- The Metropolitan Water Districtâs board voted to extend the leave of absence of embattled General Manager Adel Hagekhalil while an investigation continues.
- The agencyâs chief financial officer has accused him of harassing and sidelining her. Hagekhalil denies any wrongdoing.
The board of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California voted to allow more time to complete an investigation into accusations against General Manager Adel Hagekhalil, who was placed on leave more than four months ago in response to harassment allegations by the agencyâs chief financial officer.
The boardâs decision will extend Hagekhalilâs leave of absence until an investigator has finished interviews and submitted a report on the findings.
âThe investigation is being conducted independently by an outside investigator,â said AdĂĄn Ortega Jr., chair of the MWD board. âThe investigator is down to final witnesses.â
The MWDâs general manager was placed on leave amid an investigation into complaints. Adel Hagekhalil says the accusations against him are unfounded.
The outcome is expected to determine whether Hagekhalil is fired or reinstated as the top manager of Californiaâs largest urban water supplier. During more than three years on the job, he has called for transforming the agency and has focused on adaptation to climate change, in part by reducing reliance on water supplies from distant sources and investing in local water supplies.
Some of the accusations against Hagekhalil surfaced in a letter to the board from Chief Financial Officer Katano Kasaine, who alleged he had harassed, demeaned and sidelined her and created a hostile work environment. Hagekhalil has denied the accusations, saying he has always treated other employees with respect and professionalism.
âIâve been compelled to defend my reputation and my job based on my record of inclusion, collaboration, reform and results,â Hagekhalil told the board during Mondayâs meeting. âI have not committed any misconduct.â
The MWD board placed Hagekhalil on leave on June 13. He said the investigator contacted him for the first time on Friday to schedule an interview, but Hagekhalilâs lawyer wasnât available, so the interview is being rescheduled.
Kasaine wrote in her May 27 letter that she has been âmaligned, harassed, bullied, and sidelined from my core responsibilities.â She said Hagekhalilâs âpreference for male colleagues/staff over me has continued to sow the seeds of sexism and belittling.â
She also criticized Hagekhalilâs hiring of a team of trusted, highly paid consultants, calling it âan entire shadow leadership team, wielding more power than those holding official titles.â
Hagekhalil said he hasnât done anything wrong and is ready to tell his side of the story. He said he hopes to return to the job.
âI will continue to strive to treat everyone with courtesy, respect and dignity. Thatâs who I am,â he told the board. âIâm committed to working with you and the employees to find these solutions to move us forward and heal the organization.â
Hagekhalilâs lawyer, Kerry Garvis Wright, said she has learned that other employees referenced in Kasaineâs complaint also have yet to be interviewed.
âMr. Hagekhalil himself has identified more than 40 witnesses with knowledge of the allegations,â Garvis Wright said. âWe continue to have enormous concerns about the process and the lack of fairness and independence of the investigation.â
Itâs the second time the board has voted to extend his leave of absence. The leave had been scheduled to end this week.
Board members discussed the matter and voted to approve the extension in closed session after listening to comments from the public for more than two hours.
About 50 people spoke in support of Hagekhalil, praising him as a talented leader with a record of being respectful, inclusive and supportive of women. Many urged the board to reinstate him. The supporters included MWD employees, residents, environmental advocates, Los Angeles city officials and others who have worked with Hagekhalil.
Six other people spoke critically of Hagekhalil, saying the accusations are serious and the board should base its decision on the investigationâs findings, not attempts by his allies to sway the process.
Los Angeles City Councilmember Bob Blumenfield said the investigation has lasted a long time, which is ânot a good look.â
âIâm very concerned about whatâs going on here,â Blumenfield said. âI know that there is a lot of water politics going on always. This is California. But I really hope that that doesnât interfere with what this good man is trying to do to help our region and to help us with our water policy.â
MWD head Adel Hagekhalil wants Southern California to adapt to climate change, becoming more resilient and more self-reliant on local water sources.
The Metropolitan Water District delivers water to cities and agencies that supply 19 million people across Southern California.
The sidelining of Hagekhalil has occurred at a time when the MWDâs leaders are involved in major projects and facing momentous decisions, including preparing a climate adaptation plan, developing the countryâs largest wastewater recycling facility, and considering whether to contribute additional funds for the planning of Californiaâs proposed $20-billion water tunnel in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
Former L.A. City Councilmember Paul Koretz said Hagekhalil is âone of the finest executives Iâve ever worked with.â
âIt appears to me, his only real fault was not always agreeing with his subordinates on policy,â Koretz said. âUnfortunately, this kind of trumped-up charge is more of the stuff of which California water policy is known and famous for. Adel doesnât need to be censured. He needs an apology. The way this has been handled is frankly embarrassing.â
Hagekhalil previously worked for the city of Los Angelesâ leading programs focusing on sewers and streets. He was appointed the MWDâs general manager in 2021 after a bitter power struggle among board members.
