Title: Girl expelled after suing school to be on boys' basketball team Source:
New York Post URL Source:http://nypost.com/2017/02/02/girl-e ... to-be-on-boys-basketball-team/ Published:Feb 2, 2017 Author:Kevin Kernan and Joe Tacopino Post Date:2017-02-02 13:22:12 by Hondo68 Keywords:St. Theresa, Catholic school, NJ State, Interscholastic Athletic Assoc Views:3111 Comments:5
SEE ALSO
Sydney Phillips Richard Harbus
The New Jersey seventh-grader whose family sued the Catholic school that refused to let her play basketball on the boys team was abruptly expelled from her middle school Wednesday.
The parents of 12-year-old Sydney Phillips were sent a letter from an Archdiocese of Newark lawyer saying that both Sydney and her sister Kaitlyn should not attend St. Theresa tomorrow morning or any day thereafter.
Im furious, the girls dad, Scott Phillips, said Wednesday night. This is unbelievable. We just wanted her to play basketball.
When the Kenilworth school nixed that idea, her dad took legal action against the archdiocese and St. Theresa. St. Theresa School in Kenilworth, NJRichard Harbus
Apparently the school charter maintains that it can boot a student whose family brings a suit against it.
The Phillips family learned of the shocking decision at a training facility for the WNBAs New York Liberty, where Sydney had been invited to watch the professional womens team practice.
I am disgusted. How dare them? What did Katy do? What did Sydney do? Scott asked. I dont know what were going to do next, but were still going to fight.
Last month, a New Jersey judge denied Sydneys request to force St. Theresa to let her play, claiming there was just not enough evidence to upend the status quo.
The school reportedly is protected from bias claims because of its religious status.
However, the family filed an appeal that claims the archdioceses athletic leagues are actually governed by the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association.
The rules for that association clearly state that girls should be allowed to try out for a boys team when theres no comparable girls team.
However, an association spokesperson told The Post that the ruling applies only to high school students.
A lawyer for the archdiocese did not immediately return requests for comment Wednesday night.
No, you just wanted her to play basketball on the middle school boy's basketball team.
If you just wanted her to play basketball, she could go to a local park or to a school that has a girls basketball team.
She does not have an enforceable right to attend this private school.
The Phillips family learned of the shocking decision at a training facility for the WNBAs New York Liberty, where Sydney had been invited to watch the professional womens team practice.
It was only shocking because they failed to observe Allen's Axiom: When all else fails, read the instructions.
As for the school, let us assume the star of the boy's team is a budding man-child reminiscent of LeBron James, and he comes down with an elbow on the snowflake's head or shoulder, causing physical pain, physical damage, and emotional distress. There would be another lawsuit. How much would the school need to pay for added insurance for voluntarily permitting a 12-year old girl to play among the trees?
Christopher Westrick, an attorney for the Archdiocese and the school, said the school had offered to let Sydney play for a girls team at a neighboring school, but the parents wanted her to play at St. Theresa's.
The school said that the parents missed the deadline for filing their daughter's application to play on the girls team. Also, school officials said that in late October there were not enough girls who applied for the team, so it was dropped.
Scott Phillips countered that parents were never given a deadline for submitting applications to join the team, and that in past years the girls team had been organized in late November, just before the season started.
---it's quite a shock that the ruling judge (Kessler) actually went against another judge's wishes...yes, Ms. [Theresa E. Mullen, Sydney Phillips' mother, is a Superior Court judge in Union County. Given how the legal community looks out for each other, this is quite a pleasant surprise...
---but then there's this idiocy from the parents' lawyer: "McCrea said there were just six games left in the season for the boys team. She repeatedly told the judge that the team had not been successful in recent seasons and that Sydney Phillips could help the team."
First, if there's only 6 games left, what difference would it make?
Second, why are they so obsessed with winning at a 7th grade level? At that age, shouldn't it be about having fun and learning how to play?