| Amherst
High School in Chaos Molestation by
Principal Upsets Most Parents
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February
11, 2002 The
Amherst high school is in chaos since it
was revealed that its principal, Stephen
Myers, is a man who loves to have sex
with boys.
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A
high school student, Colin Jones, reports:
"The Amherst Regional High School is in a
state of anarchy. Fights and senseless acts of
violence are being committed left and
right."
A
mother echoes these concerns: "At least when
Myers was there, he was in the cafeteria and
looked out for my daughter. My kids are not safer
with him gone - actually the opposite."
Many
residents question, as they watch this
tabloid-style drama, whether the town will learn
from this experience and grow up. Even after it
became public knowledge that Myers had sex with
children, the chair of the school committee, Dr.
Barbara Love, refused to cast a single stone.
"As
a black woman, I am leery of jumping to
conclusions and condemning and convicting an
individual on the basis of circumstantial
evidence," she opined.
The
many families who have already fled the public
schools -- being fed-up with the bullying
episodes, dumbed-down academics, decaying
facilities, and amoral climate now feel
validated by their choice. Indeed, crises like
these only serve to bolster the alternative
education movement.
But
the liberals, who dominate the town, are too
embarrassed to embrace a traditional code of
values. They have a rigid and unwavering faith in
the ability of the State to educate and care for
their children.
Therefore,
they are reduced to complaining about "the
process" and locating a scapegoat to blame,
be it the superintendent or the school committee
chairwoman.
An unnamed, former Amherst principal doesn't have much faith in townspeople's
ability to become introspective. "I don't believe that Amherst
leftists will reconsider their biases in the light of this sorry
episode. They have too much invested. They have too much reason
to rationalize and divert others attention away from the core
issues."
There have been seven principals in fourteen years. Superintendent Gus Sayer
had heart by-pass surgery last summer and Ron Bell, his long-time
number two man, recently had a stroke.
Had
this scandal happened in a politically
conservative community like Provo, Utah, there
would have been the predictable soapboxing about,
This is what comes of allowing the National
Education Association to get in bed with the gay
rights lobby.
Sordid
Details Shocked Town
In January, the front page
of the hometown newspaper announced, Principal
Stephen Myers intends to resign his post,
following allegations that he asked a male
student to expose a nipple and invited him to his
house.
Sympathy
for the beleaguered principal and the
superintendent and school committee, who had
attempted to keep the entire affair quiet,
bottomed-out after the local newspapers published
details released by a lawyer who represented the
mother of the boy who was molested by Principal
Stephen Myers.
The
details, from an almost 100-page report, produced
by investigators in Santa Cruz, California (where
Myers had worked as an educator), included the
principal's confession to being attracted to 14-
to 16-year-old-males, and his admission to having
had sexual relations with boys.
According
to the same report, the foster mother of the
four-year-old Romanian boy that Myers was hoping
to adopt kept a journal. The Union-News noted
what this woman had written about her foster
child's time with Myers. She said the pair
"watched 'silly movies' in bed of naked
boys," and they engaged in sexually
suggestive' play, like the 'bouncing game.'
The
lawyers one-page statement closed with a
self-serving, but perhaps deserved, pat on the
back: "[I]t is apparent that the public
disclosure of Myers' improper activities at
Amherst Regional High School, although never
authorized by the family and however awkwardly
made, has served the public interest of
protecting our client and other boys in the
community from Mr. Myers. We hope that the
community will come to recognize the courage it
took for the family to raise and pursue these
difficult issues given the failure of the School
Department to deal with them adequately."
Defenders Stunned Into
Silence
While
Myers has never been charged with any crime, his
defenders have been stunned into silence. In
fact, the Amherst police became concerned for his
safety and stepped up patrols around his home.
In
addition to the cover-up that he conducted, Supt.
Sayer also faces the unhappy task of trying to
defend the extensive background check that he
says was conducted on Myers, which included a
Criminal Offender Record Information report.
Sayer
reiterated to the local media that "Amherst
officials checked Myers' professional history for
the past 20 years, including his time in the
Santa Cruz, Calif., school system."
Dean
Tong, author of Elusive Innocence and a
consultant in the Elian Gonzalez case, notes that
unless schools required every incoming principal
to submit to psychosexual testing and a
polygraph, it would be difficult and expensive to
spot a criminal. "It would cost (a school
district) over $3000/case for testing of the
suspected pedophile," says Tong. Given that
Myers' starting salary was $85,000 annually,
perhaps Amherst taxpayers would not blanch at
paying less than four percent of that to detect a
child molester.
But
insiders say hubris, not a flawed process or lack
of funds, is responsible for this crisis. The
former Amherst principal quoted earlier writes:
"From the smoke of this latest battle of the
Amherst school wars, emerges the stench of the
arrogant pietism of those who would prefer the
school leadership of persons who fit well the
profile of the politically correct."
He continues, "It is
that pietism, that romantic insistence on the
personal characteristics that signal hard leftist
politics, multi-cultural banalities, and a
fatuous attitude toward rigorous curriculum, that
lies at the heart of the process that chose Mr.
Myers as principal."
