PUBLIC NOTICE: Outpost 422 Requests Administrative Review of Wisconsin Equal Rights Division Procedures

Dear Senator Johnson,

I am a constituent and United States Army veteran residing in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. I am writing to respectfully request constituent assistance regarding concerns I have encountered during proceedings before the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development Equal Rights Division.

My concern is not simply disagreement with the outcome of an investigation. Rather, I am concerned about the procedural handling of multiple matters involving repeated investigator assignments, remand proceedings, and whether material evidence received adequate consideration during the administrative process.

The procedural history includes an initial determination, appeal, remand for additional investigation, reassignment of decision-makers, and subsequent determinations. As a result, I have developed concerns regarding the consistency and completeness of the investigative process and whether complainants are receiving a fully independent review of the evidence presented.

I have attempted to address these concerns directly with the agency through professional administrative channels and have requested review of the circumstances. My objective is to ensure fairness, transparency, and confidence in the process for all Wisconsin citizens who rely upon state administrative remedies.

I respectfully request that your office review my concerns and advise whether constituent services may assist in obtaining clarification regarding agency procedures, oversight mechanisms, and available avenues for administrative review.

Thank you for your time and consideration. I appreciate your service to the citizens of Wisconsin and would be grateful for any guidance your office can provide.

Respectfully,

Bradley J. Burt

Outpost 422®: Building the Future of Journalism Between FM Radio, Artificial Intelligence and the Human Story

OUTPOST 422®

The Future of Journalism Lives Between FM Radio, Artificial Intelligence, and the Human Story

Practicum Progress Report

June 2026

For decades, journalism followed a simple formula. Reporters gathered facts, editors reviewed the material, and newspapers delivered information to readers. Then came websites. Then podcasts. Then social media. Then artificial intelligence.

The challenge facing modern journalists is no longer how to tell a story.

The challenge is how to connect audiences across multiple platforms while preserving the integrity of the original record.

That challenge became the foundation of Outpost 422®.

Originally developed through journalism, communications, and media studies coursework, Outpost 422® evolved into a living laboratory for testing convergent media techniques. The project combines FM radio broadcasting, podcast production, WordPress publishing, storytelling frameworks, social media distribution, and artificial intelligence-assisted content management into a single integrated communication system.

At its core, the project asks a simple question:

Can a journalist preserve a story across multiple media formats without losing its meaning?

The answer appears to be yes.

The current flagship project, Time Down Range with John Q. Battlefield, serves as both a radio program and a research-based narrative examining the transition from military service to higher education. Drawing upon veteran reintegration research, the program utilizes storytelling, interviews, historical reflection, and long-form documentary techniques to connect listeners with experiences often overlooked in traditional reporting.

Unlike conventional podcasts, the format borrows heavily from Gonzo journalism, documentary storytelling, and social science communication. Rather than pretending the reporter is absent from the story, the methodology acknowledges that the journalist is often part of the record itself.

The result is what Outpost 422® describes as a “podumentary”—a hybrid blend of podcasting, documentary reporting, and archival preservation.

Each broadcast becomes more than entertainment.

It becomes evidence.

Radio broadcasts generate audio records. WordPress articles provide written context. Graphics create visual documentation. Social media preserves public interaction. Artificial intelligence assists with organization, research support, and content development. Together, these components form a connected media ecosystem capable of preserving information across multiple channels.

The concept emerged through years of experimentation at Clarion Radio, where FM broadcasting provided a practical testing ground for convergent media techniques. What began as a student media activity gradually evolved into a larger exploration of how journalism might operate in a digital-first environment.

The significance of this work extends beyond student broadcasting.

Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming how information is created, distributed, and consumed. Journalists must now determine how to responsibly incorporate these technologies without sacrificing credibility, transparency, or authenticity.

Outpost 422® approaches this challenge through a simple philosophy:

Technology should enhance storytelling, not replace it.

