Petitioner in this appeal to the New York State Commissioner of Education sought the removal of a member of a New
York State school
board, hereinafter referred to as “respondent”, from the school board.
The decision of the Commissioner of Education, Decisions of the Commissioner of Education No. 18,474, is set out below:
"Petitioner’s child (“student”) attends
respondent’s high school. During a board meeting on March 13, 2023, respondent made several remarks
concerning posters advertising the middles school’s Genders and Sexualities
Alliance (“GSA”).
"Respondent argued that the GSA could be “better named”
because the word “sexualities” was salacious. Respondent further opined
that the board had a degree of authority to regulate student clubs, citing the
“North American Man Boy Love Association” and the (hypothetical) “intersex student
pole dancing instruction club” as examples.
"At subsequent board meetings on March 27
and April 19, 2023, members
of the public made comments supporting, and denouncing, respondent’s
statements. The student spoke during the public comment portion of the
April 19 board meeting, objecting to of respondent’s statements during the
March 13 board meeting and sharing their personal experience as a member of the
LGBTQIA+ community.
"As pertinent here, respondent made
additional remarks during a September
11, 2023 board meeting. During these remarks, respondent
addressed the student by name. This application ensued.
"Petitioner argues that respondent’s
comments at the March 13 and September
11, 2023 board meetings warrant his removal from the board.
"Respondent contends that the application
should be dismissed as untimely. Respondent also contends that
petitioner’s allegations do not support the relief requested.
"First, I must address a procedural
matter. Following commencement of this application, petitioner submitted
additional evidence in the form of legal costs incurred by the board in
connection with the student’s Dignity for All Students Act (“Dignity Act”)
complaint filed against respondent. Additional affidavits, exhibits, and
other supporting papers may be submitted only with the prior permission of the
Commissioner (8 NYCRR 276.5). While this provision permits the submission
of additional evidence, it does not permit parties to raise new claims or
defenses for which notice has not been provided (Appeal of Casey-Tomasi,
57 Ed Dept Rep, Decision No. 17,301; Appeals of Gonzalez,
48 id. 405, Decision No. 15,898).
"Similarly,
additional submissions should not raise new issues or introduce new exhibits
that are not relevant to the pleadings (Appeal of Casey-Tomasi, 57 Ed
Dept Rep, Decision No. 17,301; Appeals of Gonzalez, 48 id. 405,
Decision No. 15,898). The board’s legal costs incurred in response to the
student’s Dignity Act complaint are not relevant to the issues presented in
this application. As such, they will not be considered.
"The application must be denied as
untimely. An appeal to the Commissioner must be commenced within 30 days
from the decision or act complained of, unless any delay is excused by the
Commissioner for good cause shown (8 NYCRR 275.16; Appeal of Saxena,
57 Ed Dept Rep, Decision No. 17,239; Appeal of Lippolt, 48 id. 457,
Decision No. 15,914). The 30-day timeframe also applies to a removal
application pursuant to Education Law § 306 (8 NYCRR 277.1; Application
of Kelty, 48 Ed Dept Rep 476, Decision No. 15,921; Appeal of
Budich, 48 id. 383, Decision No. 15,892).
Petitioner did not commence the instant appeal until February 14, 2024, almost a year after the March
2023 meeting and more than five months after the September 2023 meeting.
"Petitioner asserts that the petition is
timely because it was commenced within 30 days of the board’s denial of the
student’s Dignity Act complaint concerning the above remarks. This is an
insufficient basis to excuse petitioner’s delay in commencing the removal
proceeding (see Appeal of Carlson, 63 Ed Dept Rep,
Decision No. 18,304; Application of S.D., 60 id.,
Decision No. 18,009; Appeal of D.B., 59 id.,
Decision No. 17,807). “It is actual knowledge of the facts underlying a
claim that begins the 30-day period in which to bring an appeal to the
Commissioner” (Appeal of J.B., 62 Ed Dept Rep, Decision No.
18,245). Respondent’s statements were made during public meetings, which
provided petitioner with constructive notice thereof (Appeal of L.N. et al.,
61 Ed Dept Rep, Decision No. 18,105).[1] Accordingly, the application must be
denied.
"Although the application must be denied as
untimely, respondent’s March 2023 remarks—particularly his invocation of a
pedophile advocacy organization while discussing the propriety of the GSA—were
unnecessarily inflammatory. His argument that the word “sexualities” is
provocative is unsupported by the record. Respondent’s own code of conduct
uses the phrases “sex” and “sexual orientation” several times—as does as a
plain language summary thereof designed for elementary school students.[2] I remind respondent that board
members may not “us[e] a pretext of inappropriateness or obscenity” to
disparage “lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, nonbinary and gender expansive
people ...” (Appeal of Moms for Liberty of Wayne County and Marchitell,
63 Ed Dept Rep, Decision No. 18,402).
"Additionally, respondent prolonged the
instant controversy by defending his remarks over the next several
months. Board members take an oath of office to uphold the law and
faithfully discharge their duties (NY Const, art XIII, § 1; Public Officers Law
§ 10; Application of Nett and Raby, 45 Ed Dept Rep 259, Decision
No. 15,315). This includes the “duty to proceed with constructive
discussions aimed at achieving the best possible governance of the school
district” (Appeal of Williams, 61 Ed Dept Rep, Decision No.
18,116). The time spent addressing respondent’s remarks and the ensuing
controversy was far from constructive. I admonish respondent to avoid
such digressions in the future.
"In light of this disposition, I need not
address the parties’ remaining arguments.
"THE APPLICATION IS DENIED."
Footnotes:
[1] Alternatively, petitioner
demonstrated his actual knowledge of the March and September 2023 comments at
meetings of the board on March 27,
2023 and September 25,
2023, respectively.
[2] Mohonasen Central School District,
“Districtwide Code of Conduct,” available at https://www.mohonasen.org/about-us/policies-and-procedures/districtwide-code-of-conduct/(link is external) and “Code of
Conduct Plain Language Summary for Elementary School Students,” available
at https://www.mohonasen.org/code-of-conduct-plain-language-summary-for-elementary-students/(link is external) (last accessed
Aug. 2, 2024).
###