Schools

Teacher Sues CBSD For Retaliating Against Him For Trans Advocacy

In his suit, he said the district responded by suspending him in May and informing him that his employment status was under review.

Andrew Burgess taught at Lenape Middle Schoo before being reassigned to Unami.
Andrew Burgess taught at Lenape Middle Schoo before being reassigned to Unami. (Jeff Werner)

DOYLESTOWN, PA — In a federal civil rights lawsuit filed against the Central Bucks School District, a middle school teacher is claiming that district administrators began retaliating against him last year for advocating for a transgender student who was being harassed and bullied.

In March 2022, the teacher, Andrew Burgess, filed a complaint at the behest of a transgender student and his family with the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights (OCR) after he said administrators failed to address repeated harassment by classmates.

In his suit, Burgess said the district responded by suspending him in May and informing him that his employment status was under review. He was then reassigned from Lenape Middle School, where he had taught since 2006, to Unami Middle School just days before the start of the 2022-23 school year.

Find out what's happening in Doylestownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Burgess said new assignment included switching him from teaching eighth grade to seventh, new course material, and an increase in the number of students in his classes.

Burgess said in the suit that he also opposed apparent efforts to censor teachers’ classroom library materials that dealt with LGBTQ+ themes. He expressed his concerns to district leaders multiple times, and, when his building principal sought to meet individually with teachers who maintained a classroom library in March 2022, Burgess, who is a union leader, suggested that the principal instead held a group meeting with teachers on the issue.

Find out what's happening in Doylestownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"When a struggling student came to me, I did what we should want any teacher to do. I advocated for that student, as I had for numerous students in the past,” Burgess said. “That's why teachers get into this work, to support, guide, and nurture our students.

The lawsuit states that the district has violated both the First Amendment and Title IX, by retaliating against Burgess for his speech and for reporting discrimination on the basis of sex. Burgess is represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania and the law firm
LeVan Stapleton Segal Cochran LLC.

“This particular student's experiences had been reported to the administration repeatedly," he says in the suit. "But instead of properly addressing the situation, the district's administration disciplined me and then accused me of the very thing that they themselves had done. They failed to act at a time when this student needed their help and support."

According to the lawsuit, Burgess has been an advocate for LGBTQ+ students at Central Bucks, where he said bullying of those students has increased in recent years. In his suit, he claims his advocacy relating to the classroom library efforts and his support for the student who was the subject of the civil rights complaint led to a disciplinary meeting in April 2022 that included district Superintendent Abram Lucabaugh, who criticized Burgess’s advocacy.

When the district suspended Burgess in May, he said he was removed from the school campus in the middle of the school day, something witnessed by staff and students, which was highly unusual for someone who was not a safety threat. Administrators also confiscated his laptop, ordered him to not communicate with his colleagues, and banned him from district property.

“Central Bucks is retaliating against Andrew Burgess because he helped a trans student file a civil rights complaint with the U.S. Department of Education to address severe harassment that the district persistently ignored,” said Witold Walczak, legal director of the ACLU of Pennsylvania. “Instead of punishing Burgess, the district should be honoring him for being the caring and supportive teacher every student is lucky to have at some point in their education.

“The district needs to be held accountable for its brazen and illegal retaliation against an outstanding teacher.”

“Andrew Burgess stood up for the LGBTQ+ students of the school district,” said Eli Segal, an attorney with LeVan Stapleton Segal Cochran LLC. “And now we are proud to stand up for him.”

The filing comes in the midst of an ongoing investigation by the U.S. Department of Education, in response to a complaint filed in October 2022 by the ACLU of Pennsylvania. That complaint alleged that the district has ignored and even fostered a hostile environment toward LGBTQ+ students.

The lawsuit, Burgess v. Central Bucks School District, et al., was filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Burgess is represented by Walczak and Richard T. Ting of the ACLU of Pennsylvania and Eli Segal and John Stapleton from the law firm LeVan Stapleton Segal Cochran LLC, and Seth Kreimer of University of Pennsylvania Carey School of Law.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.