Artificial intelligence can assist with organization, transcription, summarization, research support, and workflow management. Human judgment remains responsible for interpretation, verification, ethics, and accountability.

The future of journalism will not be found in a single platform.

It will be found at the intersection of radio, podcasting, websites, video, social media, and emerging technologies.

That intersection is where Outpost 422® operates.

As the Clarion Radio practicum enters its final phase, the goal remains straightforward: complete the educational deliverable, preserve the record, and demonstrate a practical model for future convergent-media professionals.

The project is scheduled for completion by September 2026.

Following completion of the practicum requirements, the focus will shift toward legal studies and future law-clinic work. Yet the lessons learned through Outpost 422® will remain relevant.

Because whether the medium is journalism, law, public policy, or education, one principle remains unchanged:

The record matters.

Outpost 422® exists to preserve it.

###OP422
###JPP

From Capstone to Courtroom: Preserving the Record in Good Faith

PUBLIC NOTICE

DECLARATION OF GOOD-FAITH INTENT
OUTPOST 422®

Date: June 2026

To Whom It May Concern:

This Public Notice serves as a declaration of good-faith intent regarding the ongoing publication, research, and documentation activities conducted through Outpost 422®, Bob Cobb Freelance Ink LLC, and related educational media projects.

The purpose of this work is to preserve the record.

Beginning with academic research, journalism coursework, public-records practice, student governance participation, administrative proceedings, and appellate review, this project has evolved into a longitudinal examination of how records are created, preserved, challenged, and reviewed within public institutions and legal systems.

The objective of Outpost 422® is not to determine liability, guilt, innocence, or the outcome of any pending matter. Those determinations belong to courts, administrative agencies, public officials, and other authorized decision-makers.

Rather, the objective is to document events, preserve records, organize timelines, examine procedural issues, and promote public understanding of the processes through which disputes are investigated, reviewed, and resolved.

The author acknowledges that litigation, administrative proceedings, and public controversies involve competing interpretations of facts and law. Accordingly, all publications are intended as educational commentary, legal studies research, journalism analysis, historical documentation, and public-interest reporting based upon records available at the time of publication.

This project is further intended to examine the interaction between self-representation, procedural law, administrative remedies, disability advocacy, records preservation, appellate review, public records practice, and public-interest journalism.

The central inquiry is not whether any particular litigant prevails. The central inquiry is how procedural rules governing notice, preservation, access to records, pleading requirements, and appellate review shape access to justice and public accountability.

Outpost 422® therefore declares its continuing good-faith intent to preserve the record, document proceedings accurately, maintain transparency regarding sources and methodology, and contribute to public understanding through responsible publication and educational research.

The research became the record.

Respectfully Published,

Bradley J. Burt

Founder, Outpost 422®
Bob Cobb Freelance Ink LLC

When Speaking Up Has Consequences: A Case Study in Modern Workplace Conflict

By Outpost 422®

Most people assume retaliation means being fired immediately after filing a complaint. In reality, retaliation is often much more subtle.

The modern workplace has become increasingly sophisticated in documenting employee conduct, performance concerns, and policy enforcement. Documentation itself is not improper. In fact, employers have a legitimate interest in maintaining records and addressing workplace issues. The problem arises when documentation becomes selective, targeted, or suddenly intensified after an employee exercises a protected right.

Employment law recognizes that retaliation rarely arrives with a written admission. Instead, courts frequently examine patterns, timing, and circumstantial evidence.

The Pattern

A common allegation in employment disputes follows a familiar sequence:

  1. An employee reports misconduct, discrimination, harassment, or safety concerns.
  2. The employee requests an accommodation or invokes a protected legal right.
  3. Management becomes aware of the protected activity.
  4. Increased scrutiny follows.
  5. Minor issues previously overlooked suddenly become disciplinary matters.
  6. The employee experiences adverse consequences, including discipline, demotion, isolation, or termination.

Standing alone, any single event may appear insignificant. Viewed together, however, the pattern can tell a different story.