Anatomy of Nipplegate
In
Amherst, education takes precedence over politics
and fiscal prudence. The town proudly spends well
above the state average to fund the high school.
But
it's no secret that the gatekeepers of the
Amherst school system have long been susceptible
to political fads.
From
exhibiting Love Makes a Family (a gay, photo
display) in the elementary schools to canceling a
production of West Side Story to avoid offending
Puerto Rican students, progressive values take
precedence over rigorous scholarship for the
town's educational elite.
Still,
its hardly a workers paradise. The
previous high school principal with impeccable
left-wing credentials, Scott Goldman, supported a
police presence in the school. He left his post
after only four years complaining about overly
permissive parents.
And
teachers risk being branded as
"racists" if they grumble about the
administration's obsession with diversity and
multiculturalism.
With
this scandal, however, even the tolerance crowd
met its Waterloo.
It
began on the evening of January 15, when a group
of self-described activists crashed a routine
school committee meeting and unleashed a
firestorm during the public comment period. The
group had widely-circulated copies of a letter
that Supt. Sayer had written to the parent of the
15-year-old male student regarding Myers
peculiar actions.
Sayer
had written to the parents: "Mr. Myers
did request to see [student's name omitted]
nipple and [omitted] consented. Mr. Myers did
invite [omitted] to his home and tell him that he
had a hot tub there. These actions were improper,
as was his invitation to take [omitted] to a
movie, in my judgment."
Sayer
had little to say at the meeting in response
except to complain that his private
correspondence had been made public.
The
56-year-old Myers, who is single, did not attend
and denied any wrongdoing. But during the
meeting, his attorney left and returned with a
terse, unsigned statement from his client for the
school committee. Myers stated that the truth
would not be given a fair hearing in a
climate of rumor and innuendo" and that he
planned to step down as principal. Myers was a
recent import from a charter school in Colorado
and was only halfway through his first year at
Amherst.
Townspeople are Polarized
After
the meeting, town residents became polarized into
two camps. Most thought a decent man had been
denied due process, while others were outraged
that public officials had protected a pervert.
"Witchhunt"
became the original battle cry from the larger
camp which rallied around Myers. About fifty
parents and concerned students had attended the
January 15 meeting to complain about him. A week
later, 200 parents, teachers and concerned
taxpayers mobbed the meeting in support of him.
Chair
Dr. Love could seem to do no right. At the first
meeting, she allowed an hour-long, unscheduled
public discussion of the sexual complaint. Most
experts agree it should have been limited to the
privacy of an executive session (allowed by the
Open Meeting Law).
A
week later, wearing her trademark African tribal
garb, Love squelched comments from the defenders
of the beleaguered principal, saying her leniency
of the week before "could have easily have
been a mistake, but it's in the past. Tonight I
will interrupt."
After
the second unsatisfactory meeting, tempers were
short and questions went unanswered. Of concern:
Since Superintendent Sayer took the charges seriously enough to
hire a lawyer and undertake an investigation of his own, he was
duty bound to file a report with the Department of Social Services
(G.L.c.119, 51A). The School Committee, or any other public official
aware of the charges, also had a lawful duty to report it. Why didn't
any of them file the 51A?
Had the background check on Stephen Myers been thorough?
Why did Supt.
Sayer tell Myers that if this incident became public his job would
be untenable?" Did Sayer sense something amiss with Myers
who later changed his story by claiming he never invited the student
to his home for a dip in the hot tub?
Shortly
after that meeting, a 51A was filed on behalf of
the student, and the case is now being
investigated by the Northwest district attorneys
office.
Strange
as it may appear, support for Myers peaked when
the Department of Social Services (DSS) snatched
his adopted eight-year-old son and placed him in
foster care. A spokesperson for DSS was succinct:
"Whenever we petition for custody of a child
we do so out of concern for the child's immediate
safety."
But
supporters thought it was merely a routine
response to the original allegations, which had
yet to be proved. The 16-person committee that
selected Myers only five months earlier after a
nationwide search, had reason to hope he would
exonerated.
Only in Amherst
"Only
in Amherst." Its a refrain that drives
the long-time locals crazy.
However,
unlike the previous refrains, this one could be
very damaging to the reputation of its schools
and the sale of homes in the town.
The
previous refrains showed only the strangeness of
the inhabitants. But this episode is much more
serious as it makes one wonder about the safety
of the young people in the schools
particularly with the attempt at a cover up.
Previous
publicity occurred when the Town Meeting
unanimously voted, on the eve of the Gulf War, to
"continue negotiations with Iraq." Or,
in 1988, when voters
snubbed
Michael Dukakis in favor of Jesse Jackson. And
how 'bout that United Nations flag that flies
over the Town Common?
The
students and staff of Amherst Regional High
School have also made waves and headlines.
In
October, the school was shut down for two days
due to an anthrax hoax.
In
November, school officials debated whether to
disregard the state mandate that will require
high school students to pass the MCAS test to
graduate, and freshman Brad Bell was featured in Sports
Illustrated for his participation on the
girls' field hockey team.
But
this mid-winter's bombshell is more shocking.
Many in this small
town are wondering whats it going to take . . . a Columbine?.
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