Deconstructing the Region 10 Board of Education Press Release from Yesterday:
PRESS RELEASE REGION 10 SCHOOLS September 10, 2007
From: Beth Duffy, Chairperson of the Region 10 Board of Education
On August 31st U.S. District Judge, Mark Kravitz denied the injunction requested by Avery Doninger and her mother to void the election of senior class secretary at Lewis Mills High School. Until the case documents became public, Region 10 officials and board members were restricted by privacy laws from publicly discussing the case. The press has done a great job of covering Avery's version of the story. However, there has been very little coverage of the district’s side. Now it's time to set the record straight.
Yes, let’s set the record straight. My understanding, based in part from Beth Duffy’s comment at the previous Board of Education meeting is that it is the advice of legal council and the policies of the Board not to discuss issues of pending litigation. The case has been appealed, so litigation is still pending. It appears as if Beth is going against the advice of council and board policy.
On top of that, it is my understanding of case documents have been public for quite a while. I received copies of them back on August 22nd.
Despite what has been reported in the press, Ms. Niehoff and Mrs. Schwartz did not infringe on Avery Doninger’s First Amendment rights.
That is the assertion of that continues to be challenged in court. Duffy, Niehoff, Schwartz and Kravitz seem to believe this assertion. I, and various civil libertarians do not believe it. The real question is will the Second Circuit accept the assertion.
Judge Kravitz ruled that they acted appropriately in rendering Avery ineligible to run for the office of senior class secretary because she deliberately and publicly circulated information that was vulgar, false and incited members of the community to disrupt the central office.
Again, the Board seems to not get the facts straight. Judge Kravitz did not rule that Niehoff and Schwartz acted appropriately. Instead, he ruled that the plaintiff’s did not present sufficient information to warrant proactive injunctive relief. There is a very big difference between the two.
Avery took her action after Ms. Niehoff had addressed the issue of appropriate behavior of class officers with her that same day. Ms. Niehoff then withdrew her support of Avery’s candidacy only after it was clear that Avery did not understand that her conduct was unbecoming a class officer.
Holding the position of class officer at Lewis Mills is not a right - it is a privilege.
This gets to the interesting aspect of where rights and privileges intersect. Driving is a privilege, and that privilege cannot be taken away because someone executed their rights of free speech. If it were, you could run into very dangerous precedents. For example, I suspect Duff, Niehoff, Schwartz and Kravitz would not want to see someone’s privilege of driving taken away because that person wrote in a personal blog somewhere about a traffic cop being an asshole. If they do believe that privileges should be taken away in such contexts then that illustrates what poor regard they view the rights of U.S. Citizens.
The definition of privilege in the Merriam-Webster Dictionary is "a right or immunity granted as an advantage or favor esp. to some and not to others". At Lewis Mills, the privilege of running for class office must be earned through good citizenship, and appropriate behavior. Mrs. Doninger has admitted publicly that she believes her daughter's behavior was neither appropriate nor acceptable. That means she agrees with the assessment of her daughter's behavior made by the Region 10 administration! She just disagrees with the consequences imposed by the school district, and that is why this matter was in federal court.
This gets to a fundamental question. Who should punish a child for unacceptable behavior that takes place at home. The American tradition has always been that this is the realm of the parents, and Avery’s mother has handled this appropriately. What is inappropriate is when the reach of the government, including public schools extends into our homes.
I should point out here that Region 10 did not start this lawsuit. It was filed by Avery Doninger, her mother and their lawyer, in spite of numerous attempts by the school district to work out a compromise.
I hope the Board will be forthcoming about its efforts to reach a compromise. I have heard that there have been many efforts to reach a compromise, including a meeting with a judge in Bridgeport. None of these have born any fruit and the description I have heard of Niehoff and Schwartz’ approach has been ‘stonewalling’.
Our administrators have acted and continue to act in a professional, ethical and responsible manner. We have tried to settle this matter on at least two occasions and have been met with unreasonable demands by the Doningers. We will continue to defend the administration as long as necessary.
Citing Constitutional rights as protection for bad behavior does that incredible document a grave disservice.
Yet it is precisely these situation where we honor our Constitution, our founders, and the people that have fought so hard for our basic liberties. I am sure that people during the revolutionary war period would have considered refusing to provide housing to soldiers bad behavior. Yet it was abused, and we now have the third amendment to protect against this. Likewise, using a word like douchebag is a bad behavior, but if we reduce our rights to only when everyone is acting above reproach, then we have very few rights left.
This is an issue of standards. We have high standards for our students in Region 10 - good behavior, strong academic achievement, good sportsmanship and civil behavior to one another. Sometimes students make bad decisions because they are young, inexperienced and impulsive. When that happens, we should attempt to help the student learn from his/her mistake. That was done in this case. When a student repeatedly makes the same bad decision, it is the school's responsibility to impose consequences. That was also done here. But if our school system backed down on a fair and just consequence for bad behavior, then we would be letting down the other 2859 students in our district and our communities as well. Judge Krawitz recognized that in his ruling. We have high standards in Region 10, and I for one am proud we do.
