^my link to what is assumed to be the school in question.The Columbus Dispatch wrote: The firing of a gay physical-education teacher from a Columbus Catholic high school would be a violation of a city ordinance if a complaint were filed and investigators determined the dismissal was based on her sexual orientation.
Carla Hale of Powell, who worked at Bishop Watterson High School in Clintonville for 19 years, said she was fired in March after an anonymous parent complained that an obituary for Hale’s mother listed the name of Hale’s female domestic partner.
On the one hand, why would a gay person ostensibly seek to encourage a Catholic education, when at least this bunch of Catholics are so against homosexuals? Then we have the issue of a possible violation of a city ordinance conflicting with the idea that religious schools be allowed a certain latitude as relates to their religious convictions.
For debate:
Which is the greater harm (or good); allowing religious schools to fire folks over their sexual preferences, or to hold that all who are shown capable should be allowed to work (where we 'decide' this school is a part of the city as a whole)? I assume this is a privately funded school, but still contend society has a right to make certain decisions in this regard.
I propose the greater good is in allowing this woman, who hasn't been accused of anything within the school setting, to be allowed to continue to teach. But what does that say about allowing folks to practice their beliefs as they see fit? I'm lost as a cow at a square dance.