A federal judge has dismissed kindergarten teacher Kelly Mascio's lawsuit against the Mullica Township School District, over its attempt to fire her after two five-year-olds engaged in sexual play in her classroom bathroom.
U.S.
District Judge Robert B. Kugler said in his Sept. 9 opinion that Mascio
had not proven that the district’s actions violated her right to due
process, since her case was heard by an arbitrator who did not allow the
district to fire her.
Her
suit, filed Nov. 25, 2015, in state Superior Court, alleged violations
of her civil rights, negligence, intentional infliction of emotional
distress and defamation by the district and Harring-Marro.
The suit also named former Superintendent Brenda Harring-Marro.
Mascio,
of Mullica Township, was a tenured teacher with 16 years experience in
2013 when the district charged her with failing to supervise students
and conduct unbecoming a teacher.
"The district is aware of the court's ruling and is focused on moving forward," said Superintendent Andrew Weber.
No one else from either side could be reached Thursday afternoon. It was unclear if there is the possibility of appeal.
Harring-Marro has since left the district and is the principal at Atco Elementary School in Waterford Township, Camden County.
The
suit alleged that, following the Sept. 30, 2013 incident, the
defendants “defamed, harassed, and retaliated against her” and that
Harring-Marro made false statements about her at public meetings,
including accusations that Mascio was using her cell phone when the
incident happened.
The suit also alleged that Harring-Marro had said she “watched children being abused and did nothing about it.”
The
judge also did not find that the district was negligent in increasing
scrutiny and giving negative performance reviews, and found that
“monitoring and negative performance reviews alone do not constitute
extreme and outrageous conduct” that could be used to argue intentional
infliction of emotional distress.
Kugler also said the one-year statute of limitations had run out on her defamation claim.
The
district was not successful in its attempt to revoke Mascio's tenure
and fire her, but it took almost a year for her case to move through the
state Department of Education’s process and for her to be reinstated.
She was without her teaching income for most of that period.
In
September 2013 Mascio discovered that a boy and a girl in her
kindergarten class had gone into her classroom bathroom together without
her knowledge.
Another student had alerted her to where
they were, and she told the two to come out of the bathroom. When they
did, they told her they had taken off some of their clothing and touched
each other, according to documents in the case.
She
immediately reported the incident to her superiors and the school
psychologist, and was suspended with pay. That suspension became unpaid
after the district filed tenure charges against her in December.
In
June, 2014, state DOE Arbitrator Daniel E. Brent ruled she should not
lose her job but only be penalized with a 10-day unpaid suspension for a
brief lapse in attention. Since she had been suspended for almost the
entire school year, and it was an unpaid suspension for several months,
he also ordered the district to give her all back pay and benefits for
the $98,000 package minus the 10 days.
The
case split the small, rural community. A large faction of teachers,
parents and others supported Mascio, saying she should not lose her
tenure and job over one small infraction.
In
February 2015 Mascio’s husband Brian Mascio Sr., 45, died suddenly of a
heart attack while playing with son Joseph, then 9, in their home.
Kelly Mascio was in another room helping their son Brian, then 13, with
homework.
“We led such quiet,
normal, middle-class lives, then to have so much happen in a year,”
Kelly Mascio said at the time. “I keep feeling like this isn’t
happening, it can’t be real.”
mpost@pressofac.com
609-272-7219
@MichelleBPost
http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/top_three/mascio-lawssuit-dismissed-against-mullica-township-school-district/article_c849e9bf-abdf-5667-ae5e-72a3166c9e2a.html
Dismissal
http://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/new-jersey/njdce/1:2016cv00206/328806/12/
All related posts linked at
http://gadfly01.blogspot.com/2014/02/tenure-charges-filed-against-mullica.html
She
said at the time that her husband had been angry about how she had been
treated by the Mullica Township Board of Education and Harring-Marro.
He was especially upset that no one on the board apologized to his wife
for what she had gone through during the 2013-14 school year.
609-272-7219
@MichelleBPost
http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/top_three/mascio-lawssuit-dismissed-against-mullica-township-school-district/article_c849e9bf-abdf-5667-ae5e-72a3166c9e2a.html
Dismissal
http://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/new-jersey/njdce/1:2016cv00206/328806/12/
All related posts linked at
http://gadfly01.blogspot.com/2014/02/tenure-charges-filed-against-mullica.html
4 comments:
http://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/new-jersey/njdce/1:2016cv00206/328806/12/
The link for the court case
Thank God.
Thank you, 8:07PM. It is now linked on page
I think Kelly should get a good law firm to sue the lawyers she had representing her. They made mistakes. In my opinion, they had a conflict of interest if they belonged to the same firm that represents Mullica. She went through a year of hell and should get something for all the emotional pain inflicted on her & her family.
Post a Comment