Connecticut

Post posts about what is happening in the State of Connecticut.

Quick notes on the Doninger Case

Lauren Doninger forwarded an email to me from Greg who writes for Rhymes with Right. He has a brilliant blog post up, Shocking Decision In Douchbag Case. He and I may not agree on many issues. Yet our freedom to disagree and to argue our points of view are an important part of what makes our country great and strong. It is part of the reason the Doninger Case is so important.

With that, it appears as if the case is now headed to the Second Circuit. These sort of appeals cost money. If you can contribute, please click on the widget in the right hand column or go to Avery Doninger Appeal to 2nd Circuit. Please contribute whatever you can.

Reflections on the Doninger decision and the discussion at the Hartford Courant.

I was very interested to read the article in the Hartford Courant concerning the decision in the pretrial hearing of the Doninger case. The article is somewhat inaccurate and needs correcting. More significantly, the discussion in the forum is woefully laden with assertions based on misinformation.

The second paragraph leads off, “school officials were within their rights when they punished her for the comment as if she had made it on campus, a federal judge ruled Friday”. The problem is, that isn’t what the judge ruled. The rushed pretrial hearing, without any period for discovery, was to allow Avery Doninger to stand for re-election as class secretary, a position she won the plurality of votes as write-ins, but was not certified the winner because the school administration was upset about her blog post.

Judge Kravitz noted that there is a very high standard for providing a pretrial injunction that would change the status quo, and there did not appear to be enough evidence in his mind, to require such a pretrial injunction. The reason to seek a pretrial injunction, as opposed to waiting for the results of the full trial is that the full trial could take many months, or even years, and not be completed by the time Avery graduates from high school. It is noteworthy that Judge Kravitz often commented from the bench about this case being likely to find its way to the Supreme Court. Such a process could take several years.

So, school officials were not within their rights. Instead, enough evidence was not shown during a pretrial hearing to prove that they taken away Avery’s rights.

Now, on to the comments. Several parents have criticized Avery’s mother for not punishing Avery, or teaching her to admit when she is wrong. The problem with there assertions is that they don’t know the facts. Avery’s mother did punish her, in what I believe was an appropriate manner. Yet Avery’s mother also stood up for the basic freedoms that we have, even in a case where the speech was not something she approved of. This is laudable. It reminds me of when the ACLU stood up for the Nazi’s right to demonstrate in Illinois. Sometimes defending our basic freedoms means defending actions based on those freedoms we do not completely agree with.

An important issue is, who has the right to punish high school students for something they have done at home? Is it appropriate for the school administration to punish a student for something she has done at home, or should that be the responsibility of the parents. Personally, I believe that should be the responsibility of the parents. Avery’s mother acted responsible, and the school administrators’ actions overreached their responsibilities in a manner that is damaging to our country.

Another key issue is determining what speech is acceptable. As I’ve noted elsewhere, whether or not specific language is offensive is a question of context. Personally, I think many of the comments on the forum are offensive. It is not appropriate to be calling judges idiots because you disagree with their opinions. I watched Judge Kravitiz in the court. I disagree with his ruling, but he made many brilliant comments from the bench and illustrated a great depth of knowledge and understanding throughout the trial. To call the child a punk is offensive and inaccurate. The judge repeatedly noted that Avery is a model citizen. To call the mother a nut-case is likewise offensive and inaccurate. Mrs. Doninger demonstrated throughout the process a commitment to education, to our democratic processes, and to our basic rights that is sorely lacking in our country today.

A key issue in Freedom of Speech cases is whether of not an action will have a chilling effect on people’s freedom of speech. The response from a reader in Cheshire illustrates quite nicely this chilling effect:

I'm teaching my son to keep his mouth shut and opinions to himself so he can graduate from school without aggravation. Then when he's 18 he has the freedom to callout all the douchbags.

One of the interesting aspects is the call by Avery, as well as by other students, to have parents contact the school about the schools decision concerning a school event. During the trial the school administration tried to argue that speaking with parents was a disruption. There are some people in the thread that also seem to believe that school administrators should not speak with parents about school events. This is truly unfortunate. We need to encourage parental involvement, not discourage it.

I have written a lot on this case. I believe that there has been a wonderful teaching moment on the importance of free speech, on the importance of our democratic processes, and on the importance of civility in discourse. From what I have seen, Avery’s mother has fought hard to make sure that these lessons are learned, and the school administration has focused on wounded pride instead of trying to teach their students. For the sake of the Doninger’s I wish this were over. Yet for the sake of all of us learning more about our country, I’m glad it continues, and may in fact make it to the Supreme Court.

This is too important an issue to write quick statements that reflect a lack of understanding of the issues.

