Posted on 08/23/2016 7:14:45 PM PDT by Coleus
By 2015, she had risen through the ranks at Paramus Catholic High School, her alma mater, to dean of guidance in just four years, and she had been serving as head coach of the elite Lady Paladins basketball team since the retirement of the longtime coach, Al Roth, the year before.
But in January, she lost it all. Drumgoole, of Bogota, says the school fired her from both of her jobs after administrators learned that she was married to a woman. Now, she has filed a lawsuit in Superior Court in Hackensack alleging that Paramus Catholic; its president, James P. Vail; and the Archdiocese of Newark violated discrimination laws and intentionally inflicted emotional distress. The move comes amid a wave of dismissals of gay men and women from Catholic institutions across the United States more than 50 have been fired or had employment offers rescinded since 2010, according to New Ways Ministry, an advocacy group for gay, lesbian and transgender Catholics. As with Drumgoole, most of these dismissals were based not on the workers sexual orientation but rather because they had entered into same-sex marriages as they became legal first state by state, and then nationwide after the U.S. Supreme Court established a constitutional right to such unions last year.
A Superior Court judge will hear arguments today on a motion filed by Christopher Westrick, an attorney representing Paramus Catholic, Vail and the archdiocese, asking that Drumgooles lawsuit be dismissed. Westrick declined to comment when reached by phone on Thursday. In his motion, he makes a church-versus-state argument. He says that the defendants did not violate New Jerseys Laws Against Discrimination statute because that law allows the church to require employees to abide by the tenets of the Catholic faith. Further, the motion says the defendants conduct is protected under the First Amendment, which guarantees the free exercise of religion and freedom from government entanglement within religion.
Drumgoole was not terminated because of her sexual orientation, the motion says. Instead, she was terminated for violating the Ministerial Policies and the Code of Ethics in failing to abide by the tenets of the Roman Catholic faith, i.e. by entering into a same sex marriage. In a certification filed with the court, Drumgoole said that her job never included religious instruction and that she believes her dismissal may be retaliatory because she notified school administrators that three 17-year-old students had been sexually abused by two Paramus Catholic employees who were chaperoning a trip to Europe in 2011. Drumgoole also says that several Paramus Catholic faculty members are divorced, at least one has a child out of wedlock, various employees cohabitate with members of the opposite sex, at least one other teacher is gay, and nude photographs of another teacher have been circulated online. She says she feels as though she was singled out. There are people who are living lives that go against the tenets of the church and theyre still employed there, Drumgoole said in an interview.
Drumgoole graduated in 2001 from Paramus Catholic, where she was a star point guard and two-time captain of the girls basketball team. She was ecstatic when the school hired her, first as an assistant basketball coach in 2005, when she was still a student at St. Thomas Aquinas College in Rockland County, and later, in 2010, as a guidance counselor after she received a masters degree in social work from New York University. She later earned a masters degree in educational leadership from St. Peters University. I was proud to work there, she said of Paramus Catholic. Proud to be a part of such a diverse school community that exposed students to so much, and I also felt it was an honor to serve my alma mater.
As a guidance counselor, she set up tutoring for students who were struggling academically, counseled them on academics and college preparation, ensured that those who were learning-disabled received the help they needed, and interceded in bullying incidents. When she was promoted first to director of guidance in 2013 and then dean of guidance in 2014 her role became more administrative; she ran department meetings and organized award ceremonies, and she had contact with fewer students. Drumgoole said that only one of her colleagues knew about her private life.
Im a private person, Drumgoole said this week in an interview at the Closter office of one of her attorneys, Larry Kleiner. Particularly when you work with adolescents, I believe your private life should be private. That privacy was undone on Jan. 8 when Elaine Vanore, the sister of Drumgooles wife, Jaclyn Vanore, created a Facebook account and sent messages that included pictures from Vanore and Drumgooles Aug. 2, 2014, wedding to the Paramus Catholic Facebook page, the schools alumni association page and the personal account of Vail, the schools president. Drumgoole said Elaine Vanore sent the private messages after an argument with her sister. An attorney for Elaine Vanore said her client is not part of the motion being heard today because the count alleging discrimination on her part has been dropped. However, allegations of intentional infliction of emotional distress and unlawful interference with Drumgooles employment still stand.
We, of course, deny both of those entirely, said Nicole G. McDonough, Elaine Vanores attorney. Four days after the Facebook posts, which the lawsuit says were not made public, Drumgoole was suspended by Vail, who did not give a reason, and was told she would not be coaching that nights basketball game, the lawsuit says. Her removal was extremely jarring for the children, said Anna Shea, a Paramus resident whose daughter Jenna was on the basketball team at the time. Her other daughter, Amanda, who graduated in 2014, had Drumgoole as a guidance counselor. When the team took the floor you could see they were extremely upset, Shea said. It was a difficult game to watch.
One girl left the court mid-game, crying, she said. The kids were left with the impression that she was sick, Shea said, referring to Drumgoole, and the parents werent told anything. Shea found out this week from Drumgoole the reason she was fired. People have to live their lives and find their happiness, Shea said. Its not for me to judge. Drumgoole was told that she would be fired if she didnt resign by Jan. 15. But she wasnt terminated until Jan. 25, a snow day, when Vail asked her to come to the school for a 5:30 p.m. meeting. This was her dream job. She excelled at it, said Kleiner, Drumgooles attorney. Her entire life was just turned upside down. Jaclyn Vanore, a teacher in the Palisades Park school system, said she received sympathy and a hug from her principal when administrators learned of the situation. They were very good, Vanore said.
