, and supported culturally responsive curricula alongside mandatory diversity training for educators.[1] His background as a former restorative justice coordinator informed his push for alternatives to punitive discipline, including expanded mental health support and counseling over traditional security measures.[7] [51] In school safety advocacy, Anderson opposed the presence of school resource officers (SROs), contending that they exacerbated racial inequities in discipline and safety perceptions for students of color; he called for their removal in favor of community-based interventions.[52] He collaborated with groups like Moms Demand Action to advance Colorado's first safe gun storage law in 2019, linking it to preventing youth access to firearms in educational settings.[1] On broader reforms, Anderson aligned with efforts to fulfill the 2012 consent decree aimed at improving outcomes for English language learners through targeted resource allocation.[1] Anderson critiqued charter school expansion, advocating for a moratorium to enhance oversight of their funding and operations, positioning himself against Denver's prior portfolio reform model that emphasized school choice.[23] [53] He championed educator support, including raising the district's minimum wage to $20 per hour and bolstering union rights, as part of addressing staffing shortages and retention in under-resourced schools.[1] During his 2022 candidacy for Colorado State House District 6, Anderson extended his education-focused advocacy to state-level priorities, though specific platform details emphasized continuity with equity-driven reforms rather than introducing novel legislative proposals.[1] His board votes and public statements consistently prioritized community organizing principles, including anti-police presence in schools and resource redirection toward marginalized student groups, amid a shift away from market-oriented reforms in Denver Public Schools.[23]

Controversies and investigations

Emergence of sexual misconduct allegations (2021)

On March 26, 2021, the activist group Black Lives Matter 5280 issued a public statement alleging that Denver Public Schools board member Tay Anderson had sexually assaulted an anonymous woman who had come forward to the organization in late February.[54][55] The group, which had previously promoted Anderson's activism, stated it was sharing the allegation at the woman's request to encourage other potential victims to come forward, emphasizing survivor anonymity amid concerns for safety.[56][57] Anderson immediately denied the claim, asserting in a March 28, 2021, news conference that it was baseless and politically motivated, while pledging cooperation with any formal inquiry.[57] The allegation prompted the Denver Public Schools board to retain the third-party investigator Informed Litigation Group (ILG) on April 5, 2021, to examine the claim and any related complaints, marking the district's first formal response to accusations against Anderson.[58] No additional public details emerged immediately, but the board placed Anderson on paid administrative leave pending the probe, citing the need to address the matter independently of ongoing board duties.[5] Further allegations surfaced on May 28, 2021, when Jessica Brooks-Fleming testified anonymously before a Colorado legislative committee on educator sexual misconduct, claiming Anderson had committed sexual assault or misconduct against 62 current or former Denver Public Schools students, many of whom were minors at the time.[55][59] The district confirmed it had received reports of these claims, which expanded the scope of the ILG investigation to include potential interactions with students via social media and other channels.[59] Anderson again denied the accusations, describing them as unsubstantiated and part of a pattern of anonymous attacks, and on May 30, 2021, voluntarily stepped back from board activities to avoid distracting from district priorities.[60]

