New York Daily News

Ed. boss had bug, faces ax

- BY NANCY DILLON

A Long Island public school administra­tor who in 2009 donated a kidney to a student and in 2020 contracted coronaviru­s says she’s the victim of a textbook case of discrimina­tion by her district.

Jennifer Mazzotta-Perretti told the Daily News she’s still suffering from lingering migraines, fatigue and low-grade fevers as she slowly recovers from COVID-19 with only one kidney.

She said she was called into a video meeting Aug. 7 — just a few weeks after she got a doctor’s note saying she should work remotely through Sept. 7 — and was told she was losing her job with the Massapequa School District.

Her boss claimed the reason was that in 2018 and 2019, she’d forwarded some work emails with student informatio­n to a Gmail account she shared with her domestic partner, she said.

“It was shocking. I felt like someone took all the wind out of me. I just felt like it couldn’t be. It had to be a misunderst­anding,” Mazzotta-Perretti told The News.

The longtime educator — who has worked in the Massapequa district for three years, and oversees 1,200 special-education students — said she forwarded the emails so she could continue working on her cases at home during nights and weekends.

“It just didn’t make any sense. It’s not like there was any special training on never using a Gmail account. Nobody had ever spoken to me about it before,” she said.

Mazzotta-Perretti believes the emails are being used as a pretext to fire her. . “I feel like the way I’m being treated is just appalling,” she said. “I don’t want my 23-year career to be ruined by being terminated because I got sick and needed help.”

The teacher-turned-administra­tor said she always received positive evaluation­s and was offered a new contract for the upcoming year that she signed Aug. 4.

“Dr. Perretti is an ethical, compassion­ate, empathetic, and student-centered administra­tor. She is passionate and enthusiast­ic about helping students and supporting families,” her boss, Jordan McCaw, wrote in her most recent evaluation signed June 1, according to a copy shared by Mazzotta-Perretti.

Neil O’Brien, whose son, Kevin, received the kidney from Mazzotta-Perretti in 2009, said the glowing words about her dedication to students were “100% correct.”

“We love Jennifer. She stepped up and did an amazing thing for our family. In our dealings with her, she was always great, very empathetic,” O’Brien, 64, told The News.

Kevin was one of Mazzotta-Perretti’s students when she taught at Nassau BOCES in Wantagh, and she donated one of her kidneys to him after a writing assignment about doing good deeds led to a discussion about his need for a transplant.

“It’s unbelievab­le what they’re doing to her. What a raw deal,” the dad from Oyster Bay said.

McCaw did not personally respond to requests for comment from The News. “As this is a matter of personnel, the district has no comment. However, the district unequivoca­lly denies any and all allegation­s of discrimina­tion, misconduct, and/or wrongdoing made against any district personnel,” Superinten­dent of Schools Lucille Iconis said in a statement Tuesday.

“Unless the matters are resolved by agreement, Dr. Mazzotta-Perretti is committed to aggressive­ly pursuing discrimina­tion, retaliatio­n, and other claims against the school district,” said her lawyer, Isaac Nesser of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan.

 ??  ?? Long Island special-ed. chief Jennifer Mazzotta-Perretti says threat to fire her stems from her COVID health issues.
Long Island special-ed. chief Jennifer Mazzotta-Perretti says threat to fire her stems from her COVID health issues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States