#Recording Academy Seeks to Close Deborah Dugan Arbitration Hearing to Public

“#Recording Academy Seeks to Close Deborah Dugan Arbitration Hearing to Public”
But in correspondence with arbitrator Sara Adler and Dugan’s attorneys obtained by the Times, the Academy’s lawyer Anthony J. Oncidi said they were now only willing to make public the results of the arbitration—and the reasoning behind them—but nothing more. Pitchfork has reached out to the Recording Academy for comment; a representative for Dugan declined to comment on the record.
The hearing itself stems from a complaint Dugan submitted to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in January 2020, after she was placed on administrative leave a week before the 2020 Grammys and five months since replacing the Recording Academy’s previous CEO Neil Portnow. In the EEOC complaint, she detailed an allegedly corrupt voting process for the Grammys and accused the Recording Academy’s general counsel Joel Katz of sexually harassing her and Portnow of raping a recording artist. Katz denied the harassment allegations through his attorney, and Portnow called the rape accusation “ludicrous” and “untrue.” Dugan was officially fired in March 2020. Last year the Academy denied Dugan’s claims that nomination committee members had pushed through nominations for artists they had relationships with, and this April they announced that they would be ending nomination committees for most major awards.
Read “The Explosive Grammys 2020 CEO Scandal, Explained” on the Pitch.
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