Teachers Locked Down in LAUSD's Notorious "Rubber Room" |
Los Angeles
Superintendent John Deasy’s take all prisoners approach to teacher discipline
in the wake of the Miramonte Elementary School molestation case last year (see here
and here)
has swelled the number of teachers in LAUSD’s rubber room (teacher jail) to over
300.
Today the
school board will consider a proposal to speed up and “improve” investigations,
ostensibly to speed up the removal of criminals and exoneration of innocents.
The problem is that the only true innocents, in the eyes of Deasy, are the
children. Deasy has repeatedly asserted that his primary goal is to protect the
children (never mind if that means punishing or firing innocent teachers).
Under the resolution
by board member Tamar Galatzan, employees would have to be told why they were being
removed from their job (unless it would compromise a law-enforcement
investigation). This leaves open the possibility that a teacher could be placed
in the rubber room based on spurious accusations by discontent parents or
students, and not be told why they were there. According to the Los
Angeles Times, the resolution would also require that they be quickly
advised about the expected length of the investigation and whether or not they
would be paid in the interim.
There are
several other problems with the resolution. If the LAUSD bureaucracy did not
have time, expertise and willingness to complete its investigations promptly
and competently before, why would they have this ability now? Additionally,
speeding up the timeframe for an investigation runs the risk of weakening teachers’
due process rights. Though the goal is to protect children, it is important to
remember that people get accused of things all the time which are untrue,
including teachers. Speeding up the inquiries could limit teachers’ abilities to
defend themselves against specious accusations or exaggerated punishments for
minor infractions.
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