The Difference Between Accountability and Retaliation

Employers have every right to enforce workplace rules. Employees are not immune from discipline simply because they engage in protected activity.

The question becomes whether the employer would have treated the employee the same way absent the protected activity.

Courts often evaluate:

  • Timing between the protected activity and adverse action.
  • Whether discipline escalated suddenly.
  • Whether similarly situated employees were treated differently.
  • Whether explanations changed over time.
  • Whether documentation appeared after the employee asserted rights.
  • Whether prior performance records contradict later claims.

These factors help determine whether an employer acted for legitimate business reasons or whether protected activity became a motivating factor.

The Role of Increased Scrutiny

One of the most overlooked aspects of retaliation is heightened scrutiny.

An employee who was previously considered competent may suddenly find every action questioned, every mistake documented, and every interaction scrutinized.

This phenomenon is often described informally as “papering the file.”

Again, documentation itself is not improper. The concern arises when scrutiny appears to begin only after an employee engages in legally protected conduct.

In these situations, the documentation process may become evidence itself.

Why Patterns Matter

Rarely does a retaliation case depend upon a single statement or document.

Instead, investigators, judges, and juries often evaluate the totality of circumstances.

A timeline can reveal:

  • What occurred before protected activity.
  • What changed afterward.
  • Whether disciplinary measures were consistent.
  • Whether management behavior shifted.
  • Whether the stated reason for adverse action matches the historical record.

Patterns frequently tell a more complete story than isolated events.

The Public Policy Question

Retaliation protections exist for a reason.

Employees cannot effectively report discrimination, safety concerns, legal violations, or workplace misconduct if they fear becoming examples for others.

When workers believe that speaking up will result in closer scrutiny, disciplinary targeting, or career consequences, important workplace protections become meaningless.

The law therefore attempts to strike a balance: employers retain authority to manage their workforce, while employees retain the right to exercise protected rights without fear of reprisal.

Final Thought

Retaliation cases are rarely about a single meeting, email, or disciplinary write-up.

More often, they involve a series of events that, when viewed together, reveal a larger narrative.

The central question remains simple:

Did management respond to legitimate workplace concerns, or did protected activity place a target on someone’s back?

When Employers Make an Example Out of Someone: Understanding Retaliation Through Workplace Patterns

An examination of workplace documentation started when Outpost 422 began preserving the record on WordPress regarding heightened scrutiny. The subject matter of retaliation through the presentation of theories in the Wisconsin Equal Rights tribunal involves employment disputes connected to Frank Productions, Camp Createability, and Marcus Theatres, based on public records, legal filings, and employment-law principles. The author claims the material herein describes what these employers engaged as a perception.

No official judicial rule has been entered in the aforementioned cases, only the distribution from the vantage point of stereotyping the author as a hysterical combat veteran. All too often, employers such as theses slip under the radar and the problems continue because employees know the employer has the at-will firing advantage in Wisconsin.

Despite the odds, the matter of discrimination distinctively appears in the evidence. The answer is often found not in one document, but in the pattern that emerges over time. Knowing what is and what is not evidence is the key to understanding the legitimacy of discrimination via retaliation, which is the author’s plea to the Tribunal in Wisconsin.

Editorial Note: This article discusses general employment-law concepts and workplace-retaliation theories for educational and public-interest purposes. The blog itself does not constitute giving legal advice only the author’s lived experience as a witness.

RECORD PRESERVED: Veteran Seeks Answers on Missing Evidence in Pending Wisconsin Employment Appeal

PRESS RELEASE MEMORANDUM

Outpost 422 Record Preservation Inquiry Submitted to Wisconsin Equal Rights Division

June 11, 2026

SUN PRAIRIE, Wis. — Today, a record-preservation inquiry was submitted to the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development Equal Rights Division regarding the status of a pending administrative appeal involving the termination of Bradley J. Burt by Frank Productions LLC.

