Subject: Handcuffed for Homeschooling? Paperwork Dispute Gets Ugly

A state department took legal advice from a superintendent’s secretary...
THE DAILY BELL
View this email online if it doesn't display correctly
Handcuffed for Homeschooling? Paperwork Dispute Gets Ugly
By Jennifer Lade - December 26, 2018

A school system in Massachusetts is proving to be malicious, incompetent, or maybe both.

Of course, we suspected that already. But the latest example comes from a lawsuit from a woman who pulled her 8-year-old son from Worcester Public Schools to homeschool him last January.

Josilyn Goodall is suing the Worcester School Committee, Superintendent Maureen Binienda, and the state Department of Children and Families after police entered her home, handcuffed her, and arrested her over what amounted to a paperwork dispute.

According to the lawsuit, Goodall is seeking unspecified compensatory damages for the violation of her Constitutional rights and for the “mental pain and suffering” inflicted upon her and her son.

The lawsuit details Goodall’s multiple attempts to contact the Superintendent after filing paperwork in January saying she was going to homeschool her son. She said she never got a response to any of her phone calls or emails.

In Massachusetts, parents who wish to homeschool their children must submit an education plan to the superintendent of the local school system for approval. However, according to Care and Protection of Charles (1987), the court case upon which homeschool legal precedent was established, the burden of proof is on the school to show that the homeschool program is insufficient.

LikeTwitterForward
The Daily Bell, 954 Ave Ponce de Leon, Suite 205 - PMB 10022, 00907, SAN JUAN, United States
You may unsubscribe or change your contact details at any time.