It appears as if these ‘high standards’ are viewed as being higher than respect for the Constitution, or using moments of conflict, no matter how far they go, to find valuable teachable moments.
There are many opportunities at Lewis Mills for an intelligent, passionate, determined young lady like Avery to hone her leadership skills. Class secretary was just one of them. I know that both Ms. Niehoff and Mrs. Schwartz would like nothing better than to find an opportunity for Avery to shine in her senior year. I hope that she opens the door to that opportunity.
She has. She has stood up in court to protest the erosion of our civil rights. This goes far beyond anything she would have been able to do as class secretary. I firmly believe this will carry her much further. Avery clearly is the winner in the larger battle. She has shown more maturity than Niehoff or Schwartz. It is a sad commentary on the Region 10 School System.
Region 10 No stranger to
Submitted by Nick4nCt on Wed, 09/12/2007 - 12:50. span>Region 10 No stranger to injunctive relief lawsuits
http://www.registercitizen.com/site/news.cfm ...
By JENNA CIARAMELLA
Register Citizen Staff
HARWINTON - The Region 10 Board of Education is scheduled to hold a public hearing on Monday after more than 100 residents signed a petition requesting it over the conduct of the schools chief.
Ok so what do we have here?
A superintendent who thinks that parents should not be notified of anything ....unless it involves herself being called a name she doesn't like.
A chairperson who thinks an attorney who bills out at 220.00/hr is a board answering service.
A board who thinks that they will win any kind of lawsuit...(But then again it seems that’s the case)
A board who will spend money on legal fees like a normal person would buy a candy bar.
I think it's time to publish the names of those who are running for the region 10 school board.
I have googled it and can find more information on the mating habits of weasels than this board...which is the way they seem to like it and will spend any amount of legal fees to keep it that way
An elementary school student was allegedly able to access pornographic material on a school computer in February, but parents say Superintendent of Schools Paula Schwartz refused to inform other parents about it when she was told of the incident.
The public hearing is scheduled to take place at 1:30 p.m. in the Region 10 offices on Lyons Road in Burlington after the board meets in executive session from 1 to 1:30 p.m., school board attorney Christine Chinni said Friday.
When asked whether parents would have an opportunity to speak about the February incident or about Schwartz's handling of the issue, board Chairman Beth Duffy referred to the board's attorney.
"All comments go to our attorney at this point," Duffy said.
By law, the board is required to schedule a public hearing within three weeks of receiving a petition, Chinni said earlier this week, but she declined to comment specifics about the hearing.
Neither the board nor Schwartz were making any comments to the public or to parents of school children in Region 10, Chinni said this week.
Schwartz did not return several phone messages left on Tuesday, Wednesday or Friday.
"This is in regard to the suitability of Paula Schwartz as superintendent of Region 10 school district," parent Fred Boland read from the petition. "The reason for such a hearing stems from her actions since parents reported pornography on Region 10 school computers as well as the failure to implement appropriate safeguards and policies to protect the school children of the district."
Boland submitted the petition, which had 113 verified signatures - 54 from electors in Harwinton and 59 from Burlington - to board Treasurer Paul Omichinski while he was chairing a School Building Committee meeting on April 17.
Boland said Friday he is unhappy with the date and time the board set for the hearing because it "does not encourage the greatest degree of public participation."
"Most people are working in the middle of the day and every other board meeting is held at 7 or 7:30 at night," Boland said.
This is being held in the middle of the day when people can't be there," he said.
"Shame on them for conducting this hearing like a back-alley deal," Boland said. "Shame on them for abridging the people's right to be heard on the matter by holding the hearing at a time that discourages public participation."
An ex parte temporary injunction was filed by Boland on Friday asking the court to grant the injunction, which would have had the board change the date or time of the meeting. It was denied because it did not prove "irreparable harm," Boland said.
"Boland was told he was not entitled based on what he submitted and they declined to give him a hearing," Chinni said.
Boland said he is able to refile an amended complaint and that he is considering filing an emergency injunction on Monday
Welcome to Spin Alley...
Submitted by IRH on Wed, 09/12/2007 - 13:38. span>Aldon,
First of all, kudos on an incisive deconstruction of this document.
Having read Judge Kravitz's 34-page decision in its entirety, it surprised me that the Chairperson for the district misconstrued the judge's choice to take an arms-length approach as to the nature of Ms. Doninger's punishment. Even more egregious was that she made this assertion more than once.
But when I stepped back, I saw nothing but an undignified attempt by another public official in Region 10 to obfuscate. Much akin to the Bush Administration, perhaps Ms. Duffy will now take the approach of repeating her misleading talking points ad nauseam, with the intent of somehow turning the lie into the truth.
The Orwellian escalation Ms. Duffy has chosen to embrace should be a clarion call to all who respect the sanctity of our Constitution to increase their efforts on behalf of Avery. After all, it's always the little transgressions and inveiglements of those with authoritarian aspirations that eventually lead to the Humanity's greatest calamities.