The purpose of the correspondence was not to argue the merits of the appeal, but rather to preserve issues for the administrative record while the matter remains under review.

Specifically, the inquiry requested clarification regarding the status of potentially relevant security footage associated with the events leading to the November 2024 termination. The inquiry also sought information regarding whether any such footage was reviewed, preserved, deleted, overwritten, or otherwise became unavailable during the investigative process.

According to the submission, witness credibility and disputed factual allegations played a significant role in the investigative determination. As a result, the inquiry requests clarification regarding whether objective evidence was considered as part of the review.

The correspondence further requested an update concerning the current procedural status of the appeal and whether additional information is required from the complainant.

No conclusions were requested regarding the merits of the underlying case. Rather, the inquiry was submitted to ensure that questions concerning potentially relevant evidence remain preserved within the administrative record while review proceedings continue.

As part of ongoing documentation efforts, Outpost 422 will continue to maintain a public chronology of significant procedural developments involving matters related to employment discrimination, workplace accommodations, administrative review, and due-process concerns affecting veterans and disabled workers.

The public is reminded that allegations contained within administrative proceedings remain contested unless and until adjudicated by the appropriate tribunal.

Additional updates will be provided as they become available.

TIMESTAMP ENTRY

Date Submitted: June 11, 2026

Action Taken:
Record-preservation inquiry submitted to Wisconsin Equal Rights Division regarding appeal status and security-footage clarification.

Current Status:
Awaiting agency response.

Prepared by:
Bradley J. Burt
Founder, Outpost 422
Sun Prairie, Wisconsin

OUTPOST 422 PUBLIC NOTICE: Madison College Student Senate Libel Case Heads to the Wisconsin Appeals Court

When Procedure Becomes the Story: Why I Appealed My Dane County Case

By Bradley J. Burt
Founder, Outpost 422

Every lawsuit has two stories.

The first story is the underlying dispute. The second story is what happens inside the courtroom.

My appeal to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals concerns the second story.

This matter began as a civil action arising from events connected to my service in student government. Like many self-represented litigants, I entered the legal system believing that if I followed the rules, filed my documents, and presented my evidence, the court would evaluate the merits of the dispute.

As the case progressed, my concerns shifted from the merits of the claims to the procedures being used to resolve them.

On February 6, 2026, I filed a notice informing the court that I had encountered a mailing issue involving insufficient postage on correspondence from opposing counsel. My position was that the notice problem affected my ability to timely review and respond to filings before the court.

I later filed a formal opposition to dismissal and continued participating in the litigation. However, I remained concerned that the service issue was never meaningfully addressed before the court proceeded toward a final resolution.

On April 14, 2026, I filed a notice seeking voluntary dismissal without prejudice. My intent was to reassess the matter and determine whether a different forum would be more appropriate for future litigation.

The defendants opposed that request and sought dismissal with prejudice.

On April 21, 2026, the circuit court granted dismissal with prejudice, ending the case and preventing refiling of the same claims.

I disagree with that result.

My appeal is not based on personal attacks, political disagreements, or dissatisfaction with an adverse ruling. Courts issue rulings every day that litigants dislike.

Instead, my appeal asks a narrower question:

Did the circuit court properly exercise its discretion when it converted a requested dismissal without prejudice into a dismissal with prejudice while unresolved concerns regarding notice, service, and procedural fairness remained in the record?

That is now a question for the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.

Recently, the Court of Appeals issued a procedural order concerning a Statement on Transcript. I complied with that order and filed the required documentation. I was subsequently informed that the telephonic scheduling conference at issue was not recorded and that no transcript exists.

As a result, the appeal will likely be decided primarily upon the written filings contained in the record.

The broader lesson extends beyond a single case.

Thousands of Wisconsin citizens appear before courts without attorneys. Many are veterans, students, disabled individuals, workers, and ordinary taxpayers attempting to navigate a legal system that often assumes professional representation.

Whether I ultimately prevail on appeal is a question for the appellate court.

