Pro-LGBT New York councilman blasts private Catholic school after student’s suicide
A member of the New York City Council is
inserting himself into a tragic situation outside of his constituency while
also intruding in the oversight of a religious institution.
Councilman Daniel Dromm called for Michael
Long, chairman of the board for Holy Angels Catholic Academy in Brooklyn and
also chairman of the New York State Conservative Party (NYSCP), to step down
from the school board after a student there recently committed suicide, the
reported result of bullying.
The Democratic councilman issued a press
release accusing Long of negligence and responsibility in the child’s death
because of Long’s opposition to anti-bullying measures. He also said Long was
not fit to serve on any school board because of hostility toward LGBT
individuals.
"Michael Long has been negligent in his
duty to protect (the student) from bullying and, in fact, holds some responsibility
for his death because of his longstanding, staunch opposition to anti-bullying
education," Dromm stated. "Mr. Long should not serve on any school
board because of the hatred and malice he has shown toward many groups of
people in our society but especially against lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender (LGBT) people."
"I was shocked to learn that Mr. Long was
the chairperson of the Board of Holy Angels Catholic Academy," said Dromm,
whose district is in Queens. "He does not make the connection between his
style of bullying and how it affects young people. I suspect that Daniel's
pleas were not taken seriously because Mr. Long doesn't take bullying
seriously."
In the press release, Dromm cited Long’s
opposition to the "Dignity for All Students Act" passed in New York
in 2010, purportedly because of its creation
of a protected class for
LGBT students.
Dromm also referred to comments Long made in
2003 that were bluntly critical of segregating students by such protected
classes when Long voiced his opposition to the creation of the Harvey Milk
School for LGBT students in New York.
Harvey
Milk was
the first openly homosexual candidate elected to public office (San Francisco
city commissioner) and was notorious
for his penchant and
predation of
vulnerable, at-risk, young men.
Dromm, who calls himself a “progressive
leader,” is a former public school teacher and chair of the council’s Education
Committee.
He has an extensive background promoting LGBT
issues, having founded of the Queens Lesbian and Gay Pride Committee and organized
the first Queens LGBT Pride Parade and Festival, which he still stages each
year. The councilman also co-founded the Queens Chapter of Parents, Families
and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (P-FLAG), and the LGBT outreach Generation Q
Youth Services Program in Astoria, as well as helping to found the Queens Pride
House, and LGBT center.
Dromm’s torrent against Long, a longtime
political figure in New York who himself served on the city council in the
early 1980s, also included calling upon the local Catholic bishop to remove
Long from the Holy Angels board should Long refuse to step down. And he pushed
the bishop to officially denounce “all types” of bullying, as well as guarantee
the entire diocesan school staff was on board with the decree.
"Should Mr. Long not resign, I call on
Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio to remove him,” Dromm said. "I urge Bishop
DiMarzio to immediately issue a statement condemning all types of bullying and
to ensure that all school administrators, teachers and support staff understand
and take this issue seriously.”
Dromm said he was the target of bullying in
the 1970s in Catholic school and it was “distressing to learn that this was
still going on 40 years later.”
Diocese of Brooklyn spokeswoman Carolyn Erstad
said Bishop DiMarzio has been out of the office and unavailable for comment.
She told LifeSiteNews the bishop would not be in a position to fire a board
member or intervene in board business without serious malfeasance.
The diocese takes bullying very seriously,
Erstad said, and the school has a bullying
prevention program on
which the staff has been trained.
Long told LifeSiteNews that Dromm’s statements
in the press were political in nature and he also condemned Dromm’s
interjection into administration of the school.
“He’s taken a very cheap shot using the death
of a boy to get a headline,” Long stated.
Everyone at Holy Angels did everything humanly
possible to help the child, he continued, and the entire school community was
suffering a great deal with the tragedy, exacerbated by intense social media
backlash and imbalanced media coverage.
“It’s a very sad commentary,” Long said.
“There’s no winner here.”
Regarding Dromm and his public offensive
toward him, Long noted the two have never met, but it’s clear they have
opposing philosophies.
Long said he takes his responsibility for all
of the children and families at Holy Angels very seriously and that for Dromm
to suggest he had some responsibility in what happened “is quite outrageous and
very shameful.”
“We have a public official who lives in a
different borough and county, who knows nothing about Holy Angels, and didn’t
bother to pick up the phone,” Long told LifeSiteNews. “He doesn’t even know the
facts. Why not pick up the phone and find out the story?”
“The councilman has no right to ask me to do
anything; this is a Catholic private school,” he continued. “It’s totally
irresponsible as a public official; pick up the phone before you take a shot.”
Long said his priority now is safety and
healing for the Holy Angels community as it prepares for the coming school
year, and he called for prayers for everyone involved in the heartbreaking loss
of the student.