Covenant Eyes CEO Sells Company to Employees
Covenant Eyes CEO Sells Company to Employees
OWOSSO, Mich., Jan. 20, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ As of December 31, 2020, Covenant Eyes Inc. belongs to its 211 employees. CEO and co-founder Ron DeHaas previously held the majority interest in the company, along with a few other investors close to the company. The transfer means employees directly benefit from the growth of the company overall and own a stake in the company.
“I can t think of anyone better to sell the company to than those who work to make it the best service every day,” said DeHaas. “They are the ones who are committed most to continuing Covenant Eyes mission, and they are the ones who will ultimately benefit from its growth in the future.”
john henrehan explains what happened. reporter: at the jefferson memorial in washington, d.c. demonstrations around the statue are forbidden. last saturday a group unhappy with a ruling that prohibits dancing came anyway and danced. one protestor was taken down hard by a park police officer who was briefly choked. a week later adam came back with a copy of the constitution. have you asked for a permit? i actually got a permit. it s the same one i swore an oath to when i enlisted in the marine corps. says something about freedom of assembly, which means you don t need permission. reporter: using social media, the protestors gathered liberal code pink people and serve libertarians from several states. i m here to rescind what s on the books now. reporter: shortly after noon, dancing broke out around the statue. over the next 10 minutes, the crowd swelled to a group of more than 50 people. this is what freedom looks like! reporter: at 12:16, police moved in and s
investigation that cleared him. fox 5 s roz plater sat down with her tonight. all this is very frustrating for that whistleblower. she says there s still not an explanation of what happened and why and she s hoping mayor vincent gray will look into it. reporter: in a two sentence statement d.c. public schools said its investigation had found no reason why mckinley tech principal david pender should be removed from his job and that he be back next year. it make everything else suspect. reporter: that was stunning news to former mckinley tech counselor rhonda robinson. she had accused him of grade tampering, giving students credit for classes they never took, classes that never even existed. back in march when dcps fired its investigator for allegedly making false statements, the school system said it would continue the investigation, but robinson said that s the last she heard of it. how they can investigate this situation and not contact me, that s unconscionable. t
following allegations he doctored grades. one of the women who accused him said she s devastated by this latest turn of events. roz plater has the latest from our newsroom. she says she and others are asking why david pinder is coming back now. the normal procedure is to wait until the investigation is over one way or the other. mckinley tech principal david pinder is due back on the job monday morning. in a statement acting chancellor kaya henderson said his suspension with pay had been a precaution in the midst of two ongoing investigations. actually i of devastated. reporter: i was devastated. reporter: rhonda robinson is the teacher who was the whistleblower who two years ago made the accusation pinder was tampering with grades. why would you allow him back? these are serious claims against him and because they have not been substantiated one way or the other it, doesn t make sense to allow him back in the building. reporter: the head of the teachers union