What matters today is preserving the record, presenting the facts, and allowing the judicial process to work as designed.

Outpost 422 will continue documenting the appeal as a matter of public record and public accountability.

The mission remains unchanged: transparency, documentation, and civic engagement through responsible journalism and public-interest reporting.

The appeal continues.

From Combat Zone to Classroom: The John Q. Battlefield Model of Veteran Reintegration

John Q. Battlefield: The Front Lines of Higher Education, Journalism, and Law

By blending academic research, creative nonfiction, and lived experience, the emerging John Q. Battlefield persona raises a question higher education is only beginning to answer:

What happens when a veteran leaves one battlefield and enters another?

For thousands of veterans using the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill, college represents opportunity, stability, and reintegration. Yet research suggests the transition from military service to academic life is often far more complex than admissions brochures acknowledge.

A 2010 study examining veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan found that many experienced profound culture shock when moving from highly structured military environments into civilian college settings. Researchers described veterans entering campuses where authority structures, social norms, and peer relationships differed dramatically from what they had known during service.

The findings mirror a recurring theme in Bradley J. Burt’s John Q. Battlefield project, a multimedia journalism initiative developed through Outpost 422®. According to Burt’s Yahara Journal submission, the project originated as a form of convergent media storytelling designed to document the barriers student veterans encounter during reintegration into higher education. The work blends journalism, diary research, documentary storytelling, and academic inquiry into what Burt calls a “Podumentary” format.

The Data Behind the Struggle

The challenges are not merely anecdotal.

Research published in Professional Psychology: Research and Practice found that approximately 12.4% of college students screen positive for PTSD, while the rate among student veterans rises to approximately 25.1%, nearly double that of non-veteran students. Researchers further noted that students suffering from trauma-related symptoms often experience poorer physical health, reduced academic performance, and higher dropout rates.

The earlier Zinger and Cohen study reached similar conclusions. Veterans interviewed described difficulties with concentration, social isolation, anger management, sleep disturbances, hypervigilance, and reconnecting with peers after deployment. Many reported feeling older than their classmates, disconnected from campus culture, and frustrated by misconceptions about military service.

One participant summarized the experience bluntly:

“I came to QCC and felt totally alone.”

For veterans accustomed to operating in teams where trust could determine survival, the transition can feel jarring.

Reintegration as a Public Health Issue

Modern research increasingly views veteran reintegration as more than an educational concern.

Wilkinson-Truong and colleagues argue that university counseling centers must be prepared to address trauma-related conditions through evidence-based treatment models such as Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT). Their research notes that college students may arrive on campus carrying trauma histories ranging from childhood abuse and sexual assault to combat exposure and military sexual trauma.

Importantly, the authors found that trauma treatment can improve not only mental health outcomes but also academic persistence and student success. Universities that invest in veteran-specific counseling resources, trauma-informed services, and evidence-based interventions may be better positioned to retain and support student veterans.

This perspective aligns closely with the mission outlined in the John Q. Battlefield project.

Rather than portraying veterans solely through the lens of disability or heroism, the project frames them as individuals navigating a complicated readjustment process involving identity, purpose, education, and belonging. Burt’s submission specifically describes the work as an effort to help student veterans communicate barriers openly while developing resilience through writing, storytelling, and self-documentation.

The Battlefield Changes

One of the most striking themes across all three sources is the notion that conflict does not necessarily end when military service concludes.

The battlefield simply changes.

For some veterans, the new challenges involve navigating financial aid systems, disability accommodations, or academic expectations. For others, the struggle centers on rebuilding social relationships, processing traumatic experiences, or finding meaning after service. Researchers found that many veterans viewed education itself as a pathway toward rebuilding identity and creating a secure future.

That idea sits at the center of the John Q. Battlefield narrative.

The persona serves as an archetype rather than a single individual. He is the veteran who enters college carrying experiences that classmates may never fully understand. He seeks education not merely as career preparation but as reintegration, recovery, and personal transformation. Through journalism, legal research, and documentary storytelling, he converts experience into evidence and obstacles into public dialogue.

A New Mission

The data suggests that student veterans remain an underserved population within higher education. PTSD rates exceed those of traditional students, reintegration barriers remain significant, and many campuses continue developing services capable of meeting those needs.

At the same time, veteran students bring unique strengths: discipline, resilience, leadership experience, mission focus, and a deep appreciation for educational opportunity. Many of the veterans interviewed in the Zinger and Cohen study described becoming more serious, more motivated, and more committed to success after military service.

The result is a story larger than any single veteran.

It is a story about adaptation.

A story about finding purpose after service.

And, perhaps most importantly, a story about ensuring that when veterans arrive on campus carrying the weight of previous battles, institutions are prepared to help them succeed in the next one.

###OP422

OUTPOST 422®: Declaration of Use in Action — From Pandemic Outpost to Investigative Journalism Movement

Time Down Range: The Sentinel’s Walk Home

A Short Story Inspired by the Burt Honors Literature Review

The war ended, but the transition never did.

John Q. Battlefield sat on the cold stone steps of a state capitol building, staring across a city that moved too fast and listened too little. He had survived deployments, military discipline, loss, and the strange silence that follows service. Yet college—of all places—proved to be one of the hardest battlefields he had ever crossed.

The younger students hurried by with backpacks and earbuds. Professors discussed theories. Administrators discussed retention statistics. Few understood that some students carried a different kind of textbook: memory.

For John, the classroom became another outpost.

The mission was simple: earn a degree, build a future, and find purpose after service. The execution was anything but simple.

His greatest enemy was not combat trauma. It was reintegration.

Every lecture hall reminded him that military culture and academic culture spoke different languages. Orders became suggestions. Structure became ambiguity. Accountability became group projects where nobody seemed accountable.

Some days he wondered whether he belonged at all.

Then he discovered something remarkable.

He was not alone.

Across America, thousands of veterans walked the same path. They struggled with identity, finances, concentration, stigma, isolation, and the feeling researchers described as “cultural incongruity”—the sense of being present while never fully belonging.

John learned that resilience was not the absence of struggle.

Resilience was showing up anyway.

It was attending class after a sleepless night.

It was asking for help when military culture taught self-reliance.

It was using available resources rather than suffering in silence.

It was finding battle buddies in places where no one wore a uniform.

As the semesters passed, John realized college was not merely preparation for employment. It was rehabilitation of purpose.

The veteran clubs.

The service officers.

The counselors.

The faculty who cared enough to learn military culture.

The fellow veterans who understood without explanation.

Each became part of a new chain of command.

Through persistence, John transformed from survivor to mentor.

He began telling others what he wished someone had told him:

“You belong here.”

The journey was never about erasing military identity. It was about integrating it.

The soldier became a student.

The student became a scholar.

The scholar became a servant.

And the servant became a sentinel standing watch for the next generation.

His mission changed, but the oath remained the same.

Leave no one behind.

That is the enduring lesson of reintegration. The war may end overseas, but the campaign for belonging continues at home.

Thirteen Findings Every Reader Should Know

From the Burt Honors Literature Review

The following themes emerged repeatedly throughout the research and form the foundation of the review’s conclusions.

1. Reintegration Is the Primary Challenge

The most common barrier to student veteran success is transitioning from military life into civilian and academic environments.

2. Transition Lasts Longer Than Expected

Research suggests that military transition is not a short event but a lifelong adjustment process.

3. Cultural Incongruity Matters

Feeling misunderstood, isolated, or out of place predicts lower college adjustment and success rates.

4. Veteran Support Networks Increase Success

Veteran clubs, resource centers, and peer networks improve retention and reduce isolation.

5. Mental Health Stigma Remains a Barrier

Many veterans avoid seeking assistance because help-seeking is perceived as weakness.

6. Faculty Awareness Improves Outcomes

Researchers consistently recommend training faculty and staff on military culture and veteran experiences.