Independent investigation findings and board censure

In September 2021, the Denver Public Schools Board of Education commissioned an independent investigation by the Investigations Law Group (ILG) into anonymous allegations of sexual misconduct against board member Tay Anderson, including claims of assaulting or engaging in misconduct with up to 62 students and others.[61] The ILG report, released on September 13, 2021, concluded that the most serious allegations—such as sexual assault at a Krispy Kreme in 2017, misconduct involving 62 primarily undocumented DPS students in 2020, and physical or sexual contact with students during 2018-2019—were unsubstantiated due to lack of victim corroboration, inconsistencies in complainant accounts, and absence of supporting evidence.[61] [5] However, the report substantiated specific instances of inappropriate conduct, including flirtatious social media interactions with a 16-year-old DPS high school student in July-August 2020, where Anderson made comments on her bedroom photo, pursued ongoing contact, and extended date invitations before ceasing upon learning her age.[61] It also confirmed unwelcome sexual advances and comments toward seven young women in a 2018 non-DPS context affiliated with Never Again Colorado, which Anderson largely admitted, though no direct DPS policy violation was tied to this pre-board activity.[61] Additionally, two of Anderson's social media posts—one featuring a Bugs Bunny image captioned "Do it bitch" and another issuing a July 7 warning—were deemed likely retaliatory and intimidating toward potential witnesses, violating DPS policies on retaliation, ethical conduct, and integrity, though no evidence linked him to directing supporters' independent actions.[61] The investigation, costing $105,449.63, noted Anderson's full cooperation but highlighted a pattern breaching board member expectations for professional boundaries, particularly with minors.[8] On September 17, 2021, the DPS board voted 6-1 to censure Anderson, with him casting the dissenting vote, citing the ILG findings as evidence of a "disturbing pattern" of flirtatious behavior toward students, intimidating online activity, and ethical lapses that undermined public trust.[62] [8] Board President Carrie Olson emphasized the censure's role in enforcing behavioral standards without mandating resignation, while members like Jennifer Bacon and Angela Cobián stressed accountability for higher official conduct.[62] Anderson responded by rejecting the censure as racially motivated "anti-Blackness" and a "high-tech lynching," acknowledging the flirtation as a mistake but maintaining he committed no crimes and intending to complete his term through 2023.[8] The action did not remove him from office but publicly condemned the substantiated violations.[62] In November 2021, following an independent investigation that deemed the most serious sexual misconduct allegations against him unsubstantiated, Denver Public Schools board member Tay Anderson filed a defamation lawsuit in Denver District Court against Black Lives Matter 5280, its leadership, and six individuals, including Mary-Katherine Brooks Fleming and Dr. Apryl Alexander.[63][64] The suit alleged that the defendants knowingly published false claims of sexual assault and grooming via social media and public statements, seeking $1 million in damages and asserting claims of defamation, defamation per se, civil conspiracy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.[65][66] Defendants invoked Colorado's anti-SLAPP statute to seek dismissal, arguing the claims arose from protected public participation. In April 2022, Denver District Court Judge David H. Goldberg dismissed most claims against BLM 5280 and several defendants, ruling that Anderson failed to demonstrate a probability of prevailing on conspiracy or outrage claims, though some individual defamation allegations survived initial motions.[67] Anderson appealed the partial dismissal. In September 2023, the Colorado Court of Appeals reversed in part, allowing defamation claims against two women who had posted unsubstantiated sexual assault allegations online to proceed, finding Anderson had shown sufficient evidence that the statements were false and caused reputational harm, while affirming dismissal of other claims lacking factual support for malice or conspiracy.[68][69] By March 2024, following further proceedings, Judge Goldberg ordered Anderson to pay over $61,000 in defendants' legal fees, determining the dismissed claims were substantially frivolous or groundless under anti-SLAPP provisions, marking a significant financial and legal setback in the case's aftermath.[70][71] No trial on the remaining claims has been reported as of October 2025, and Anderson has not secured any judgments in his favor from the suit.[72]

Post-tenure developments

Departure from the school board (2023)

On June 12, 2023, Auon'tai Anderson announced he would withdraw from his reelection campaign for the Denver Public Schools board, stating his intention to pursue a seat in the Colorado House of Representatives in 2024 rather than seek another term on the board.[11] This decision came after he had initially filed to run for reelection in the November 2023 election, which would have extended his tenure beyond the four-year term beginning in 2019.[50] Anderson's term officially concluded in early December 2023, following the certification of the November election results, ending his service amid a backdrop of prior board censure and public scrutiny over misconduct allegations that had prompted earlier calls for his resignation.[73] Despite vowing in September 2021 to remain on the board through the end of his term, Anderson did not face formal removal proceedings and completed his elected duties without further interruption after the 2021 censure vote.[74] His departure shifted focus to legislative ambitions, though it drew commentary from critics who viewed the end of his board tenure as a relief for the district after years of division.[50]

Recent employment and relocation (2024-2025)

Following his departure from the Denver Public Schools Board in 2023, Auon'tai Anderson withdrew from the Colorado House District 8 race on January 9, 2024, stating that multiple Black candidates risked diluting support and allowing a non-Black candidate to win.[48][75] He simultaneously announced the formation of Good Trouble Consulting, an education-focused organization aimed at advocacy and consulting services.[76] In April 2024, Anderson returned to Denver Public Schools as a guest teacher. By November 2024, the district hired him as Restorative Justice Coordinator at Manual Middle School, citing his prior 13-month tenure in a similar restorative practices role during 2018–2019.[7] This employment occurred despite district policies prohibiting staff from contracting with their outside businesses, such as Good Trouble Consulting.[7] In early 2025, Anderson relocated from Denver to Aurora, Colorado.[12] On January 13, 2025, after attending an Aurora City Council meeting, he accused Mayor Mike Coffman of physical attack, which Coffman rejected as a mere verbal altercation amid policy disagreements.[77][78]

References

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