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From the Philadelphia Inquirer:
There’s a point Ervin Mears Jr. wants people to understand, and it’s the reason he filed a federal lawsuit when his son was ousted from the high school track team:
“Children have rights,” Mears, 68, said, “just like any adult.”
In this case, he said, it’s the right to run.
On May 6, Mawusimensah Mears, a sophomore at Sterling Regional High School in Camden County, was kicked off the team, the suit says.
Eleven days later, his father sued in Camden, naming the coach, athletic director, principal, superintendent, and school board.
The suit says his son was subjected to bullying and harassment. It seeks $40 million plus 2012 and 2013 varsity letters and championship jackets.
The jackets are a nice touch, because if you win $40 million, why not get the jackets for free? Oh, there’s more:
He ran track in high school and the military and said his son “comes from a family of track winners.” The boy was the “undefeated champ” in the 200-, 400-, and 800-meter runs as an eighth grader at a Catholic school in 2010, the suit says.
Eighth grade superstar! And the dad is worried his son is going to lose out on a college scholarship. . .
It’s unfair, Mears said, that his son wasn’t allowed to compete, even though he may have been faster than some seniors who raced. “If he doesn’t qualify, then the clock will say he’s not fast enough,” said Mears, who worries his son may be losing out on the possibility of a college athletic scholarship.
A scholarship? Um, maybe somebody needs to tell this father that scholarship money for ‘Track and Field’ is a fraction of what football players or basketball players get. But the father isn’t done:
“Participation in extracurricular activities is a right,” Mears said.
Not allowing his son to participate constitutes bullying, harassment, and an “abusive school environment” in which the sophomore’s rights to due process and freedom of speech were impeded, the suit says.
Running sprints is now a First Amendment issue? The whole, sad piece here.