How Parents Outraged by Library Books, Diversity Initiatives, And Sex Ed Transformed One New Jersey School Board

2

How Parents Outraged by Library Books, Diversity Initiatives, And Sex Ed Transformed One New Jersey School Board

 

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week.

This story is part of a series that explores how school board meetings across the country are fomenting conflicts and controversies that have led to violence and arrests. Are you interested in a virtual event on this topic? Let us know here.

The woman at the podium was 14 seconds into reading a passage from a library book by a nonbinary author — an attempt to prove that the county board of education “promotes obscene material and porn,” as she’d described it — when the school board president Catherine Kazan cut her off.

“I don’t think that’s appropriate,” Kazan said. “There are young people in the audience.”

“Of course it’s appropriate!” the woman, Pamela Macek, countered, raising her voice to be heard over the cacophony of cheers from the people seated behind her in the auditorium.

“Ma’am, you can verbalize your complaint without reading the book,” Kazan said.

“No, no! Oh no!” Macek bellowed, shaking her head from side to side. “You ain’t shutting me up.”

She resumed reading from the book, “Gender Queer: A Memoir,” eking out about a dozen more words before her mic was cut. But still she kept at it.

“If this continues, we will clear the room,” Kazan warned, holding up her palm. Glancing up in search of help, Kazan said, “Officer, please?”

But Macek continued her complaint about books in the high school library. “There are teenagers!” she yelled, loud and clear in the absence of a microphone. “With strap-ons! Giving blow jobs!”

Kazan banged her gavel three times. “Officer! Officer! I could use a little help here. The woman refuses to leave the podium, and she’s being disruptive.”

Macek, a substitute teacher who later claimed in a lawsuit that her opposition to mask mandates had led to her firing weeks before the meeting (she received a $22,500 settlement for emotional distress), was part of a chorus of attendees angered by what they perceived as dangers to students in Wayne Township, New Jersey. One of the eight people who’d addressed the board before her at the October 2021 meeting was concerned that the district’s COVID-19 precautions were overkill — or “hygiene theater” — as evidenced by the use of plexiglass shields in classrooms. Others had bemoaned the mention of abortion in the state’s sex-education curriculum and the “borderline pedophilic books” in the library.

2 COMMENTS

  1. “White Parents Rallied to Chase a Black Educator Out of Town. Then, They Followed Her to the Next One.
    Mothers Behind Book-Banning Campaign Claim Their First Amendment Rights Are Being Violated”

    White parents?
    Was race the motivation behind their protest?

Comments are closed.