HS suspends teen who tweeted photo of hallway packed with maskless students

A photo of high school students in a hallway between classes, with kids packed closely together and many not wearing masks.
Enlarge / Photo from North Paulding High School, tweeted by student Hannah Watters on Tuesday.

A 15-year-old high school student who posted a viral photo of a crowded school hallway says the school suspended her for five days for allegedly violating a social-media policy. But the school has since backed down and lifted the suspension.

Hannah Watters, a student at North Paulding High School in Dallas, Georgia, posted a photo to Twitter on Tuesday, noting the “jammed” hallways and “10 percent mask rate.” Her tweet received 1,800 retweets and 4,500 likes. She also posted a 10-second video of a hallway at the 2,000-student school and says she was suspended around noon the next day.

“The policies I broke stated that I used my phone in the hallway without permission, used my phone for social media, and posting pictures of minors without consent,” Watters said, according to a BuzzFeed article. Watters called her actions “good and necessary trouble”—an apparent reference to a John Lewis quote—saying she is worried about the safety of students, faculty, and staff as the school reopens despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Her mother, Lynne Watters, said “the family is challenging the suspension,” according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Cell phone use is allowed in between classes and the sophomore waited until after regular school hours to post to social media, her mother said in a text message. ‘I feel they are selectively enforcing the rule in question,’ she wrote, adding that Hannah has never been in trouble at school.”

The newspaper article said one other student was suspended from the school for the same reason but didn’t name the other student. We contacted the school district today and will update this article if we get a response.

Watters’ appeal was apparently successful. “This morning my school called and they have deleted my suspension,” Hannah Watters tweeted this morning. “To everyone supporting me, I can’t thank you enough.”

State Schools Superintendent Richard Woods said in a statement today that “discipline decisions are constitutionally the purview of local boards of education,” but he encouraged “districts and schools to operate with transparency, and to ensure that students and staff are not penalized for expressing their concerns,” according to the Journal-Constitution article. The newspaper also quoted Dr. Harry Heiman, clinical associate professor at Georgia State University’s School of Public Health, as saying that the hallway photo showed “exactly the kind of situation that school planning should ensure doesn’t happen.”

“It’s not a question of if that’s going to cause spread of the pandemic. It’s only a question of how quickly and to how many people,” Heiman said. Some members of the school football team had already tested positive for COVID-19 before the school reopened.

District: Photo looks bad but is missing “context”

In a leaked audio recording, North Paulding High School Principal Gabe Carmona was heard warning students of “consequences” for posting photos or video “on social media that is negative in our light without permission.”

Paulding County School District Superintendent Brian Otott wrote a message about one of the viral photos to parents Tuesday night, saying that “some in the news media and some individuals on social media are taking this photo and using it without context to criticize our school reopening efforts.” Class changes are difficult, and the school district is “continuing to work… to find practicable ways to further limit students from congregating,” but “students are in this hallway environment for just a brief period as they move to their next class,” he wrote.

Otott admitted that “the photo does not look good,” but he called it “unfortunate that in this day and age of instant communication these types of issues can escalate so quickly without sufficient context.” While many students were shown without masks, he wrote that “wearing a mask is a personal choice and there is no practical way to enforce a mandate to wear them.” Otott’s note to parents was published by TMZ.

Otott’s note also said that during this first week of school, students are going in person from Monday to Wednesday and “learning remotely on Thursday and Friday so that all of our schools can step back and assess how things are going so far.” The Thursday/Friday closure means that Watters did not miss a full day of in-person instruction.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp on July 15 issued an executive order stating that cities and towns cannot impose mask-wearing requirements, and he sued Atlanta in an attempt to overturn the city’s mask mandate. Despite that, Atlanta is imposing a mask mandate in schools as well. Atlanta and the governor are in settlement talks.

https://arstechnica.com/?p=1697456