Saturday, April 6, 2013
Saturday, April 6, 2013
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Discrimination lawsuit filed against Turkish-run charter school

A former English teacher at Truebright Science Academy Charter School has filed a civil rights suit alleging the Turkish-run charter discriminated against employees based on gender and national origin.

Regenna A. Jalon, who worked at the North Philadelphia school for four years, said in a complaint filed in U.S. District Court in late February that the school engaged in a pattern of hiring, promoting and paying less-qualified Turkish nationals more than American-born educators who were certified and had more experience.

A Truebright attorney said the school denied any wrongdoing when the suit surfaced during a hearing Thursday on the charter school's renewal.

Jalon was one of at least nine Truebright staffers who filed initial discrimination complaints with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 2011. She filed her suit in federal court after the EEOC issued a letter in January that said she could proceed with a lawsuit.

Truebright, which is one of more than 130 charter schools across the country linked to a controversial Turkish imam, is fighting to remain open. The school is being reviewed by the district on whether its charter should be renewed. A hearing will resume on April 26.

Truebright's board, top administrators and a third of its teachers are Turkish. Many of them are working in the United States on nonimmigrant visas.

Jalon's suit contends Truebright engaged in "a concerted effort to deprive" non-Turkish staffers of the ability to earn as much as the Turkish male employees.

The complaint also charges that Jalon was abruptly demoted from the post of English department chair in late August two days after she testified at the charter-renewal hearing.

According to the suit, Truebright officials retaliated against Jalon after learning at the hearing that she had filed complaints with the district and the state Department of Education in 2011 outlining alleged improprieties at the school.

During Thursday's hearing, a district lawyer attempted to introduce the suit as evidence to support the School Reform Commission's contention that Truebright's board had failed to address concerns of parents and staff, including discriminatory employment practices.

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Brian H. Leinhauser, Truebright's attorney argued that Jalon's complaint was not relevant to the charter's renewal and should not be admitted.

"The inclusion of mere allegations is extraordinarily prejudicial to my client," Leinhauser told Phinorice J. Boldin, the hearing officer.

He added: "The school denies any wrongdoing."

Boldin, an outside attorney who is serving as the district's hearing officer, said she would take the matter under advisement.

The hearing stems from Truebright's appeal of a vote last spring by the School Reform Commission not to renew its operating charter on 18 grounds, including poor academic performance and lack of certified teachers.

After the hearing is over, Boldin will send a report to the SRC, which will take a final vote on whether to renew the school's operating charter.

 


Contact Martha Woodall at 215-854-2789 or martha.woodall@phillynews.com

Martha Woodall INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
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Comments  (11)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:54 PM, 04/05/2013
    Not only are charters get rid of lazy union teachers they are replace all American Teaches. God knows the students in the hood need Turkish role models. Go Charters!!
    poogie
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:08 PM, 04/05/2013
    charters are the free market answer to public education!!
    and thats why they are fraught with corruption, ineptitude.................
    BACKWARD!!!
    the lopez!
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:02 PM, 04/05/2013
    You mean the U.S. isn't the Middle East?!
    Selhafeh
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:38 AM, 04/06/2013
    truebright, edison. you decide. when you see the alternative this troubled charter, you see why even a school opened by the devil himself would be attractive to some parents.
    pointguard
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:19 AM, 04/06/2013
    Wow, this case must be a real dilemma for liberals. African Americans vs. Middle Eastern immigrants.
    catwalks
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:29 AM, 04/06/2013
    Only in America could our tax dollars fund this kind of S*&T
    callitlikeiseethem
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:29 AM, 04/06/2013
    Only in America could our tax dollars fund this kind of S*&T
    callitlikeiseethem
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:39 AM, 04/06/2013
    What this report fails to include is that the reason the Turkish nationals are paid more (funded by American taxpayers) than their American colleagues is because they are expected to send the extra money home to fund a religious movement in Turkey run by the Gulen family.

    This is much more than corruption. This is a scam that uses our visa laws and our charter school laws to open up a whole new funding source for a religious organization in a foreign country.

    Gendres
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:49 AM, 04/06/2013
    Here is a source that explains how this chain of charter schools uses our tax money to fund a Muslim based organization in Turkey called the Gulen Movement:
    http://gulencharterschools.weebly.com/

    And, Point, in case you really want to sound silly promoting Truebright, their graduation rate is 48%, only on point higher than an alternative charter school for discipline problems.

    Time to close all Gulen schools and send their scam artists packing.



    Gendres
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:40 AM, 04/06/2013
    Another fiasco brought to you by the School District of Philadelphia.
    Boru
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:12 AM, 04/06/2013
    This is a well and long known scam. I was in Turkey and people there told me about this scam. The school board should be in jail.
    Doug R