ACLU/SC Settles Lawsuit over Orange County High School That Tolerated Homophobia and Sexism (9/9/2009)
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SANTA ANA, Calif. – The ACLU of Southern California and the law firm of
Hadsell, Stormer, Keeny, Richardson and Renick LLP have settled a lawsuit
against Orange County's Newport-Mesa Unified School District and Corona del Mar
High School over a sexist and homophobic atmosphere that officials permitted to
flourish at the school.
The settlement agreement filed today in Orange County Superior Court resolves
a lawsuit over an environment that led to despicable threats of violence against
Hail Ketchum, a senior at Corona del Mar High School at the time. Under the
agreement, district officials will provide a written apology to Ms. Ketchum.
The district also will provide mandatory training sessions for
administrators, teachers and students that will focus on the harmful impact of
sexual discrimination and harassment, as well as on federal law and district
complaint protocols to be followed whenever anyone experiences discrimination or
harassment based on sex, sexual orientation and gender identity.
"The mandated training will make it clear to administrators, teachers and
students not only what constitutes sexism and homophobia, but what school
officials must do to deal with it – and prevent it from spreading – according to
the law," said Hector Villagra, director of the ACLU/SC's Orange County
office.
Ms. Ketchum, who agreed to be publicly identified for the first time today,
said that while the district's apology to her is important, she's been primarily
interested in ensuring that district officials do everything they can to prevent
other students from being the target of vitriolic comments and threats like
those she experienced. Those attacks "were disgusting and very disturbing to me
personally," she said. "But what was really disheartening is that when I
complained about them, the administrators did little to deal with them. I'm
happy that the settlement provides the school with a road map of how to address
situations like this more appropriately."
The training mandated by the settlement will be conducted under the direction
and guidance of the Orange County/Long Beach regional office of the
Anti-Defamation League. It includes an eight-hour program later this year for
all district managers, school-site administrators, principals and assistant
principals. Teachers and staff at Corona del Mar will get two two-hour training
sessions during the current school year, as will students.
"It's important for high school students to be educated about bullying and
homophobia. It's crucial for school administrators and teachers not only to be
aware of these issues, but how to deal with them," said Katherine Darmer, a
Chapman University law professor who is on the board of the Orange County
Equality Coalition, which focuses on LGBT issues. "It's shameful that Ms.
Ketchum had to suffer through the threats and comments she did, but I'm hopeful
that with this new training, school officials will be better prepared to deal
with a situation like this if it comes up again."
"California law guarantees a safe and bias-free learning environment for all
students," added Anne Richardson, a partner with Hadsell Stormer. "School
officials must understand that they have a duty to take affirmative steps to
change a school culture that ignores or promotes harassment and
discrimination."
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