Ramblin Ray and Judy Pielach find out how Batavia High School fishing team Coach Brian Drendel feels about being inducted into the Illinois Outdoor Hall of Fame.
Ramblin Ray and Judy Pielach find out how Batavia High School fishing team Coach Brian Drendel feels about being inducted into the Illinois Outdoor Hall of Fame.
Big John and Ramblin’ Ray cover Batavia high school, as a woman says that board member John Dryden threatened her and other parents with a comment he made about them on his Facebook page.
Kelly Sullivan of Batavia said she filed a police report Wednesday, the day after a school board meeting where she and two other parents criticized how the district handled a situation involving a transgender student’s use of the sixth-grade girl’s locker room and restrooms at Rotolo Middle School.
Dryden posted on Facebook: “Sometimes School Board meetings are like Mr. Toad’s wild ride. (Enjoy it on BATV.) You can watch me try really hard not to launch myself over the table and strangle an anti-transgender lynch mob. The Board Comments at the end are worth listening to. Cheers Batavia — let’s move ahead, not backwards …”
In an interview, Sullivan said the board was rude to the parents and Dryden’s Facebook comment was a threat. With many commenters, on Dryden’s page accusing the parents of bigotry and discrimination.
“I certainly did not threaten anybody,” Dryden said Friday. “I cannot and would not.”
He stands by his comment. “I watched a lot of people throw a middle school kid under the bus,” he said.
He said the parents’ comments upset him so much he briefly left the board room. And he reiterated his stance in a statement late Friday afternoon.
“In a disappointing turn of events, their bullying tactics are now directed at me,” he wrote. “While I find this sort of thing distasteful, I would much rather their anger and angst be focused on me than directed towards an innocent middle school child.”
Speakers at Tuesday’s meeting said parents and students should have been told ahead of time that a transgender student — a boy biologically who identifies as female — would be using those facilities.
Federal law does not require letting the transgender student use the female facilities and other schools have offered a separate facility for transgender students or have curtained off an area of the locker room for students who wish to change in private. According to district communications coordinator Sue Gillerlain, the locker room has three privacy stalls and a single-user women’s restroom outside the locker room where girls also can change.
The board’s response, she said, indicates it doesn’t care for all students’ privacy.
But Superintendent Lisa Hichens said the district is following legal advice and its own equal opportunity policy. Privacy laws preclude the district from telling parents or other students personal information about another student, she said.
It’s not the first time Dryden has been in the spotlight. When he was a social studies teacher at Batavia High School, he was disciplined by the board in 2013 for advising students they had the right not to incriminate themselves while answering a school survey about drug, alcohol and tobacco use, and their emotions. He was ordered to not give students legal advice and to stop being sarcastic and flip with students. He retired a year later and ran for school board in 2015.
Sullivan wrote to the school board Wednesday about Dryden’s comment, asking what it would do about it.
Board President Cathy Dremel reiterated that the board believes the district is acting legally and “has no role in monitoring individual member’s personal social media or the opinions shared in such a forum.”
Read more on DailyHerald.com.
One of the biggest rivalries in Illinois High School Football takes place tomorrow night as the Geneva Vikings and the Batavia Bulldogs face off for the 100th time. Geneva Mayor Kevin Burns and Batavia Mayor Jeff Schielke both share their thoughts on the upcoming game, and tell why tomorrow night’s contest is a community event.
(BATAVIA) A man had to be extricated from their car Sunday night after it was found rolled over and 200 feet into a wooded area in west suburban Batavia.
Emergency crews responded to the single-vehicle crash at 11:33 p.m. on Kirk Road south of Wilson Street, according to a statement from the Batavia Fire Department.
Crews found the car on its roof with a 28-year-old man inside who needed to be extricated, according to the fire department. It took about 20 minutes to remove the man from the vehicle.
He was taken to Delnor Community Hospital in Geneva, according to the fire department.
The circumstances of the crash were not immediately available from the Batavia Police Department.
(BATAVIA) Five Naperville residents are charged in a string of vehicle burglaries throughout the Tri-Cities area in the western suburbs, and some victims may get their items back, according to police.
They were arrested after a resident in the 600 block of Blackhawk Drive in Batavia saw them trying to break into a neighbor’s vehicle about 3:51 a.m., Batavia police said in a statement.
The group drove off when the resident confronted them, but officers were able to find their vehicle using a partial license plate number, police said.
Police stopped the vehicle in the 400 block of Main Street and found five people inside, as well as numerous items stolen from vehicles, authorities said. They claim the group is responsible for burglarizing unlocked cars throughout Batavia, St. Charles and Geneva.
All five suspects live in Naperville, and are charged with seven counts each of felony burglary to a motor vehicle, police said. They include:
• Christine L. Flood, 19, of the 1000 block of Mill Street;
• Amanda E. Gonzalez, 20, of the 1100 block of North Mill Street;
• Julian P. Pecoraro, 19, of the 500 block of Cassen Road;
• Brennan M. Rafferty, 19, of the 700 block of Benedetti Drive; and
• Austin J. Smith, 21, of the 1800 block of Hilltop Court.
All five were taken to the Kane County Jail and will appear in court for a bond hearing Saturday, police said.
Police have recovered a large quantity of stolen items in the case. Anyone who had items stolen from their vehicles should contact their local police department to file a report.
The investigation is ongoing as additional victims come forward to claim their belongings, police said.
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