Street v. Talladega City Board of Education

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMarch 14, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00614
StatusUnknown

This text of Street v. Talladega City Board of Education (Street v. Talladega City Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Street v. Talladega City Board of Education, (N.D. Ala. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA EASTERN DIVISION

BETTY STREET, Plaintiff, v. Case No. 1:22–cv–614–CLM

TALLADEGA CITY BOARD OF EDUCATION, et al., Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Betty Street was a Kindergarten teacher in the Talladega City School System. During that time, Street alleges that she was harassed, defamed, retaliated against, and denied a fair opportunity to publicly speak against her mistreatment. So Street has sued four defendants: the Talladega City Board of Education, Superintendent Tony Ball, Principal Phillip Jenkins, and fellow Kindergarten teacher Caitlyn Freemon. Principal Jenkins was only recently served (doc. 22) and has yet to respond to Street’s complaint against him. The other three defendants have moved to dismiss Street’s claims against them. (See Docs. 12, 13). The court grants their motions to dismiss some claims, and denies their motions on others:  Count 1 (defamation): the court denies Ball and Freemon’s motion to dismiss;  Count 2 (false light): the court denies Ball and Freemon’s motion to dismiss;  Count 3 (First Amendment prior restraint): the court grants all Defendants’ motions to dismiss;  Count 4 (First Amendment retaliation): the court grants all Defendants’ motions to dismiss;  Count 5 (hostile work environment): the court grants the Board’s motion to dismiss but denies Ball and Freemon’s motion;  Count 6 (Equal Protection disparate treatment): the court grants Ball and Freemon’s motion to dismiss but denies the Board’s motion; and,  Count 7 (Equal Protection retaliation): the court grants all Defendants’ motions to dismiss. The court explains its rulings, after it recounts the facts alleged by Street. STATEMENT OF THE ALLEGED FACTS Betty Street, a white female, was hired by Talladega City Schools to teach Kindergarten. While teaching, Street says she was harassed, bullied, and subjected to inappropriate sexual comments. So Street filed an EEOC complaint against her school principal, the Superintendent of the school system, and the Talladega City Board of Education. Street says that her plight got worse from there. 1. The resignation letter: Two weeks after the EEOC issued its right to sue letter, new Superintendent Tony Ball told Street that he was concerned about her teaching, even though Street had no negative employment or performance records. Superintendent Ball told Street that, because he was concerned, he wanted to observe her in the classroom. Street requested that a witness be present for that observation, which she says upset Ball. Even though the observation revealed no poor performance, Ball required Street to observe other teachers in a different system. Superintendent Ball told the parent of a student that he wanted to fire Street, but it was difficult because she had tenure. He also told that parent that he wanted to hire black teachers because most students were black. At the same time, Superintendent Ball had Street’s fellow Kindergarten teacher, Caitlyn Freemon, collect information on Street. Freemon, in turn, enlisted students to spy on Street and report what was happening in Street’s classroom. Freemon then falsely reported to Superintendent Ball that Street had no control of her classroom. Other teachers told Street that Freemon said she was going to “get” Street on the last day of school. The school principal, Phillip Jenkins, knew about the threats, but refused to act or tell Street about them. In any event, Street took the threat of physical violence seriously because, she says, Freemon had a record of threatening others with violence. Freemon never attacked Street; instead, she resigned. With Superintendent Jenkins’ help, Freemon wrote a resignation letter that said she (Freemon) suffered “emotional anguish and mental harassment, refusal of collaboration, and continuous verbal abuse from Street.” She also wrote that “as long as Street is an employee underneath Talladega City School Systems, her constant harassment towards myself and others will keep happening.” Street says that Freemon, Superintendent Ball, and Principal Jenkins all knew these statements were false. Yet the trio shared the letter with Street’s co–workers, employees at other Talladega City Schools, and the Administration. Principal Jenkins didn’t stop there. He warned Street’s co-workers to stay away from Street because she was a troublemaker, even though Street had no negative employment history in her file. Altogether, this caused Street to seek mental health treatment and request to transfer to another school, which was ignored. 2. The School Board Meeting: Street wanted to publicly tell the School Board about these incidents and discuss the mental health and physical safety of employees in the district. In compliance with Board policy, Street wrote a letter to the Board that detailed what she wanted to say during the meeting. The Board subsequently restricted what topics Street could discuss and prevented her from bringing a witness. Superintendent Ball threatened to sue Street if she named anyone during her remarks. Later, Superintendent Ball admitted to Street that he knew Freemon’s letter was backwards; that Freemon was the bully, not Street. Ball asked Street not to speak at the meeting because her remarks would reflect badly on him. But Street was determined to speak. So Superintendent Ball left Street off the agenda and closed the meeting to public entry. Despite Board meetings usually being broadcast on Zoom, the Board streamed this meeting on YouTube instead. The YouTube stream failed, so members of the public couldn’t watch it. When Street started to read her preapproved letter, the Board chair stopped her and did not allow her to continue speaking. Street requested to read her full letter at a future board meeting, but the Board, through Superintendent Ball, denied that request. 3. The complaint: The next month, Street complained to the Alabama Department of Education that Ball, Jenkins, and Freemon harassed her. Nothing has come of that complaint. In the months that followed, three of Street’s black co-workers told Street that Principal Freemon told them to “throw out the race card” if anything happened between them and Street. And a new teacher told Street that she was instructed not to talk to Street. So Street sued the School Board, Ball, Freemon, and Jenkins. She alleges Libel, Slander, and Invasion of Privacy/False light claims against Ball, Freemon, and Jenkins in their individual capacities. She brings one First Amendment claim for prior restraints against the Board and Ball in his official and individual capacities, and another First Amendment Claim for retaliation against Ball, Jenkins, and the Board. She brings a hostile work environment claim against the Board, and Ball, Jenkins, and Freemon in their individual capacities. And she brings two Equal Protection claims—one for disparate treatment against the Board and Ball in his individual capacity, and another for retaliation—against Ball, Jenkins, Freemon, and the Board. STANDARD OF REVIEW Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)(2), a plaintiff must provide “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” To survive a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), the “[f]actual allegations [in the complaint] must be enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level.” Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007) (citation omitted). This “requires more than labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do.” Id. (citation omitted).

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Bluebook (online)
Street v. Talladega City Board of Education, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/street-v-talladega-city-board-of-education-alnd-2023.