The Mercury News

Valedictor­ian cut off when alluding to sexual misconduct

- By Eli Rosenberg The Washington Post

Lulabel Seitz had done everything right, at least on paper. As a high school senior with a grade-point average over 4.0, the 17-yearold had been accepted to Stanford University, one of the most prestigiou­s colleges on the West Coast. The first in her family to graduate from high school, she was named valedictor­ian at Petaluma High School, an honor that was joined by an opportunit­y for her to give a commenceme­nt speech.

But about four minutes into her speech at the school’s graduation ceremony on June 2, the microphone she was speaking into was disconnect­ed.

Seitz had arrived at a part of her speech that touched on sexual assault allegation­s at the school, without naming anyone in particular, according to a video she later uploaded to YouTube. But school administra­tors had cut her off at the moment she deviated from a script that she had previously submitted to them, the Santa Rosa Press Democrat reported.

David Stirrat, the principal of the high school, told The Washington Post that students had submitted their speeches for approval, then practiced with a panel. They had been warned that if they went off script, the microphone could be cut off, he said.

Seitz had spent the first four minutes of her speech describing some of the challenges that both she and the student body at large had overcome to make it to their high school graduation­s. She said that she was the granddaugh­ter of immigrants from the Philippine­s, and the child of two parents who left high school early and didn’t go to college.

“I didn’t think I’d be standing here as your valedictor­ian,” she said. “But the reason I share this story with you is not because I think it’s unique. In fact quite the opposite. We have all achieved unlikely dreams.”

She said that the school had weathered a teacher’s strike and closures during the fires that raged last fall in Sonoma County, which she said had claimed some

students’ homes.

But it was in her next sentence that school administra­tors decided to silence her. She began it by saying that “the class of 2018 has demonstrat­ed time and time again that we may be a new generation, but we are not too young to speak up, to dream and to create change. Which is why even when some people on this campus, those same people ...”

The mic cut off. The video shows the awkward silence that ensued on the field. After a few seconds, a few students in the audience stand and clap, with some beginning to chant, “Let her speak!”

According to the version

of the speech that she read later and posted to YouTube, Seitz planned to say: “And even learning on a campus in which some people defend perpetrato­rs of sexual assault and silence their victims, we didn’t let that drag us down. The class of 2018 has demonstrat­ed time and time again that we may be a new generation but we are not too young to speak up, to dream, and to create change.”

“The Petaluma High School administra­tion infringed on my freedom of speech, and prevented a whole graduating class from having their message delivered,” she wrote on YouTube. “For weeks, they have threatened me against ‘speaking against them’ in my speech. Sometimes we know what’s right and have to do it.”

The Press Democrat reported that Seitz was frustrated by what she claimed was a lack of action from the administra­tion on a claim of sexual misconduct.

Stirrat said the students were welcome to include potentiall­y controvers­ial material in their speeches.

“In Lulabel’s case, her approved speech didn’t include any reference to an assault,” he said. “We certainly would have considered such an addition, provided no individual­s were named or defamed.”

Seitz said that she never planned to name anyone, and that it should have been clear to administra­tors from the tone of her speech.

“Just based on the patterns of where my speech was going, I was just saying some people, it was very vague. So they had no reason to think I was going to call out somebody in particular,” she said. “I just think they got scared because I was going to call out them.”

Dave Rose, an assistant superinten­dent, told the Press Democrat that he could remember only one other time that administra­tors had disconnect­ed a microphone during a student’s graduation speech in the past seven years, but said he believed it was legal.

“If the school is providing the forum, then the school has the ability to have some control over the message,” Rose said.

Public school students do have strong First Amendment protection­s. But school administra­tors occasional­ly cross what scholars have called legal lines, including some who threatened students planning to partake in anti-gun protests with discipline in the wake of the Parkland, Florida school shooting.

Seitz completed three years of college classwork at two nearby schools while in high school and was involved in student government, the Press Democrat reported. According to a Google Plus profile, she was a trumpet soloist in the school’s jazz band and a school treasurer.

“The Petaluma High School administra­tion infringed on my freedom of speech, and prevented a whole graduating class from having their message delivered. For weeks, they have threatened me against ‘speaking against them’ in my speech. Sometimes we know what’s right and have to do it.” — Lalabel Seitz, Petaluma High School valedictor­ian

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States