The Rhode Island chapter of the nation’s largest teachers’ union is suing to protect members’ “individual privacy rights” against a woman who has filed over 200 separate public records requests about the integration of Critical Race Theory in her local school district.
The lawsuit names six South Kingstown school committee members and Nicole Solas, a 38-year-old mother whose daughter attends kindergarten. It seeks to prevent the school district from providing Solas with what she has requested through the state’s Access to Public Records Act (APRA), alleging that many of those records contain NEA members’ “private” information unrelated to official business.
Solas said she began filing APRA requests after school district officials appeared to be reluctant to clarify her concerns about how topics such as race, gender, and U.S. history were being taught in schools.
Solas wrote that the school district complied with her initial APRA request, but wanted to charge her $9,570 for gathering the information. The price tag dropped to $79.50 after she submitted numerous “specific and narrow” requests and only asked for digital copies.
A list of Solas’ completed and pending requests attached to the complaint include ones such as “All emails to or from [former superintendent] Linda Savastano containing the word ‘race,’” “All emails to or from Linda Savastano containing the word ‘whiteness,’” and “All lesson plans in which the concept of ‘whiteness’ as a social construct is discussed, at all grade levels.”
In June, the South Kingston school committee considered whether to sue Solas because of all the public record requests, which they claimed to be associated with an unspecified “racist group” and a waste of their time.
“This issue is a much larger one—one that involves a disturbing attempt by a nationally organized, racist group to create chaos and intimidate our district in recent weeks as we discuss bringing equity and anti-racism curriculum to our schools,” Cummiskey said. “This is their MO nation-wide, and I anticipate other districts in our state will soon experience the same unfortunate influx we have.”