The Columbus Dispatch

One arrested over Arizona school’s COVID mandates

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TUCSON, Ariz. – The father of an Arizona elementary school student was arrested after he and two other men showed up to the campus with zip ties, threatenin­g to make a “citizen’s arrest” on the school principal over a COVID-19 quarantine, school officials said Friday.

Diane Vargo, principal of Mesquite Elementary School in Tucson, said the parent came to her office Thursday with his son. The father was upset the child would have to isolate and miss a school field trip because of possible exposure to someone with COVID-19. She said two other men also “barged in.”

One was carrying “military, large, black zip ties and standing in my doorway.” Vargo said she tried to de-escalate the situation while explaining the school had to follow county health protocols.

“I felt violated that they were in my office claiming I was breaking the law and they were going to arrest me,” a visibly shaken Vargo said in a video statement released by the Vail Unified School District. “Two of the men

weren’t parents at our school, so I felt threatened.”

In a video posted on social media, Vargo can be heard calmly asking them to leave. One of them replies they aren’t leaving because they’re not going to let her control the situation. The principal called Tucson police. School officials said the man arrested was the father. Vargo said they are pursuing charges against the other two men.

The arrest is the latest in a number of confrontat­ions in schools around the country over virus-related rules.

School district officials commended Vargo’s handling of the situation.

“The principal through training and her own personalit­y did an excellent job of making sure that tensions didn’t escalate,” District Superinten­dent John Carruth said.

Considerin­g the threats, Carruth said the decision to call police was appropriat­e.

Most people, while frustrated by the continuing impacts of the pandemic, are still supportive of each other and the school system, he said.

“The tactics are escalating but I wouldn’t say there is a broader need to raise concern,” he said. “The solution and the lesson and the silver lining in this (incident) is it calls attention to the need for all of us to seek to listen with the intent to understand.”

Dr. Francisco Garcia, Pima County’s chief medical officer, declined to comment on the incident.

“We are still in the process of contemplat­ing what our next steps are in terms of our individual response to that family in terms of their adherence to staying at home,” Garcia said.

This wasn’t the first virus-inspired confrontat­ion involving the Tucson area school district. In April, the district board ended a study session and then canceled a regular meeting after dozens of parents protested the district’s refusal to lift its mask mandate. Sheriff’s deputies were summoned to help keep order after parents, many not wearing masks, pushed their way into the boardroom.

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