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Home : News : News : Today's Stories
28 students suspended for morning BBQ
By: SLOAN BREWSTER, Press staff
09/24/2008
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Kyle Sheehan, center, who owns the propane grill used by the students, is seen with seven of his suspended classmates Wednesday.
Kyle Sheehan, center, who owns the propane grill used by the students, is seen with seven of his suspended classmates Wednesday.
MIDDLETOWN - Nearly 30 high school seniors were suspended for two days after holding a morning barbecue on the grounds at the high school Tuesday.
According to parents of some children involved in the breakfast party, 28 students participated and were subsequently told they would not be welcome on campus for the next couple days.
Superintendent Michael Frechette was unable to confirm or comment on details of the incident Tuesday, as he was unaware it had taken place, he said.
Principal Robert Fontaine did not return calls on the matter.
Anthony and Dawn Hinton were among the slew of parents summoned to the school Tuesday morning to pick up their children.
The Hinton's son, Kris, was one of the students involved.
Tuesday evening, some of the group - now known as the Breakfast Club after being so dubbed by a high school security guard - proudly showed off the propane-powered grill they were using before they were ushered to the principal's office and dismissed from school.
They joked about the incident and admitted disappointment they had not gotten around to cooking eggs before the powers that be put an end to the merrymaking - a birthday celebration for Mike Aronne, one of the teens involved.
According to grill-owner Kyle Sheehan, most of the seniors had late arrival and were not expected in school until 9:30, so they met in the lot at around 8:30, set up the grill and chilled, as the aroma of bacon wafted through the morning air.
"We didn't have beer, we didn't have weed, we had bacon," said Eddie Mangini, who along with the others did not anticipate the two-day suspension.
The students asserted the gathering was quiet and at least a football field away from the school, so could not have been a disruption to underclassmen endeavoring to learn.
None of the students expected to get in trouble, they said.
"The reason why we didn't expect it was because it wasn't really even a party, we were just in a small group outside," Kyle said. "A small group talking, not being loud, not being dangerous ... We were just cooking bacon."
Furthermore, students insisted outdoor barbecues are a normal end-of-year, on-campus activity among graduating seniors and said the only difference was this was done at the beginning of the year.
"They do it almost every year," Kyle said. "In past years teachers have been involved ... They would come out and get a piece of bacon and go back in and nobody got in any trouble."
Parents were equally mystified.
"Even the principal said they did it before," Anthony Hinton said. "They were cooking eggs and bacon. We don't know the policy that was broken ... [Kris] did not know that there's a policy against cooking in the parking lot."
Students added they were not warned to disperse or told to put the grill away before being served sentences. "There was no warning," Kris said. "They just came out and told us to go straight in house."
Parents said they believe the children were misbehaving by grilling on school grounds, but wonder at the severity of the consequence. They tried to get an explanation from Fontaine on why the punishment was so stern but were unsuccessful.
"He just kind of blew us off," Anthony Hinton said. "Don't you think that's a little harsh?"
Parent Gary Behm concurred the two-day suspension was too much while Sebastian Gentile said he would have preferred if the suspension had been an in-house verses off-campus punishment.
"I mean they didn't do anything wrong, they were just having fun to have a little cookout," Gentile said. "I think it was right that they got suspended because they didn't have the okay. The fact that they were sent home ... Keep the kids in school and have them do something."
Hinton agreed the students would have better learned their lesson if they were given some community service or clean-up in the school parking lot. However, one day of such chores would have been sufficient, he said.
"Have them pick up trash on Green Street," Hinton said. "Two hours community service and clean up in the North End."
"Most of them admitted it was a foolish thing to do," Behm said. "I mean a detention or cleaning project would have been a more useful and fitting punishment."
Behm fears how the incident will appear on student's applications to colleges.
"I believe they should have it removed from their records," he said.



©The Middletown Press 2010

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Reader Comments
Added: Thursday October 09, 2008 at 10:10 AM EST
Thefacts
I have learned not to make judgements about stories like these unless I know all the facts. Usually schools will not comment on the activity or the punishment so you only get one side of the story. When all the facts are revealed you usually have a better understanding of the whole situation. I'm not saying the school wasn't wrong, I'm just saying that we don't have all the facts to make that judgement.
Pam Robinson, Tyler TX
Added: Wednesday October 08, 2008 at 07:28 PM EST
PATHETIC
I just do not understand why these kids were suspended. If this is the only thing they are doing then what the heck is the big deal? I am very sure that the morons running this school have much bigger problems with other students in the school that should be taken care of then to punish these good kids. If this is considered bad or UNSAFE then what about the people that are at the school cooking food for the games that are going on? IS THAT BAD TOO? OH COURSE NOT, its for $$$$$$$$. These kids were bonding and just having a breakfast, this is the last year most will see each other. If the principal thought it was so bad, don't you think he could have just went out there and said, "Look, we don't think this is a good idea, so just pack the stuff away, and be done with it." BUT no, they have to think they can throw some weight around, (WHICH THEY DONT HAVE, BUT THINK THEY ARE SO IMPORTANT!) I am sure there is no rule written in the handbook stating there can be no cooking of breakfasts in the school parking lot! If this was ok to do before, and with a few teachers involved, then why the big change now? I think the kids and the parents really should pursue this farther, and take it to court. Actually, I don't blame them at all for doing the cooking, I know it's better than the garbage they serve in the public school system. That IS A CRIME! I totally stand by these group of students!
DEBI, Deep River, CT
Added: Wednesday October 08, 2008 at 04:21 AM EST
All I can say is, if I were in charge of the school, I'd be proud that they were so organised and involved with each other to set this up, but as I'd not want it to become a regular event (but maybe occasional), I'd have told them it was fine as long as they didn't do it too often. Seems to me the school rather than the students are in need of lessons about what to value in life ...
Roy Hillman, England
Added: Thursday October 02, 2008 at 12:07 PM EST
I don't understand
According to this article parents seem to be conceding that their children were misbehaving. I don't understand why. Why was this misbehavior? I don't get it. I'm confused.
Thom, Baltimore, MD
Added: Wednesday October 01, 2008 at 10:37 AM EST
Celebrate this behavior not condemn it.
Is it really wonder why our children perform so miserably as compared to other children around the world? The people in charge of teaching our kids are complete idiots. Take the zero tolerance stupidity. How can you inculcate critical thinking skills when you (the administration) don't engage in critical thinking yourselves.
Troy Messer, Kingman, AZ
Added: Wednesday October 01, 2008 at 10:17 AM EST
Cognitive dissonance much?
"I mean they didn't do anything wrong, they were just having fun to have a little cookout," Gentile said. "I think it was right that they got suspended because they didn't have the okay. The fact that they were sent home ... Keep the kids in school and have them do something."

