Current:Home > InvestA Pennsylvania law shields teacher misconduct complaints. A judge ruled that’s unconstitutional -Prime Money Path
A Pennsylvania law shields teacher misconduct complaints. A judge ruled that’s unconstitutional
View
Date:2025-04-20 14:54:24
A Pennsylvania law that makes it a crime to release information about teacher disciplinary complaints is an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment, a federal judge has ruled. The judge sided with a school board member who sought to publicize a misconduct allegation against his son’s school psychologist — and criticize the state’s dismissal of it — without fear of being prosecuted for the disclosure.
The unusual case involves the Educator Discipline Act, a state law that controls how the Pennsylvania Department of Education investigates and prosecutes misconduct complaints against teachers and other school staff. The law’s confidentiality provision makes it a misdemeanor to disclose the existence of a state complaint or any information about it unless and until discipline is imposed.
Criminalizing disclosure of educator misconduct complaints is rare and perhaps unique among the states. Jimmy Adams, executive director of the National Association of State Directors of Teacher Education and Certification, said he’s not aware of another state that has a similar law, although the state education agencies themselves are constrained from releasing information while an investigation is pending.
Proponents of the Pennsylvania statute say it’s needed to protect due process. Opponents say it allows teachers, and the state’s disciplinary system, to avoid scrutiny.
U.S. District Judge Karen S. Marston did not strike down the law itself in her Jan. 10 ruling. But she prohibited the Bucks County district attorney from applying it to the plaintiff, James Pepper, an attorney and school board member in the Philadelphia suburbs.
Pepper’s lawsuit grew out of the tangled, toxic politics of the Central Bucks School District, Pennsylvania’s third-largest school system, where cultural battles have raged over transgender athletes, sexualized content in books, and a “neutrality” policy that barred social and political advocacy in classrooms. Pepper wanted to talk publicly about his complaint against a Central Bucks school psychologist whom he accused of “weaponizing” his sons’ disabilities, but he feared prosecution under the Educator Discipline Act.
Ruling on Pepper’s challenge, Marston said the law’s confidentiality provision violated his free-speech right to discuss both the 2023 misconduct complaint, and the Department of Education’s subsequent determination that the complaint lacked legal merit.
The ruling does not prevent enforcement in other cases where educator confidentiality is violated under the law. But Pepper’s attorney, Aaron Martin, said he hopes the decision on First Amendment grounds will cause any prosecutor considering it to hesitate.
“This ruling is a victory for free speech,” Martin said. “We hope the effect ... will be to shine more light on the actions of government so that people can make up their own minds as to whether government agencies are properly fulfilling their duties.”
The state’s largest teachers union said it was disappointed by the ruling and called for an appeal.
“The confidentiality provision exists to protect the reputation, privacy, and due process rights of educators” who are accused, and ultimately cleared, of wrongdoing, said Chris Lilienthal, a spokesperson for the Pennsylvania State Education Association. “It also protects student privacy and avoids unnecessary disruption of the educational process.”
It’s not clear whether the ruling will be appealed. Bucks County District Attorney Jennifer Schorn, who took office this month and inherited the case from her predecessor, declined to comment this week.
Pepper’s misconduct complaint centers on a January 2023 email that school psychologist Julia Szarko sent to his school district account. Szarko urged Pepper to vote against the board’s neutrality policy, which critics said targeted Pride flags and other symbols of support for LGBTQ+ students. Proponents said the policy applied to all political and social advocacy, and was necessary to prevent indoctrination in the classroom.
Szarko — who had worked with Pepper’s youngest son — began her email by commending his dedication to both of his disabled sons “with all of their incredible strengths but also their extensive needs.”
Pepper, a Republican, said in an interview that while Szarko was free to engage with him on a policy issue, it was “incredibly unprofessional” of her to “use information about my children that she’s learned as a school psychologist to lobby me on a vote.”
Worse, in Pepper’s view, was that by emailing his school district account, Szarko had made private information about his sons’ disabilities discoverable via the state’s open records law — a breach of professional ethics, Pepper asserted. He said it wasn’t the first time that district personnel had disclosed confidential information about his sons to hurt him politically.
Szarko did not respond to emailed requests for comment.
“Dr. Szarko weaponized our vulnerability, and her access to strictly confidential information about our sons, for her own political purposes,” Pepper wrote in his complaint to the state education department.
The department quickly dismissed Pepper’s complaint without opening a formal investigation, saying there was no legal basis to proceed.
“The allegations contained in the complaint, even if proved to be true, would not warrant professional discipline,” an education department lawyer wrote to Pepper on July 26.
Citing the Educator Discipline Act, the lawyer also warned Pepper that “any unauthorized release of confidential information” about the complaint was a crime. The state’s online complaint form included identical warning language.
Pepper viewed the confidentiality provision as plainly unconstitutional and filed suit.
“This prevents people from filing in the first instance, because they’re afraid of getting themselves enmeshed in something that has criminal liability attached to it,” Pepper said. “Who knows the bodies that are buried out there.”
It’s not clear whether Marston’s ruling will prompt the Department of Education to stop warning people to remain quiet about their complaints. A spokesperson said the agency was reviewing the decision, but did not answer detailed questions about the impact of the ruling on department policy.
veryGood! (3532)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- You’ll Adore These Fascinating Facts About Grammy Nominee Miley Cyrus
- The destruction of a Jackie Robinson statue was awful. What happened next was amazing.
- Deion Sanders becomes 'Professor Prime': What he said in first class teaching at Colorado
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Grammys 2024: Nothing in This World Compares to Paris Hilton’s Sweet Update on Motherhood
- Claims that Jan. 6 rioters are ‘political prisoners’ endure. Judges want to set the record straight
- South Dakota tribe bans governor from reservation over US-Mexico border remarks
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Fighting for a Foothold in American Law, the Rights of Nature Movement Finds New Possibilities in a Change of Venue: the Arts
Ranking
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Authorities release names of three killed when plane crashed into Florida mobile home park
- Virginia music teacher Annie Ray wins 2024 Grammy Music Educator Award
- Deion Sanders becomes 'Professor Prime': What he said in first class teaching at Colorado
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Fiona O'Keeffe sets record, wins Olympic trials in her marathon debut
- The destruction of a Jackie Robinson statue was awful. What happened next was amazing.
- California bald eagles care for 3 eggs as global fans root for successful hatching
Recommendation
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
Unfortunate. That describes Joel Embiid injury, games played rule, and NBA awards mess
Chiefs roster for Super Bowl 58: Starters, backups, depth chart for AFC champs vs. 49ers
Taylor Swift Drops Reputation Easter Eggs With Must-See 2024 Grammys Look
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Episcopal Diocese of Mississippi elects its first woman and first Black person as bishop
Far-right convoy protesting migrant crisis nears southern border
Joe Rogan inks multiyear deal with Spotify, podcast to expand to other platforms
Like
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Mike The Situation Sorrentino and Wife Save Son From Choking on Pasta in Home Ring Video
- They met on a dating app and realized they were born on same day at same hospital. And that's not where their similarities end.