Education

Lawyer Sides With School That Suspended Student For Confederate Flag Hoodie

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Rob Shimshock Education Reporter
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A lawyer sided Thursday with a Montana high school that suspended a student for wearing a Confederate flag hooded sweatshirt.

Attorney Elizabeth Kaleva acknowledged the competing interests of recognizing students’ free speech rights and preventing disruption to the education process, but sided with Missoula County Public High Schools in its ability to prevent Big Sky High School student Mitchell Ballas from wearing a Confederate flag sweatshirt, reported the Missoulian.

“There are a lot of cases actually where the use of the Confederate flag has been banned at schools and been upheld,” Kaleva told the Missoulian. The attorney, who represents Montana school districts such as Missoula, pleaded guilty to a DUI in February after crashing her SUV off a road. She previously received DUI convictions in 2013 and 2005.

The 17-year-old Ballas rejects the notion that the Confederate flag symbolizes hate and said he wears it to support the First Amendment. He points to the school handbook, which does not explicitly forbid wearing the Confederate flag.

“The school is in the wrong for saying they can dictate me wearing this sweatshirt,” Ballas told Fox News. “They’re saying it’s offending kids and it’s derogatory and all that, but it’s not. It’s my First Amendment right.”

However, the school can suspend students for “disruption of the learning environment,” and Big Sky High School’s principal Natalie Jaeger does not seem to view the flag in the same light as does the student. (RELATED: Virginia School Drops 3 Letters In Name To Try To Erase Confederate General Reference)

“Regardless of the intent of the students displaying the flag, the flag is a symbol in 2018 that is used to express racism and oppression, and that has no place in an educational environment,” Jaeger told Fox News.

She said about 30 students privately said they were scared and nervous because of the flags displayed by Ballas and other students on clothing and cars.

“Tomorrow, I’m going to wear the sweatshirt again, and if they suspend me longer, they suspend me longer, but I’m not going to give in to them,” Ballas told Fox News Tuesday. “What they’re doing is wrong, and I won’t allow it.”

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