Julia Lopp, a
Spanish teacher at South Johnston High School in Four Oaks, North Carolina, was
suspended with pay this past week for being accused of segregating students
based on their religious and political beliefs. According to the Johnston County Report, Lopp segregated
students in her classroom by “forcing them to line up on opposite sides of the
classroom based on whether they did or did not believe in God.” After Lopp segregated
the students based on their belief in God, she purportedly asked for their
stances on abortion and LGBTQ rights. According to the New York Post, Lopp then allegedly told her students that if they
reported her actions, she would “not recommend them for a job or even entrance
to college.”
Johnston County
Public Schools is currently investigating “whether or not [Lopp] asked students
about their beliefs in God.”
Superintendent Jim Causby asserts, “It is never appropriate for a
teacher to segregate students based upon religious, political, or personal
beliefs.”
One question at
hand is: Is Johnston County Public Schools required by the constitution to pay
Lopp while she is suspended from teaching at South Johnston High School?
Although the
school is currently paying Lopp during her suspension, the constitution does
not require Johnston County Public Schools to pay her while she is suspended
for violating her students’ constitutional rights.
The case at hand is what Justice Scalia
would deem a “hybrid situation.” Separating students based on their religious
and political opinions violates more than one constitutional right. Lopp burdened
her students’ free exercise by segregating them in the classroom based on their
religious beliefs. Her questions undoubtedly intended to intimidate a religious
group by first asking her students whether or not they believed in God. The
government has compelling interest to be involved in this case because Lopp’s
beliefs could heavily influence those of her young and impressionable
students.
In addition to free exercise, Lopp also
violated her students’ free speech by threatening to punish them for divulging
her actions. Furthermore, Lopp violated her students’ rights outlined in the
Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, stating that no state can
“deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;
nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”
This Clause was the basis of Brown v.
Board of Education in which it was ruled unconstitutional to segregate public
education solely on race. Due to Lopp burdening the constitutional rights of
her students through segregation, I believe that Johnston County Public Schools
does not have to provide Lopp with pay during the investigation period, and
would be within its right to terminate her from the institution for the
aforementioned accusations.
However, it is
important to note that a few months ago, an English teacher at Heritage High
School in Wake Forest, North Carolina was suspended without pay for five days in September after asking her students
personal questions regarding their “gender, race/ethnicity, sexuality, religion
and socioeconomic status.” Although the English teacher did not allegedly
segregate her students as Lopp did, questioning these students about their
identities is unconstitutional. Considering the fact that both South Johnston
High School and Heritage High School are public schools in North Carolina,
there should have been consistency in deciding whether or not a teacher should
receive pay during suspension.
Another question
follows: If Lopp were found guilty of the accusations, would it be unconstitutional
for the state of North Carolina to deny her unemployment benefits?
Based on the
evidence provided, it would not be unconstitutional for North Carolina to deny
Lopp unemployment benefits upon being terminated from South Johnston High
School for segregating the children in her classroom. One precedent for this
case is Employment
Division of Oregon v. Smith,
in which Alfred Smith and Galen Black were denied unemployment benefits after
being terminated from their jobs for ingesting peyote, an illegal drug, for
sacramental purposes. While it remains unknown whether or not Lopp thought it
was her religious duty to separate students based on their beliefs, her
segregation of students would remain unconstitutional. In Sherbert v. Verner, the Court ruled that the government could not set
“unemployment eligibility requirements such that a person cannot properly
observe key religious principles.” No such religious principle exists where the
case at hand is concerned, and even if it did, the state should not make an
exemption for Lopp, due to the fact that she violated her students’ rights.
South Johnston High School is entitled to deny Lopp pay during her suspension,
and the state of North Carolina is within its right to deny her unemployment
benefits.
If Lopp were teaching at a private
school, the state of North Carolina would still be within its right to deny her
unemployment benefits for violating the constitution. Providing Lopp with
unemployment benefits means that she would be rewarded for denying her students
their constitutional rights. In this case, she cannot plead ignorance: she threatened
to interfere with her students’ future if they were to divulge her actions.
Therefore, granting Lopp unemployment benefits would reward her actions and suggest
that every conscience is a law unto itself, which is thankfully not the case.
3 comments:
I agree with what the author is saying here. Allowing the accused teacher to receive pay is a blatant violation of those students religious rights. It is also possible that by still paying this estranged teacher the state is establishing a religious preference for that teacher's religion. The private school angle is more difficult to determine. If a private institution wished to continue paying their employee after she violated a direct rule in the organization, that is their decision. This case is more extreme than simply breaking a rule in a business setting, though, so I still believe the author is correct in saying that the teacher should still be denied payment in the private sector
I agree that it is absurd that a teacher would segregate students based on their belief in God; there is a clear state interest in protecting the impressionable children here, and students should not be forced to declare their personal beliefs in front of the entire class. Children are susceptible to peer pressure, and so the act is extremely inappropriate. I think that the accused teacher should not be paid, and that this situation cannot rely on the precedent set forth in Sherbert v. Verner because, from my understanding, the refusal of unemployment benefits does not infringe on the teacher's own religious principles.
I agree with Sarah that the precedent established in Sherbert v. Verner should not be upheld as a basis for this decision. In my opinion, refusing unemployment benefits does not impede upon an individual's free exercise rights, only upon their financial stability. In this case, involving children, there is a government interest in preventing segregation and discrimination based upon religious views, and therefore even if someone claimed that Ms. Lopp's right to free exercise was violated, I would argue that the state interest overrides this violation.
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