DeepseekerADS
Gold Member
- Mar 3, 2013
- 14,880
- 21,733
- Detector(s) used
- CTX, Excal II, EQ800, Fisher 1260X, Tesoro Royal Sabre, Tejon, Garrett ADSIII, Carrot, Stealth 920iX, Keene A52
- Primary Interest:
- Other
Brought about by the state that voted for transgender toilets....
CA Governor Brown Vetoes Bill to Force Teacher Leaves for Murder Charges
by Ben Shapiro 11 Oct 2013
On Thursday, California Governor Jerry Brown vetoed a bill that would streamline the firing process for California teachers. The bill, presented by a fully Democrat state assembly and senate, came in the wake of several teacher scandals including one at Miramonte Elementary, in which a teacher fed students spoonfuls of his own semen, and yet could not be immediately fired. The bill would have added murder and attempted murder to charges that would allow an indefinite leave of absence, and allowed districts to use evidence of sexual harassment older than four years.
Even the California Teachers Association supported the bill. But that wasn’t good enough for Brown, who said that the bill could “make the process too rigid and could create new problems.” More specifically, the bill would have allowed districts to fire teachers during the summer, and limited case time after dismissal charges. “I share the authors’ desire to streamline the teacher discipline process,” Brown wrote in rejecting the measure, “but this bill is an imperfect solution.”
CA Governor Brown Vetoes Bill to Force Teacher Leaves for Murder Charges
by Ben Shapiro 11 Oct 2013
On Thursday, California Governor Jerry Brown vetoed a bill that would streamline the firing process for California teachers. The bill, presented by a fully Democrat state assembly and senate, came in the wake of several teacher scandals including one at Miramonte Elementary, in which a teacher fed students spoonfuls of his own semen, and yet could not be immediately fired. The bill would have added murder and attempted murder to charges that would allow an indefinite leave of absence, and allowed districts to use evidence of sexual harassment older than four years.
Even the California Teachers Association supported the bill. But that wasn’t good enough for Brown, who said that the bill could “make the process too rigid and could create new problems.” More specifically, the bill would have allowed districts to fire teachers during the summer, and limited case time after dismissal charges. “I share the authors’ desire to streamline the teacher discipline process,” Brown wrote in rejecting the measure, “but this bill is an imperfect solution.”