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Middle school teacher issues dire warning amid claims she was forced to hide students' gender identity

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  vic-eldred  •  last year  •  5 comments

By:   Jon Brown (Fox News)

Middle school teacher issues dire warning amid claims she was forced to hide students' gender identity
California teacher Elizabeth Mirabelli told Fox News Digital that school policies keeping a student's gender identity from parents effectively teaches children to be deceptive.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



California teacher and plaintiff Elizabeth Mirabelli and her attorney Paul Jonna join 'Fox & Friends Weekend' claiming the rule violates her constitutional First Amendment rights.

A California middle school teacher who is suing school district leaders after she was allegedly told to deceive parents about students' gender identity said her Christian faith played a role in her opposition to such policies, which she believes are teaching children to be deceptive.

"It's unfortunate that I have to go toe-to-toe and stand up against a community of people that I love," teacher Elizabeth Mirabelli told Fox News Digital. "I've been there for 25 years. This is a community of people I care about, people I've served for a long period of time. And so that gives me pause to have to stand up, but I felt that I had to make that choice."

Attorneys for Mirabelli and fellow teacher Lori Ann West, both of whom taught for decades at Rincon Middle School in Escondido, filed a federal lawsuit against the school's leadership in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California last week after the women claimed they were effectively required to lie to parents about their children if they assumed a different gender identity in school.

The lawsuit, which was also filed against administrators with the Escondido Union School District (EUSD) and the California State Board of Education, alleged that the K-8 school district's harassment and discrimination policies mandated teachers to accept a child's transgender or gender diverse identity without hesitation and to hide it from families.

The suit also claims they were instructed to use students' preferred names and pronouns in school, but to revert to their biological pronouns and given names when speaking with their parents. Teachers were told to tell "a suspicious parent" that they were allowed only to discuss "information regarding the student's behavior as it relates to school, class rules, assignments, etc.," according to the suit.

According to a transcript of a Feb. 3, 2022 training presentation to EUSD staff about the "rights of gender diverse students" obtained by Fox News Digital, teachers were instructed that a student's "assertion is enough" to determine gender identity, and that failure to affirm it would constitute harassment. The training also claimed there is "no requirement for parent or caretaker agreement or even for knowledge for us to begin treating that student consistent with their gender identity."

Mirabelli told Fox News Digital that the policy emerged in the school district around the 2019-2020 school year and that while some of her colleagues were being disciplined if they did not comply, it was not until the 2021-2022 school year that she "personally was faced with a dilemma."

That year, several of the new students on her roster approached her to request that she refer to them with a different name and not to tell their parents. She said she had been mulling over how best to handle the situation when she discovered from the school counselor that students' names were being changed in official school records without parental knowledge or consent.

Elizabeth Mirabelli and Lori Ann West, both of whom taught for decades at Rincon Middle School in Escondido, claim school policies required them to lie to parents.(Credit: Google Maps)

"How do educators know better than their own parents and families? Why are we taking over the welfare of these kids and decisions as personal as their given name?" she said. "I just felt that was really overstepping as a teacher, as an educator. That's overstepping our role in their lives. And then we're not allowed to tell their parents? I thought it just doesn't seem right."

She noted she has a good relationship with her students' parents, most of whom she said do not feel comfortable with the district's policies but feel "powerless to do anything."

Mirabelli, who is a Catholic, said her faith played a part in how she responded to the policies, which she claims violate her beliefs. She sought a religious accommodation to avoid them, but said she was only given partial accommodation after many weeks of bureaucratic back-and-forth.

She sued on First Amendment grounds after the school allegedly flat-out denied her request to be exempt from the aspect of the policy excluding parents.

"I think we all know quite readily that lying is not something that you want to do, and it's certainly not something you want to teach to children," she said. "If I'm telling a child, 'Yes, sweetheart, you can have a whole persona here at school, but we're not going to tell your parents,' what does that teach a child?"

She said teachers who go along with such deception are weakening the bond between parents and their children, and that the message children are receiving is that "manipulating others is acceptable, and lie if you need to."

Mirabelli noted schools seem to be more concerned with exploring alternate identities than preparing students to compete academically.(Mohssen Assanimoghaddam/picture alliance via Getty Images)

"I think people from all walks of life can understand that educators have a certain role," she said. "Our role in a free society is to prepare [students] academically, to go out and achieve their goals and dreams; to compete, to attend college. It's not to overstep those bounds."

Mirabelli said fellow teachers across the political spectrum have expressed support for her stand.

"The schools are normalizing and encouraging students to explore these alternate identities, but their academic progress is in the tank," Mirabelli said, adding that many students' math and reading skills are three or four years below grade level.

A photo of a Pride Progress flag, which includes colors from the Transgender Pride Flag.(Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)

"We're affirming all these social trends, but we send them out into the world, and they can't go to college and compete because they can't access the high levels of literacy that are required to become a scientist, a doctor, a lawyer or a teacher," she said. "That's the problem. We need to go back to focusing on our job."

"The Escondido Union School District is committed to providing a safe and positive environment that enables our students to learn and actualize their unlimited potential and that empowers our teachers to excel as educators," EUSD superintendent Dr. Luis A. Rankins-Ibarra told Fox News Digital in a statement. "As part of that commitment to student learning, the District observes all federal and state laws."

Protesters in support of transgender rights rally outside the Alabama State House in Montgomery, Ala., on Tuesday, March 30, 2021.(Jake Crandall/The Montgomery Advertiser via AP)

Thomas More Society special counsel Paul Jonna, who is representing Mirabelli and her colleague, said he believes their case could open the floodgates for similar cases, which he hopes will eventually rise to the Supreme Court and settle the issue at the national level.

Both Mirabelli and Jonna are confident in their complaint, which the teacher said is "grounded in law and in the truth."

Jonna said he was surprised to learn how "pervasive" similar policies have become in schools not just in southern California, but in other states. He noted the case of Pamela Richard, a retired teacher in Kansas who received a $95,000 settlement last fall following a lawsuit against the Geary County School District, whose administrators allegedly expected her to deceive parents about students' gender identity.

"[There's] no question in my mind, there's definitely been coordination on a higher level," Jonna said of why such policies have sprung up as far afield as rural Kansas. "I'm very interested to learn more about that. It's something that I don't know."

"But how these policies crept in school districts all across San Diego, and all across California, and probably many, many states? I'm sure that there were large, powerful organizations behind these policies, but I'm just speculating right now. I don't know, but we're going to find out," he added.


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Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Vic Eldred    last year

For those still in denial: A lawsuit has been filed.

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
2  Jeremy Retired in NC    last year

California.  Can't say I'm surprised.

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  Jeremy Retired in NC @2    last year
California. 

The place where citizens are outvoted.

 
 
 
charger 383
Professor Silent
3  charger 383    last year

Do they still send report cards home?

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
3.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  charger 383 @3    last year

That would celebrate MERIT and we can't have that!

 
 

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