Bruce Reznik, executive director of the group Los Angeles Waterkeeper, said he understood that such personnel issues require caution, but that nothing in the complaints that have come to light would warrant dismissing Hagekhalil.
âItâs now been more or less a four-month fishing expedition and I donât think youâve caught any fish,â Reznik said. âAnd thatâs one of my worries, is we can keep dragging this out.â
Others praised Hagekhalilâs character and leadership style.
Hilary Norton, former chair of the California Transportation Commission, called him a âcollaborator who is respectful to women, uplifts new ideas that stem from women leaders and gives women the opportunity to say what they need to say, speak their mind and support their leadership.â
Norton said she has been in âharassing environmentsâ in local and state government, but Hagekhalil is âsomeone who would stand up for women.â
Melanie Winter has long advocated for change along the L.A. River. As she undergoes cancer treatment, she remains focused on healing L.A.âs relationship to water.
In recent letters to the board, some employee groups have criticized Hagekhalilâs management and what they say are failures.
The Hispanic Employees Assn. urged the board to âhold him accountable for his actions that go against his responsibility to cultivate and maintain a fair, equitable, and inclusive workplace.â
The Black Employees Assn. said there has been a âa pattern of behavior by Mr. Hagekhalil negatively affecting several members, particularly Black women.â
Darcy Burke, president and chief executive of the business consulting firm WaterMark Associates, said the comments by some that Hagekhalil is a âgood leaderâ are irrelevant to investigating the complaints against him.
âThere are only two questions you must answer today: Are these allegations true? And if so, what is your course of action?â Burke said. âAs the leader of this organization, the general manager sets the culture and tone. Condoning his behavior tells the women of Metropolitan that they are indeed second-class citizens, that inappropriate behavior is encouraged and rewarded.â
Bernadette Robertson, the MWDâs controller, raised other concerns, saying Hagekhalil âdoes not listen to and respect the people that know the financesâ of the agency.
Annette Eckhardt, president of an employee group called Women at Metropolitan, criticized a recent Los Angeles Times column about the investigation, saying the board should disregard âunsubstantiated comments and speculation.â She said the board should carefully review the results of the investigations, âwhich are supposed to be impartial, and only then decide to take actions based on what is bestâ for the district.
Ellen Mackey, a senior ecologist and leader of the womenâs caucus at the MWD, called for reinstating Hagekhalil while the investigation proceeds. She praised him for making progress improving the culture at the agency, âbut we fear we are now losing ground with those more comfortable with the old, abusive work environment.â
In interviews with current and former staffers and reviews of district records, court documents and audio recordings, The Times found a pattern of complaints alleging harassment and bullying of women at the Metropolitan Water District.
Ortega, the board chair, said after the meeting that the investigation âmust be thorough, fair and respectful of the rights of everyone involved.â
While the investigation continues, Deven Upadhyay is serving as interim general manager.
âWhile I know many would have preferred for our board to have reached a conclusion today, we must take care to protect the independence of the outside investigator and give them time to hear witnesses and affected parties who may be impacted, and to produce a report,â Ortega said. âA fair and thorough process for all parties involved is our priority.â
Some civil rights advocates have raised concerns about potential discrimination in the process. The Council on American-Islamic Relations has told the water district that Hagekhalil has been âsubjected to discriminatory and racist actions and behaviorsâ by some board members.
Hagekhalil is the first Muslim Arab American general manager in the districtâs history. He grew up in Lebanon with his Palestinian family before immigrating to the United States in 1984.
âWe are concerned about the potential discriminatory, anti-Arab, and Islamophobia sentiment coloring his placement on leave and the current investigation,â Amr Shabaik, the councilâs legal director in Los Angeles, said in a letter to the MWD board last week.
âWe are aware that Board members have used derogatory terms against immigrants, Muslims, and Arabs. Such alleged statements include the following: âWhen are we going to get rid of those refugees?â âWhen are we going to hire someone that we can pronounce their last name,â and calling Muslims and Arab Americans âCamel Jockeys,ââ Shabaik wrote.
âWe ask that the potential discrimination and harassment against Mr. Hagekhalil be addressed and remedied,â he said.
MWD spokesperson Rebecca Kimitch said the agency âtakes all accusations of discrimination, harassment and retaliation seriously,â and that these allegations are being treated in accordance with the districtâs antidiscrimination policies.