Drumgooles support came from parents and others outside of Paramus Catholic. Al Roth, her mentor and predecessor as the girls basketball coach, said Thursday that he was still shaking my head over Drumgooles treatment by the school. I cant even pick a word. I was shocked, upset, annoyed, Roth said. She, within the building, did nothing wrong but continue to be a perfect role model. Roth first met Drumgoole in 1997, during her freshman year at Paramus Catholic, where she quickly made a mark on one of Bergen Countys most successful basketball programs. He described her as fiery, a leader and competitive in a strong way. He recalled one game when she jammed her thumb, pulled it out herself, and kept playing.
Attitude, poise and control, Roth said. We used to say it before every game. And thats what shes about. Her skills on the court and her personality twice garnered her the coveted position of team captain. When she returned to the school as Roths assistant coach, he said, she had a great dialogue with the players. When she was named his successor, it was well-deserved and well-earned, he said. Jeff Jasper, who has coached girls basketball at Pascack Valley High School for more than 40 years, said Drumgoole has the rare gift as a coach of also being a great teacher.
Shes someone who can relate to the kids in a positive way and teach them not just the game, but life lessons, he said. When Drumgoole wasnt on the bench for several games, Jasper said he asked Roth about her. It struck me as, in this day and age, how is that possible? Jasper said of her firing. Jasper, who teaches history and government and is also the adviser of his schools gay-straight alliance, said he cant understand how administrators could let someone of her caliber go. Shes a great human being, he said. Im not looking to convert anybody to my beliefs. But shes innocent. What did she do but fall in love? How can that be bad?
Roth, who had declined to talk to reporters about Drumgoole until she went public, said shes like family to him. Ive been raised Catholic, I know the doctrines, Roth said. But Im also very loyal to people that are loyal to me. When I lost my wife two years ago, she could not have been more supportive, he said. She visited my wife while I worked and on weekends. Its unclear what long-term effect, if any, Drumgooles termination will have on her career. That remains to be seen because were not sure whats going to happen with the defendants in this case, if theyre contacted, said Eric Kleiner, Drumgooles other attorney, who is not related to Larry Kleiner. Jobless for all but one of the past eight months, Drumgoole said she has lined up a position in a public school for the coming school year to temporarily replace a teacher who is on maternity leave. Nobody should have to go through this, she said. I did my job very well, every day.
you can be an unmarried lesbian and work at the school... because you’re supposed to be celibate while unmarried. as such, the sin of homosexuality was not being committed.
but once you get married, the sin is hammered home and you are saying that you are sinning and see nothing wrong with it.
that is why she was fired once she got married.
don’t let the door hit ya where the good Lord split ya
She was ecstatic when the school hired her . . . I was proud to . . . be a part of such a diverse school community that exposed students to so much."
Uh-huh. Apparently, they did.
Girls' basketball, girls' golf, it's too bad, but the popular wisdom seems to be true.
So, the court case will revolve around, whether or not a Catholic institution can enforce its standards of behavior and morality, and marriage, on employees.
Any legal precedents in this area??
I know the liberal view will be that this girl should still be employed, and that the church is “judgemental” and all that, in dismissing her. But the liberal view is not necessarily what the law requires.
So why doesn’t the school fire all the cohabiting teachers?
The church looks the other way.
It probably will be determined as to whether the other cases she cited are true, and is the school enforcing it’s moral code arbitrarily. If you have a code against behavior the church considers immoral, it needs to be enforced equally. Just imagine what the country would be like if the rules against bad behavior didn’t apply to some privileged elites?
Oh yeah, /s
If she names them in a deposition or elsewhere during these legal proceedings, the school just might take action.
The term "equally" does not necessarily apply in a case like this. Many violations of a moral behavior code can only be formally documented using investigative measures that are both intrusive and potentially illegal. In this particular case, there was no need to do any investigating at all. The school employee did all the documenting for them when she went out and got "married."
And this is why I will always vote for the Republican. Honestly, hate Trump, but I have faith that Trump will at least slow the destruction of our religionist rights.
References?
I love that show, and that actress!
Liberals hate to admit the truth.You give one side their rights,you destroy the rights of others.You want to be married,great..Leave your job and go to the public schools.
Those northeners is cold, man.
I missed Kim Bodnia in the 3rd season. Thure Lindhardt began to grow on me in the 3rd. 2018 for season 4.
co-habiting doesn’t necessarily mean sex out of wedlock. (assuming that’s what you were after)
the lesbo knew what she was doing and was trying to enact her agenda from the inside. and she’s still trying to do it
she lost.
Have not seen the later season(s).
Having same-sex attraction is one thing, laying it on the altar of God as a “sacrament” is blasphemy of the highest order.
Rush Limbaugh warns Obama regime is sending government-paid lesbian farmers to invade red states
Education
Department Of Agriculture Celebrates Lesbian Farmers At Third-Rate Iowa Law School
Education Editor
9:05 AM 08/19/2016
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, the keynote speaker at Thursdays Iowa LGBT Rural Summit on the campus of Drake University, told dozens of assembled participants that he beams with pride about the amazing cultural transformation he has overseen during his seven years at the Department of Agriculture.
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