Los Angeles Times

School principal faces suit

Former employees say he subjected women to ‘sex-based ridicule’ and retaliatio­n.

- By Rosanna Xia rosanna.xia@latimes.com Twitter: @RosannaXia

A former vice principal and a former teacher at a middle school in Lancaster said they were forced to quit in June because the school principal subjected women to “sex-based ridicule” and “harassed, discrimina­ted against, or retaliated against” numerous female employees, according to a lawsuit filed last week.

The lawsuit, filed by Dawn Dolinski and Jody Finks against the Eastside Union School District and Francisco Pinto, principal of Gifford C. Cole Middle School, cited a number of alleged incidents that they say portrayed a sexist and hostile work environmen­t under Pinto.

“Principal Pinto had a reputation among teachers and staff for retaliatin­g against women who, like Ms. Dolinski, did not fit his sexist view that women should act with a submissive manner and be subservien­t to men,” the lawsuit claims. “A female teacher or staff member who was experienci­ng career success, recognitio­n from the District, or was strongwill­ed, would generally become the target of Principal Pinto’s attacks.”

In addition, the lawsuit says, the school district was put on notice of Pinto’s conduct by at least 15 grievances filed in the 2015-2016 school year by female teachers and staff — but those who complained “were not protected by the District, and instead were subjected to more intense harassment from Principal Pinto” and “suffered first-hand the retaliator­y tactics that Principal Pinto took against teachers and staff that complained about him.”

In an email Saturday to The Times, Melinda Jaggi, Eastside Union’s interim superinten­dent, said the district does not comment on pending litigation. Pinto did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Dolinksi was hired in 2015 as a special education teacher and promoted to vice principal the next academic year, according to the lawsuit. Finks had been working as a teacher since August 2009.

Soon after Dolinkski began working for Pinto, the lawsuit says, she became aware of Pinto’s views of women and was “bombarded with misogynist­ic comments and behavior.”

Pinto regularly called her “Double D,” in reference to her initials and a woman’s bra size, according to the lawsuit. He discussed a female teacher’s breasts with another administra­tor and “regularly expressed his judgement of the bodies and attractive­ness of female teachers at Cole Middle School,” the lawsuit says.

“After Principal Pinto smelled a co-worker cooking fish, he exclaimed that the odor must be coming from Ms. Dolinski’s genitals,” according to the lawsuit.

Dolinski first approached the situation delicately — “injecting some humor so as not to upset Principal Pinto” — but after repeated requests for Pinto to stop his behavior, she became more direct, according to the lawsuit.

As she became more vocal in her complaints, Pinto “doubled down on his offense remarks” and his “rhetoric became so offensive that Ms. Dolinski frequently needed to excuse herself,” the lawsuit says. “On various occasions, Principal Pinto’s attacks against Ms. Dolinski so disturbed her that she began crying in front of her coworkers.”

Pinto told her to “deal with it or resign,” according to the lawsuit, and also stripped her of some responsibi­lities, such as conducting teacher evaluation­s and leading staff profession­al developmen­t, and assigned her less-desirable tasks, such as supervisin­g student sports games.

The lawsuit cites similar allegation­s of sexual harassment and retaliatio­n against Finks, a teacher with a “strong-willed personalit­y,” and two other female teachers who spoke up against Pinto.

The suit seeks unspecifie­d punitive damages and compensato­ry damages, including for emotional distress, lost wages and benefits, and past and future medical expenses.

The lawsuit was filed Wednesday in Los Angeles Superior Court by Carlsbadba­sed attorney David M. Peer, who is representi­ng Dolinski and Finks.

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