School district will pay after bullying followed by suicide
ASPartOfMe
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The family of Isabella “Izzy” Tichenor blamed her death in 2021 on an inadequate response by school officials to reports that the girl was being bullied over her race and disabilities. The Davis School District announced the settlement on Tuesday.
The lawsuit said that Izzy, the only Black student in her class, was bullied by students at North Salt Lake’s Foxboro Elementary School by classmates who called her the N-word, told her she stank and made fun of her for being autistic. The family said they had reported the bullying to teachers and administrators, who hadn’t stopped the harrasment.
Tichenor’s death came weeks after the district, which educates 73,000 kids north of Salt Lake City and has a student body that is less than 1% Black, was reprimanded by the U.S. Department of Justice for failing to address widespread racial discrimination. It sparked widespread outrage, including from the Utah Jazz, whose then-star shooting guard Donovan Mitchell spoke out about how school officials should’ve done more to stop the racist bullying.
Utah lawmamkers passed legislation requiring districts to track reported bullying and racism in schools. Izzy’s mother, Brittany Tichenor-Cox, pointed to deep-rooted racism in the predominantly white state. The district initially defended its handling of bullying allegations, but launched an independent investigation after Tichenor’s death.
The investigation found “no direct evidence” of Tichenor being bullied specifically because of her race or disabilities but confirmed major parts of the family’s account, including that staff had mistreated Izzy. It recommended policy changes such as training to address and track bullying.
The $2 million amount was approved on Tuesday by a committee at the Utah Legislature that oversees settlements.
The district did not admit liability or negligence, or announce concrete policy changes. The statement said the district will continue to provide training “and is dedicated to creating environments to encourage open dialogue and discussions that promote mutual learning, respect and empathy, free from any undue pressure on individual students.”
The district also made a public apology Tuesday and announced a separate $200,000 settlement with three Black students who said they experienced daily discrimination.
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auntblabby
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That was a recipe for disaster.
Children will go after a child who sticks out and being the lone black student and (presumably) lone autistic student means she looked different and acted "weird" so was a huge target. I suspect it was especially bad because Utah, but those circumstances anywhere were not going to go well.
Most children are savage little bastards, even if their parents don't teach them racism and cruelty. They're natural hyenas.
Teachers, even sympathetic ones appalled by that kind behavior, are going to struggle to keep bullying in check because it's a long fight against the nature of children and bullying frequently happens where no adults see it. You have to quash it early and often.
Plus it's Utah.
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