7. Structure Helps Veterans Thrive

Veterans often perform best when expectations, instructions, and accountability measures are clearly communicated.

8. Social Support Is Essential

Positive support systems correlate strongly with academic adjustment and persistence.

9. Sleep, Anxiety, and Stress Affect Academic Performance

Sleep difficulties, anxiety, and psychosocial stressors are among the most commonly reported obstacles.

10. Military Experience Is Both a Strength and a Challenge

Leadership, discipline, and perseverance help veterans succeed, yet military expectations can clash with civilian environments.

11. Resilience Is a Learned Process

Successful student veterans develop resilience through recognition, adaptation, and integration of their experiences.

12. Institutions Must Share Responsibility

Programs such as veteran resource centers, counseling services, and VITAL initiatives improve educational outcomes.

13. Stories Matter More Than Statistics Alone

The literature repeatedly concludes that qualitative interviews and lived experiences reveal realities numbers cannot fully capture.

Thesis Statement

The Burt Honors Literature Review argues that the greatest obstacle facing post-9/11 student veterans is not academic ability, but reintegration into civilian and educational culture. Through resilience, social support, veteran-centered resources, institutional awareness, and opportunities for meaningful belonging, veterans transform military experience into academic success. The evidence demonstrates that understanding what hurts and what helps is essential to reducing attrition and ensuring those who served can successfully transition from battlefield to classroom.

The work ultimately reaches a simple conclusion:

Success begins when veterans stop being viewed as problems to solve and start being recognized as people with experiences worth understanding.

Additionally, the companion creative work Time Down Range frames these findings through narrative storytelling, emphasizing visibility, belonging, peer support, and the importance of ensuring veterans are both seen and heard in higher education.

OUTPOST 422® was not built in a boardroom. It was built through journalism, veteran advocacy, documentary storytelling, radio broadcasting, and public record preservation. Since its first use in commerce during 2020, the mark has served as a platform for investigative reporting, community engagement, and the examination of issues affecting veterans, students, workers, and citizens. This entry documents the continuing journey of OUTPOST 422® as a living publication, demonstrating actual use through articles, broadcasts, interviews, podcasts, documentary projects, evidence diaries, and public-interest reporting. Every story added to the archive becomes another mile marker on the road from concept to commerce, and from commerce to legacy.

BURT v. FRANK PRODUCTIONS LLC: FROM ADA INTERACTIVE DIALOGUE TO APPEAL

BURT v. FRANK PRODUCTIONS LLC: FROM ADA INTERACTIVE DIALOGUE TO APPEAL

A pending employment dispute involving Frank Productions LLC now centers on whether the company’s disability-accommodation process evolved into a mixed-motive investigation culminating in retaliatory termination.

The dispute arose after workplace-health concerns, accommodation requests, and internal complaints triggered a formal ADA interactive dialogue process in September 2024. The matter later expanded into an outside investigation, extensive document collection, witness interviews, and eventual termination proceedings tied to alleged workplace-safety concerns and disputed communications.

The employee argues the record contains unresolved factual disputes requiring full evidentiary examination rather than administrative dismissal.

According to internal materials and investigative records, workplace concerns first surfaced in May 2024 when reports regarding migraines, physical pain, elevator-light sensitivity, and sitting and standing limitations were communicated to management. Informal accommodations were allegedly implemented regarding work assignments and elevator rotation practices.

By September 2024, the dispute escalated into a formal ADA accommodation process. Frank Productions management initiated requests for medical-provider information while simultaneously retaining outside investigator Jennifer Lindberg of Lake Effect HR & Law to conduct a fact-finding investigation into allegations involving disability discrimination, retaliation concerns, workplace communications, and operational disputes.

The investigation included:

  • witness interviews,
  • staffing reviews,
  • Humanity communication logs,
  • accommodation correspondence,
  • management interviews,
  • and analysis of workplace communications and employee conduct.

