Teacher files suit against school district
Jessica Garrison
NEWPORT-MESA -- An Andersen Elementary School teacher who was
removed from her classroom this fall and placed on administrative leave
has filed a lawsuit charging that district officials violated her due
process rights and her right to privacy.
In addition, Patricia Wood, who filed a lawsuit in Superior Court on
Monday as “Teacher Doe,” also alleged that the district violated the
state’s open-meeting laws and the state education code when it decided to
remove her from the classroom.
As part of Wood’s claim that the district had violated her privacy,
Wood’s lawyer, Greg Petersen, submitted articles about Wood published in
the Daily Pilot and the Orange County Register to the court.
The district’s lawyer, Spencer Covert, countered that he had filed a
response to the lawsuit in Superior Court. The Pilot was unable to obtain
that response by the end of the day Tuesday and Covert, along with
district officials, refused to comment further on the matter.
Wood, who has taught in the district for the last 30 years, was the
subject of a petition drive signed by more than 90 Andersen parents last
spring.
Parents said that Wood, though once a great teacher, should be removed
from the classroom because “she could no longer teach our children
effectively and in a way that best serves them.”
Parents charged that Wood’s eccentric habits -- which they said
included wearing a mask and gloves to protect her from students’ germs,
leaving children unsupervised and driving in an unsafe manner near school
-- meant she should no longer teach.
District officials, citing state confidentiality laws, refused to
comment on the parents’ petition, or any of their complaints against
Wood.
But according to Petersen, district officials told Wood she could not
return to the classroom because she is “mentally ill.” District officials
refused to comment on this allegation.
Also as part of the lawsuit, Petersen asked the judge to grant a
temporary restraining order preventing a panel of district-appointed
psychiatrists from examining Wood to determine if she suffers from mental
illness. Petersen contended that such an examination amounted to a gross
violation of Wood’s privacy.
“Just as a search warrant cannot be granted on facts that are stale,
improbable ... so does the board’s claimed decision fail,” the lawsuit
states. “The board sets forth no factual basis for their opinions on
mental illness or facts showing impairment of plaintiff’s duties as a
teacher.”
Petersen also submitted a letter from Dr. Barry Chaitin, a clinical
professor of psychiatry at UCI’s Medical School, in which Chaitin
declared Wood is not suffering from “significant mental illness which
would render her unfit for the profession as a teacher.”
At a hearing Monday, the judge postponed a decision on whether Wood
should undergo a psychiatric exam until Nov. 18, when both Wood and the
school district will be back in court to decide the matter.
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