• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish
No Result
View All Result
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
No Result
View All Result

County HR director arrested for DWI

Ivan Foley by Ivan Foley
July 1, 2014
in Platte County
4
SHARES
107
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare via Email

Mary Robinson, the director of human resources for Platte County, was arrested for allegedly driving while intoxicated Friday night.

Robinson, 43, was arrested at a DWI checkpoint being conducted in Platte City by the Platte County Sheriff’s Department. She was booked into the Platte County Jail and released a short time later after posting $1,000 bond.

RelatedNews

Three local judges up for retention Nov. 5

Summer concerts set on courthouse lawn

Free summer concerts begin June 7 at Zona Rosa

According to the arresting deputy’s report, Robinson’s blood alcohol content measured .174, which is more than twice the legal limit of .08.

Robinson, who has served as the county’s HR director since late 2009 and earns a salary of $61,700 per year, is the wife of Platte County Auditor Kevin Robinson.

The sheriff’s department conducted the checkpoint near Hwy. 92 and Prairie View Road in Platte City from 9 p.m. Friday until 2 a.m. Saturday.

Robinson, driving a 2001 Honda CRV, was stopped at the checkpoint at 9:30 p.m., according to the incident report filed by the arresting deputy.

“I advised Ms. Robinson that she had entered a sobriety checkpoint. I could smell a strong odor of intoxicants coming from inside the vehicle,” the deputy writes in the report.

“I asked Ms. Robinson if she had consumed any alcoholic beverages and she stated that she had a few to drink before picking up her car at Maria’s (a restaurant on Hwy. 92 in Platte City). Ms. Robinson’s speech was slurred and her eyes were bloodshot and glassy,” the report says.

Robinson, of Kansas City in Platte County, later told the deputy that she had been at the Avalon Cafe in Weston prior to picking up her car at Maria’s. She told the officer that she had four drinks, which were rum and coke, between 5:30 and 8:30 p.m.

“Ms. Robinson stated in her opinion she was not under the influence of an alcoholic beverage,” the deputy’s report states.

The report indicates Robinson struggled with field sobriety tests. Robinson consented to the breath sample, and after a 15 minute observation period had expired, “provided a valid breath sample with a result of .174,” according to the report.

The report then indicates a citation for driving while intoxicated was issued and Robinson was transported to the county jail. Robinson “was very cooperative and polite,” the report indicates.

NOT HER FIRST BRUSH WITH CONTROVERSY

The human resources office at Platte County answers directly to the county commission, and the HR director is employed at the will of the county commission.

The arrest isn’t the first piece of controversy for Robinson and the HR office in her time as HR director. Most recently, some ire was raised within the administration building when an employee in Robinson’s office was the only worker in the county complex to receive a pay increase in the 2014 budget. The worker was given a 10% pay hike, even though county commissioners had publicly indicated no county employees would be receiving raises. The Landmark broke the story on Jan. 1 after noticing the salary line in the HR budget had been increased by $2,700.

Jason Brown, presiding commissioner, said he argued against the raise. Duane Soper and Beverlee Roper, associate commissioners, supported the pay increase for the HR worker.

In 2012, Robinson was issued a written reprimand by then-county commissioners Jason Brown and Kathy Dusenbery. The vote was 2-0, with then-commissioner Jim Plunkett absent. Minutes from that meeting do not indicate why the action was taken. Robinson, in a phone interview with The Landmark at that time, said: “I haven’t done anything to warrant disciplinary action.”

Brown and Dusenbery declined to comment on the reason for the action, citing the topic as a personnel matter.

A set of minutes originally issued from an Oct. 15, 2012 meeting of county commissioners indicated that on a 2-1 vote, with Plunkett opposed, Robinson would be suspended for one day without pay and that she be required to attend training sessions.

In particular, the sessions are to be oriented toward the human resources director position and are to relate to confidentiality and professionalism issues.”