The company maintains accommodations were granted in good faith and denies retaliation. The employer further argues termination resulted from workplace-safety and threatening-conduct concerns unrelated to protected activity.

The employee disputes that characterization and argues:

  • the timeline demonstrates temporal proximity between protected complaints and adverse action,
  • the accommodation process became intertwined with investigative evidence gathering,
  • employer explanations contain inconsistencies regarding disability awareness,
  • and credibility disputes surrounding statements and communications require cross-examination and formal adjudication.

Central issues now include:

  • disability discrimination,
  • failure to accommodate,
  • retaliation,
  • mixed-motive analysis,
  • investigatory procedure,
  • and whether the employer’s stated rationale constituted legitimate safety enforcement or pretext for adverse action following protected conduct.

The matter continues as part of an appeal and broader administrative-law review process focused on evidentiary development, procedural scrutiny, and preservation of the record.

PUBLIC NOTICE: BURT v. FRANK PRODUCTIONS LLC

MAY 2024
Workplace health concerns first reported regarding migraines, elevator lighting, prolonged sitting/standing, and physical pain limitations. Informal accommodations allegedly provided.

SEPTEMBER 2024
Formal complaints and accommodation discussions escalate. Frank Productions initiates ADA interactive dialogue process and requests medical-provider information through Human Resources and outside investigator involvement.

SEPTEMBER–OCTOBER 2024
Outside investigator Jennifer Lindberg of Lake Effect HR & Law conducts interviews, gathers documents, reviews emails, staffing records, workplace communications, and accommodation materials.

OCTOBER 2024
Frank Productions confirms certain accommodations were implemented while simultaneously continuing investigative review into workplace disputes and alleged conduct concerns.

NOVEMBER 2024
Employment relationship deteriorates amid disputes involving workplace safety allegations, protected activity, retaliation concerns, and conflicting interpretations of communications and intent.

TERMINATION & APPEAL
The dispute now centers on whether the employer’s investigation and accommodation process constituted a good-faith ADA interactive dialogue or became intertwined with retaliatory motive, mixed-motive decision-making, and pretextual evidence gathering.

The record contains disputed material facts requiring credibility findings, evidentiary examination, and adjudication before final conclusions may reasonably be reached.

Appeal to Challenge Dismissal With Prejudice Filed in Dane County Civil Case

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Pro Se Litigant and Journalism Graduate Announces Appeal in Dane County Civil Case

Dane County, Wisconsin — Bradley J. Burt, a journalism graduate and pro se litigant, has announced his intent to file an appeal following the dismissal of his civil case, Burt v. Mattsson et al. (Case No. 2025CV003799), in Dane County Circuit Court.

On April 21, 2026, the Circuit Court entered an order dismissing the case with prejudice after Mr. Burt filed a voluntary dismissal without prejudice. The Defendants objected and requested that the matter be dismissed with prejudice, which the Court granted.

The forthcoming appeal will focus on a narrow procedural issue: whether the circuit court properly exercised its discretion in converting a voluntary dismissal without prejudice into a dismissal with prejudice. The appeal will not address the underlying claims, but instead examines how procedural decisions affect access to the courts.

Mr. Burt, who has a background in journalism and media production, has documented his experience as part of an ongoing independent reporting project exploring the intersection of pro se litigation, media, and due process. His work reflects a broader effort to understand how individuals navigate complex legal systems without formal legal representation.

“This appeal is about process, not personal outcome,” Burt stated. “I’m examining how procedural decisions are made and how they shape a litigant’s ability to move forward.”

Mr. Burt intends to file his Notice of Appeal with the Dane County Circuit Court within the statutory deadline. He will continue documenting the appellate process as part of his ongoing research and reporting.

Further updates will be published through his independent media platform.

Contact:
Bradley J. Burt

Got a tip or a lead for a story? Send to Bob Cobb, the Capitol Wolfwatch at #SunPrairieQRF on X.

###VPLA64