Attorneys for The Rutherford Institute have filed a civil rights
lawsuit against a Chicago public school district on behalf of a
second-grade teacher who was suspended after he displayed garden-variety
tools such as wrenches, pliers and screwdrivers in his classroom as
part of a "tool discussion" in his class.
Despite the fact that all potentially hazardous items were kept out
of the students' reach, school officials at Washington Irving Elementary
School informed Doug Bartlett, a 17-year veteran in the classroom, that
his use of the tools as visual aids endangered his students. Bartlett
was subsequently penalized with a four-day suspension without pay -
charged with possessing, carrying, storing or using a weapon.
The complaint charges
that Bartlett "suffered humiliation, embarrassment, mental suffering,
and lost wages, and was suspended for four days" - and asks for "nominal
and compensatory damages" and for the suspension to be expunged from
the teacher's record.
"This school district's gross overreaction to a simple teaching
demonstration on basic tools such as wrenches and pliers underscores
exactly what is wrong with our nation's schools," said Rutherford
Institute Pres. John Whitehead.
"What makes this case stand out from the rest is that this latest
victim of zero tolerance policies run amok happens to be a veteran
school teacher," Whitehead said.
None of the tools were made accessible to the students. When not in
use, the tools were secured in a toolbox on a high shelf out of reach of
the students. They were used to demonstrate the proper use of tools.
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