Dems Are Ignoring the Red Menace Inside Their Home
After His Candidates Got Taken to the Cleaners, the NRCC Sent Hakeem Jeffries...
Republican Lawmakers Launch Investigation Into Progressive DA for Protecting Criminals
Trump Sets the Records Strait on Iranian Tolls in Hormuz
Turns Out USAID Funding May Have Caused a Lot of Death and Destruction
Take a Guess Why Democrats Oppose Transparency in Children's Programming
Daraliza Avila Chevalier's Work With CUAD Could Be Grounds Not to Seat Her...
The Democratic Party Now Belongs to Socialists
Here’s Who Actually Drove New York’s Socialist Upset
Trump Orders DOJ Probe Into Oil Companies Over Gas Prices That Still Aren’t...
Gavin Newsom Bragged About California's Job Growth. There's Just One Problem.
Speaker Mike Johnson Sounds the Alarm As Socialists Gain Ground in the Democratic...
Will China Ever Be Held Accountable for COVID-19?
America 250 Begins Tonight As Trump Takes the Stage on the National Mall
Another Day, Another Biden Appointed Judge Issuing an Insane Immigration Ruling
OPINION

Wis. Protests: Districts Naming Teachers Who Called in Sick

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Wis. Protests: Districts Naming Teachers Who Called in Sick
(Newser) – Conservative groups are asking for the names of teachers who called in sick during the Wisconsin protests earlier this year, and most districts that were asked have released the names. The Madison School District, however, has denied several of the public records requests, fearing for the safety of its teachers, and the state's largest teachers union asked a judge to halt the release of names in two other districts. Presumably, such records are open to the public under the state's open records law unless the government determines otherwise, the Wisconsin State Journal reports.
Advertisement

Teachers who called in sick during the protests against Scott Walker’s anti-union bill caused many districts to close for a day or more, but Madison’s legal counsel says his district was the only one to shut down for four days, "so the anger and the rhetoric is very heated here” and there have been "a number of threats." One parent was charged with a misdemeanor after allegedly leaving a voicemail on a middle school's main number threatening to "come down there and punch you guys right in the face." But the head of one conservative think tank says taxpayers have the right to know, and adds that "no one really believes that someone would use the information to do something that crosses the line."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement