High School
Journalist Faces Firing
Co-editor of a Fullerton campus
paper profiled three gay students who decided to come out. Officials
say she needed their parents' OK.
By Joel Rubin
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
January 26, 2005
When high school journalist
Ann Long sent a recent edition of her school's newspaper to the
printer, she hoped her profile of three gay students would generate
some discussion in the hallways.
But she didn't expect to be
punished for writing the article.
According to Long and her
mother, officials at Troy High School in Fullerton told the senior that
by Thursday she must resign or face being fired from her shared post as
editor in chief of the Oracle.
Assistant Principal Joseph
D'Amelia, who Long said delivered the ultimatum, declined to comment,
deferring questions to Patricia Howell, deputy superintendent for the
Fullerton Joint Union High School District.
Howell, who wouldn't discuss
Long by name, said district and school officials did not object to the
story's content. She said Long, 18, was being punished for violating
the ethical standards of the journalism class and a state education
code that prohibits asking students about their sexuality without
parental permission.
"We're not saying there is
anything morally wrong with the article," she said. "Freedom of speech
is not at issue. Confidentiality and privacy rights are the issue."
It is a position that has
left Long defiant and legal experts contending that the state law
applies to faculty but not students.
"I don't think I've done
anything that merits me stepping down," said Long, who vowed not to
surrender her position. "Perhaps I should have called the parents to
interview them for the story, but I don't feel like I should have been
obligated to get their permission to write it. These students chose to
talk to me."
At issue is a Dec. 17 article
that chronicled the decisions of three students — two 18-year-olds and
a 15-year-old — to reveal their homosexuality and bisexuality to family
and friends. All three spoke to Long knowing their names would be used.
According to Long, her
journalism teacher, Georgette Cerrutti, worked closely with her on
drafts of the article for more than a month, at one point discussing
with her the impact it might have on the students' families.
Long said Cerrutti never told
her she needed to get the parents' approval.
On Monday, Long said, she was
summoned to D'Amelia's office, where he and Cerrutti admonished her for
not seeking the parents' permission.
"He told me I either had to
resign and make an example of myself for failing to do my job," Long
said of D'Amelia, "or that I would be removed."
In meetings Tuesday with
Long's parents, D'Amelia and Troy Principal Chuck Maruca reaffirmed the
school's stance, Long and her mother said.
Maruca and Cerrutti did not
return calls seeking comment.
Howell said journalism
students are taught to be cautious when writing stories that address
other students' private lives. She said Long had violated the section
of the California education code that requires written parental
permission before asking students questions about their or their
parents' "personal beliefs or practices in sex, family life, morality,
and religion," as the code states.
"Anytime a school policy or
the education code is violated, there obviously has to be some
consequences," Howell said.
Howell declined to comment on
whether Cerrutti had told Long of that requirement or whether the
teacher had asked to see the parents' written permission.
Experts on the rights of
student journalists said the district was wrong to apply that part of
the education code to a student.
"The school has no right to
punish this student," said lawyer Mark Goodman, executive director of
the Student Press Law Center in Arlington, Va. "A student has the right
to talk about their private life, and a student journalist has the
right to report on it. Ultimately, there are some things that are not
within a school's right to control."
Doug Mirell, a 1st Amendment
lawyer in Los Angeles, said that because minors legally could not waive
their right to privacy in discussing matters such as sexual
orientation, journalists must get a parent's permission. Mirell said it
would be up to a parent, and not a school, to complain about the
privacy breach.
The parents of the
15-year-old whom Long interviewed could not be reached for comment.
Goodman and Michael Hersher,
a state Department of Education lawyer, said they had never heard of a
school trying to apply that section of the education code to a student
journalist. They cited another section of the code that places the
responsibility on faculty advisors "to maintain professional standards
of English and journalism" in school newspapers.
Long's mother, Daisy, said
she was planning to take up the matter with district officials.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-resign26jan26,1,7491810.story?coll=la-headlines-california