Motion Denied

This afternoon, Judge Kravitz heard the final testimony regarding a preliminary injunction in the Avery Doninger case. He stressed the preliminary aspects of this and that he was only ruling on the constitutional aspects. Testimony ended around 5 PM and his thirty four page opinion was available on the courts website about forty five minutes later. He has denied the Doninger's request for relief.

In the opening paragraph, he states that 'Just about everyone but Avery agrees that the manner in which Avery expressed her frustration was offensive and inappropriate.'

Everyone is very broad and I do not fall within his bounds of 'just about everyone'. He recognizes that what Avery wrote was on a personal blog, but fails to consider that context in his ruling.

He states 'it contained at best misleading and at worse false information regarding the music festival'. In this, he accepts the testimony of the principal despite its contradictions. My understanding from Avery's testimony is that her blog post contained information that she considered accurate.

The crux of Judge Kravitz' decision is that if a student, at home, writes on a blog using words that some members of the school administration consider offensive, inappropriate, or inaccurate, the school is within its bounds to punish the student. This overly broad ruling is damaging to democracy.

Our forefathers who recognized that civil discourse, even when it uses less than civil words, is a cornerstone of our democracy must be rolling in our graves.

During his final comments, he noted that this case is one that is likely to find its way to the Supreme Court. He has just moved it one step closer and an appeal appears likely.

Knowing the facts

Today, I received a comment on my blog post Democracy is Scary entitled, know the facts that I think deserves addressing in a full post.

The commentator asserts that I am not “accurately representing the facts”. The first assertion of the commenter is that “the taxpayers are not paying for the administrators representation”. This is based on an apparent misunderstanding concerning who is paying directly for the lead attorney. The lead attorney, Thomas Gerarde as well as Katherine Rule, both of Howd & Ludorf, are being paid by the insurance company, Massamont Insurance. This does not mean that the taxpayers are off the hook. My understanding is that there is a deductible and may be limits to the amounts that are covered as part of the insurance policy. In addition, there is no way of knowing if this case will cause in increase in the premiums in the coming years. On top of that attorney Christine Chinni is paid by the school board and not by the insurance company. She has been at the hearings everyday, as well as at the Board of Education meeting on Monday evening.

Beyond this, I do agree with the commenter that we need to know the facts. Andy Thibault has been doing yeoman’s work trying to help us get to the facts. You can read about his latest effort in Many Public Records Still Under Wraps Since Aug 1. Andy has been trying hard to get the facts, and the school administration has been less than forthcoming. I hope that the commenter contacts the school administration and the school board and encourages them to be more forthcoming about the facts.

The commenter also asserts that “nearly all Principals and Superintendents in the state earn the same salaries”. A brief check of the The Connecticut Association of Public School Superintendents list of Connecticut Superintendent vacancies shows Canterbury is currently looking for a superintendent in the range of $108,000-$118,000. Region 16 is looking for a superintendent in the range of $130,000-$145,000. I’ve been told that Superintendent Scwartz is being paid considerably about the Region 16 range. However, I have yet been able to get details, and this is another area where Andy Thibault is trying to get information from the school administration.

I should also note that while I did live in Stamford (not Stanford, as the commenter suggests), I have moved to Woodbridge. Woodbridge is also a wealthy area that has spent a lot of money on renovations and on legal fees. My father-in-law, a retired U.S. Treasury Agent was part of a committee that investigated these costs. It is my belief, in line with the suggestion that we need to know the facts, that investigating construction costs and legal costs are an important part of the checks and balances that we need and that are too often lacking with regard to school boards.

I have no objection to the new auditorium. As I’ve spoken with taxpayers and voters in Region 10, they have all noted that the auditorium was needed. I am glad that it was built. I just hope to see that the costs are properly tracked and that it gets the sort of utilization that it deserves.

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Random Stuff

Life continues to be hectic as Fiona starts school, as we try to settle into our new house, as I continue to search for a job, as I do research for blog posts on the Doninger case, as well as for other posts that I hope to write soon.



Aug 013, originally uploaded by Aldon.

When Fiona signed the Parent/Legal Guardian Permissions 2007-2008 form, there was a section acknowledging that Fiona was aware of the rules from the BRS Handbook, which Fiona needed to sign. Because of similar such material being exhibits in the Doninger case, I thought I would scan it in for our records, and post it on Flickr. (Click on the link above).

As Fiona got on the bus, the loyal watchcat made sure everything was fine.

Also, I heard from Beth Kanter, who is in Cambodia right now for the Bloggers’ Summit. She post an entry about he First Video Cambodian Video Blogger in Cambodia. Please, check it out, and welcome Virak.

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