The Columbus Dispatch

Forest Hills’ anti-crt resolution brings backlash, suit threat

- Madeline Mitchell

A pair of lawyers sent a letter Friday to Forest Hills school board members warning that its recently passed resolution banning anti-racism and critical race theory from curricula, training and hiring practices is unconstitu­tional. The lawyers, who have children in the district, threatened legal action if the resolution is not rescinded.

The resolution, which passed in a 3-2 vote last week, was met with public outcry and prompted one of the board's final three candidates for superinten­dent to withdraw his name from the search hours before second-round interviews began. Edgewood City Schools' superinten­dent Russ Fussnecker, who applied to lead Forest Hills after Scot Prebles announced his move to a job in the Cleveland area, said his “leadership style would not take Forest Hills in the direction it appears to be going.”

The district also is facing a petition drive to repeal the resolution. The Enquirer reached out to Forest Hills district officials and individual board members with no response as of Monday afternoon.

New board member Sara Jonas wrote the resolution and added it lastminute to the board's regular business meeting agenda last week. Under the new policy, teachers can no longer give assignment­s that nudge students to consider their race, socioecono­mic class, religion, gender identity, sex, sexual orientatio­n, ethnicity, or culture as derogatory. They cannot force kids to “admit privilege of oppression” or to reflect, deconstruc­t or confront their identities.

Critical race theory is a college-level legal theory but critics believe it has influenced curriculum and policies around race, diversity and equity in Ohio's K-12 schools.

Lawyer Nicole Lundrigan told The Enquirer Monday that she felt “outrage” when she saw the resolution had passed. She hoped “that perhaps they had made a mistake” and that the board would correct it, she said.

She and her husband Kelly Lundrigan said they don't represent anyone in a case against Forest Hills yet. Their letter is on their own behalf as parents, lawyers and taxpayers in the district. Kelly Lundrigan told The Enquirer they have not received a response regarding the letter, and that the next step is to file a lawsuit.

“We're not waiting,” he said Monday afternoon. The couple currently has four kids enrolled in the district, and one that graduated from Turpin High School.

Woodrow Keown Jr. and Barbara C. Perez, presidents of the National Undergroun­d Railroad Freedom Center and the YWCA of Greater Cincinnati, respective­ly, sent out a joint statement on Thursday regarding the board's new policy. The local leaders said the resolution “is a threat to equity and detrimenta­l to the developmen­t of students and our educationa­l system.”

A petition on Change.org to repeal what its author labeled as the “culture of kindness” resolution had more than 1,500 signatures as of Monday afternoon. It was started by district parent Natalie Hastings Saturday evening.

“Our school district faces a mental health crisis, and we will not stand for resolution­s or policies that are detrimenta­l to students' learning and feeling of belonging in the classroom,” the petition reads. It demands the immediate repeal of the resolution.

The new policy is morally wrong and legally deficient, The Lundrigans wrote in their letter. It violates numerous legal rights and will subject the school district to lawsuits, they write.

“The last thing that we want to do is sue our own school district and Board,” the Lundrigans' letter reads. “However, we will not sit idly by while you trample the Constituti­onal rights of students and teachers and destroy this school system.”

Nicole and Kelly Lundrigan listed several reasons why the resolution puts the school district and board in legal jeopardy, mostly because of its violation of the First Amendment.

The resolution is “vague and overbroad,” they wrote, and does not uphold students' right to receive informatio­n and ideas, a First Amendment corollary establishe­d by the United States Supreme Court in 1982. It was enacted “not for legitimate pedagogica­l reasons, but for illicit political and partisan reasons” based on four of the board members' anti-critical race theory campaign platforms.

 ?? KAREEM ELGAZZAR/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? The Forest Hills School District school board begins a meeting in May at Nagel Middle School in Anderson Township.
KAREEM ELGAZZAR/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER The Forest Hills School District school board begins a meeting in May at Nagel Middle School in Anderson Township.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States