They did the right thing. |
I'm a parent at the school who didn't complain but I wholeheartedly agree. |
| SR was a better place with him there, I'm sorry the girls won't have him as a teacher and mentor any more. As an SR parent and alum I'm very disappointed in how this was handled. |
Well I suspect you are outnumbered, and rightfully so. I don't know the gentleman, and I am sure he is lovely and fun to be around. But he crossed a line. He would be better off in a secular educational setting. |
How many bishops said such a stupid thing exactly? |
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Is videotaping consistent with school policies?
PV are a bunch of criminals and a cancer on society so I would be leery of doing anything that encourages them |
On the SR parents chats I'm on with girls in different grades we are entirely in support of him. I do know the gentleman, he educated my daughters for years with a lot of grace and humor. He is a favorite of the girls and will be missed. |
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This sets a bad precedent. He was doing his job well and serving an underrepresented part of the SR community. I get that religious and private institutions can fire without cause, but it doesn’t mean they should.
Why choose SR if they abandon loyal people so quickly under pressure? What example does this set for their students? |
If they had kept him on the staff, the school would lose all of its credibility as a Catholic institution. I suspect they were very concerned about enrollment in the upcoming admissions season...especially in the lower and middle schools. They did the right thing for the future of the school. |
Instead of breaking with the employee, they should have broken with the Catholic Church. Problem solved! |
They shouldn't be concerned about enrollment, especially since covid they have been turning away lots of applicants and trying to set up additional classrooms for all of the girls they let in. Enrollment isn't an issue these days. |
Or they could have shown the Catholic value of forgiveness and redemption for a member of the community, like they tell the students to do. Tomorrow morning they'll be reminding the girls we're all sinners who come from dust, this holds true for faculty and staff as well. |
| As a new non-Catholic family at SR we’re sad to see him leave. However, it should be noted that he was leaving at the end of the school year anyway. The email from the head of school was well-written and wasn’t shy to call out Project Veritas. It’s sad this is how he left… I wish there was a way to reach out to him and let him know he was a special and respected member of the SR community. |
| The school's hands were tied. If he had left it as basically talking about recognizing and supporting each child, it would be a different story. I am sure the school would have fully stood behind him. Maybe if he had even said that doing so requires taking a more expansive view of Catholic teachings and values, he would have been on more solid ground. The issue was adding the part about feeling like it is subverting the Catholic Church and that being a good thing. I don't see how the school could have done anything else. |
I agree his comments, taken with no context and without his knowledge, were problematic. We don't know whether he was fired or chose to leave, the school's statement was ambiguous so who knows if they had to do much of anything at all. |