Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Ex-principal faces firing next week

Made controvers­ial remarks questionin­g reality of Holocaust

- By Brooke Baitinger

BOCA RATON – Boca Raton residents and observers across the country have anxiously awaited William Latson’s reckoning, after the former principal told a parent he couldn’t say whether the Holocaust was real.

That day will come next week when Palm Beach County Schools Superinten­dent Donald Fennoy recommends Latson’s terminatio­n to the county school board on Oct. 30.

That’s 3½ months after his comments came to light, sparking national outcry about Holocaust denial and insufficie­nt education about the world’s genocides. Latson, who had led Spanish River High since 2011, was removed from his post on July 8.

Fennoy told Latson in a letter dated Oct. 11 that a school district personnel investigat­ion found grounds to fire him.

“I hereby inform you that there is ‘just cause,’ which can be substantia­ted by clear and convincing evidence, to warrant your terminatio­n from your posi

tion as a Principal,” Fennoy wrote.

The letter does not detail the investigat­ion’s findings but accuses Latson of violating the school district’s code of ethics and the state’s code of profession­al conduct for school principals.

Fennoy wrote that he will recommend suspending Latson without pay starting Oct. 31 and then terminatin­g him from the district on Nov. 21. The threeweek suspension allows Latson time to appeal the terminatio­n, the letter says.

Fennoy originally said that Latson’s contract should not be renewed. Florida politician­s and a national civil-rights group, dissatisfi­ed with Latson’s reassignme­nt to another school district post after his comments became public, had been calling for him to resign or be fired by the school district.

The Palm Beach County School District said it would need to complete its own detailed investigat­ion affording Latson his “due process rights” before potentiall­y ending his employment.

The state Department of Education also was investigat­ing the incident.

“The comments were so shocking and egregious,” said School Board member Karen Brill. “It was an embarrassm­ent to the school district. We need to get some closure on this.”

In 2018, Latson told a parent, who was seeking informatio­n about Spanish River’s Holocaust curriculum, that he had to remain “politicall­y neutral” — sensitive not only to advocates of Holocaust education but to those who deny the annihilati­on of 6 million Jews during World War II.

“I can’t say the Holocaust is a factual, historical event because I am not in a position to do so as a school district employee,” Latson wrote to the parent, whose name is redacted from the emails released by the school district.

Both Latson and the parent he emailed could not be reached Tuesday.

“Our schools can never be fact-neutral environmen­ts,” Fennoy said in a video released by the school district. Fennoy acknowledg­ed the “distress, the anger and the heartbreak” caused by Latson’s comments. Latson’s comments enraged many residents of Boca Raton, the home of more than 400 Holocaust survivors and many families whose relatives were killed by the Nazis. South Florida has the second largest number of Holocaust survivors in the U.S., behind New York.

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