By Kate Anderson | Campus Reform
A former professor at the University of Southern Maine
Patricia Griffin filed a lawsuit, Griffin
v. University of Maine System, University of Southern Maine, Glenn Cummings, on
July 14 after being fired in 2021 over the university’s mask mandate.
Griffin, a former professor of
marketing, claims that the university fired her after she requested
data that would support the university’s mask mandate.
According to the lawsuit, Griffin attended a luncheon in
August 2021 remotely that then-President Glenn Cummings attended in person.
Griffin claimed that Cummings was not adhering to the mask policy which
prompted her to request the data responsible for the policy.
After making her request, Griffin’s classes were removed
from the fall 2021 schedule. She was scheduled for a disciplinary hearing on
August 27, 2021.
After the hearing, Griffin allegedly received a letter from
Cummings accusing her of failing to adhere to the mask mandate and that she was
suspended. Griffin was fired on September 22.
Campus Reform spoke to
Griffin’s attorney, Stephen Smith,
regarding the lawsuit. He told Campus Reform the claim that
Griffin did not obey the mask mandate was “simply not true.”
“She was fired under the pretense and pretext that she
didn’t, that she wouldn’t obey the mask mandates," Smith stated.
"That’s simply not true. She simply asked for information about
them.”
Smith said that while Griffin didn’t believe in the mask
mandates, she didn’t break them.
"I think it is fair to say she did not believe in the
mask mandates, but she had never made a statement that she would not obey the
mask mandates," Smith said. "She simply was challenging the
assumptions and requesting information."
According to Smith, the school never provided any
information Griffin requested to support the mandates.
No comments:
Post a Comment