They didn't do anything wrong, but it was right that they got suspended. That makes a lot of sense, guy. And of course all the parents consider slavery a better punishment than just staying home for the day. Teach those kids a lesson through forced labor, yeah!
nicole, Chicago, IL
Added: Tuesday September 30, 2008 at 03:21 PM EST
We did it all the time
Our senior year, we would have a (charcoal!) BBQ every third Thursday in the high school parking lot. And both the principal AND the superintendent attended one (along with most other teachers in the school in rotation, two at each event). Our teacher in the period before lunch would even sometimes let us out a few minutes early to get the coals going! And this was not an officially sanctioned event.

Not allowing it in the first place is ridiculous -- though I can see potential liability issues (thank you civil court system) -- but giving no warning is completely disrespectful of the people who are expected to be next in line to run our country.
Ken Brunell, Ruidoso, NM (then); Issaquah, WA (now)
Added: Monday September 29, 2008 at 05:47 AM EST
Bigger Problems
People are dying everyday from heroin overdoses and all they have to worry about is some seniors cooking bacon? Make then stop cooking, let them know the dangers of what they were doing and the rules they broke BUT no need to suspend them for two days. I've yet to read what rules the actually broke causing the suspensions.
ron jackson, Middletown, Ct
Added: Monday September 29, 2008 at 11:39 PM EST
Throw the bums out!
I would bring my kid back to school the next day and if they didnt change the punishment, immediately ask for their resignation and get the other parents (nice that there are so many of them) and go to the next school board meeting and demand that the punishments be removed completely or that somebody gets fired for being such imcompetent idiots that they should not be allowed to operate a deep fryer, let alone be trusted to teach our kids... Wouldn't even tell them what rule they were supposed to be breaking. Reminds me of the kid that got in trouble a few days ago for wearing an American flag t-shirt, and the next day, everyone wore one, and the school issued a nice apology to everyone involved...
Richard Evans, Varney, WV
Added: Sunday September 28, 2008 at 08:24 AM EST
student handbook
was it in the handbook that could not have a cook out I think not!
chopper.mouse@yahoo.com
Added: Saturday September 27, 2008 at 09:58 AM EST
its all a joke
do you know what the difference between a flower and a hockey mom are?
One has both male and female reproductive organs and the other is a flower.
Butch, Boise Idaho
Added: Saturday September 27, 2008 at 07:34 AM EST
Breakfast Club
No matter where you go , the breakfast club wil appear anywhere ,anytime!The mega hit movie of the 80's have made a movement that will last for many generations to come.
No matter what any school administrator tries to do to stop them , they will appear time to time The spirit of the Breakfast Club will live in our hearts and minds forever and in our school parking lots.Long live the Breakfast Club.
Tom Pullman, Higganum Ct
Added: Saturday September 27, 2008 at 01:11 AM EST
You've got to be kidding.
Aren't our government schools just special? Then the principal couldn't give a reason for the suspension? That school must be filled with over paid administrators with nothing to do. It's just one more reason for home schooling.
Hallett Newman, Ratcliff, Arkansas
Added: Friday September 26, 2008 at 09:28 PM EST
If you can't teach...
administrate. How about just admitting that your school is led by an idiot?
Fred, Atlanta, Georgia
Added: Friday September 26, 2008 at 07:09 PM EST
This is why...
This is why there is so much wrong in the world today... or at least with people. Let's punish some kids for doing something that was good hearted and in good nature. Way to go! Let's teach them that everything is mean and harsh so that when they get older they don't display these acts of kindness towards friends, family, or even strangers. To me it sounds like someone was upset they weren't invited, or the party wasn't for them. Someone is just tryinng to make a point by bringing this down on a harmless activity such as a friendly Birthday Breakfast. What the school wasn't making any money from it so that makes it a violation of code? No warning, nothing, you're gone for two days for no reason at all. This principal must have a great relationship with his students. If I were a parent, I would be wondering what values this person is instilling in the youth of today! Most schools would welcome this kinds of wholesome social activities instead of the late night beer bash.
Jay, Riverside, Ca
View All 85 Comments »

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