Those minutes were subsequently pulled from the county record by Bob Shaw, county attorney, according to Plunkett at the time, and replaced with minutes that did not reflect any vote taken in the closed session. Shaw told Plunkett he was pulling the original minutes because the vote taken was not a “final” vote on the topic.

Following that Oct. 15, 2012, vote, Robinson hired an attorney to correspond with the county on her behalf. Ten days after a letter from Robinson’s attorney, commissioners Brown and Dusenbery voted to issue the reprimand to Robinson.

In an interview after that decision by the commission, Robinson told The Landmark she had not been told by the county what she is alleged to have said or done that led to the reprimand.

Robinson’s hiring in 2009 in itself had raised eyebrows. At the time she worked for a firm called People Wise, owned and operated by her husband Kevin, now the county auditor.

People Wise was hired in the fall of 2009 by the county commission of Betty Knight, Plunkett and Dusenbery to conduct a “management audit” of the county’s human resources department after allegations of multiple payroll mistakes had been alleged by then-county auditor Siobhann Williams and confirmed by the county’s outside auditor.

As the controversy brewed, the county commission, in the middle of a well-publicized feud with Williams, took action to hire a third “audit” of the department.

The contract penned between People Wise and the county called for total costs of $9,000 for the management audit. The contract noted that People Wise’s billable rate is $125 per hour but “has been reduced to $56.25 per hour in consideration of current and future projects for the county.”

Two months later, Mary Robinson was hired by Knight, Plunkett and Dusenbery as the new county HR director.

Kevin Robinson at the time served on the board of directors of the Platte City Chamber of Commerce, and Knight at the time was an advisory board member for the Chamber of Commerce.

At the time of the hiring, Knight defended the move in an interview with The Landmark.

“We watched what she was doing and were really impressed by her knowledge of the HR office as a whole, not necessarily our office. We had no idea that she would want to accept a position.”

Tags: Kathy Dusenberyparkvilleplatte cityplatte countyweston
Ivan Foley

Ivan Foley

Ivan Foley, longtime owner/publisher of the Platte County Landmark, is a past winner of the national Gish Award for courage, tenacity and integrity in rural journalism, presented by the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues at the University of Kentucky. He lives in Platte County not far from KCI Airport.

Related Posts

Bryan Richison

Platte City makes offer to man from Arnold, Mo.

by Ivan Foley
June 13, 2025
0

BRYAN RICHISON MAY BECOME NEW CITY ADMINISTRATOR Matthew Bryan Richison has been offered the position as the new city administrator for Platte City. The Platte City Board of Aldermen is holding a special closed session today (Friday) at 4:30 to...

45 Years Ago–June 6, 1980

by Ivan Foley
June 12, 2025
0

Paul Regan, manager of Ferrelgas of Platte City, Bethel Road, is the new fire chief for the Platte City volunteer fire department. His selection by the other members of the fire department was approved by the Platte City Board of...

30 Years Ago–June 15, 1995

by Ivan Foley
June 12, 2025
0

Platte County Commission plans to build a new bridge across Jowler Creek on Interurban Road just south of Camden Point have hit a snag because the existing bridge has been declared of “historical significance,” it was announced Thursday. Platte County...

15 Years Ago–June 16, 2010

by Ivan Foley
June 12, 2025
0

City of Parkville officials on Monday warned of high water in English Landing Park and changes for the upcoming River Jam event that may be caused by it. As of 12:30 p.m. Monday, water levels had reached 27.25 feet, flooding...

Next Post

Firm envisions 300-acre project east of I-29 at Platte City

Popular News

  • Bryan Richison

    Platte City makes offer to man from Arnold, Mo.

    43 shares
    Share 17 Tweet 11
  • KC man charged in shooting death of local sports reporter

    34 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • I-29 pedestrian struck by three vehicles dies at scene

    73 shares
    Share 29 Tweet 18
  • Detectives speaking with ‘person of interest’ in shooting death of sports reporter

    64 shares
    Share 26 Tweet 16
  • Input sought for Downtown Platte City

    10 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 3
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Call us at 816-858-0363

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Subscribe Online
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved