Judge to school: Leave the kid's hair alone
10/24/2002
By JACK PERRY
projo.com staff writer
PROVIDENCE / Updated 3:48 p.m. -- St. Raphael's student Russell Gorman
III can keep his hair long, a Superior Court judge ruled this morning.
School officials have no right to force Gorman, a 15-year-old sophomore,
to cut his hair, Judge Stephen J. Fortunato said.
Paraphrasing a song from the rock group Pink Floyd, Fortunato said,
"Leave the kids alone."
Fortunato issued a permanent injunction against school officials
restraining them from suspending, expelling or otherwise punishing Gorman
because of his hair style.
Gorman and his parents filed suit this fall after officials at the
school told Gorman to cut his hair. They said Gorman's hair style, which
is short on the sides but flows far down below his collar in the back,
violated school policy.
"The rule is arbitrary and capricious," Fortunato said, while issuing
his ruling this morning.
He pointed to Gorman's freshman year at school, saying his hair style
caused no distractions or disturbances. Gorman is an honors student.
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Journal file photo
RUSSELL GORMAN III
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This was the root of the issue: Could the school admit Gorman, with long
hair, then adopt a school policy on hair style and threaten to expel him?
Fortunato's ruling suggested that officials at the co-educational
Catholic school were acting like schoolyard bullies, picking on the kid
with long hair.
"It must be emphasized this case is not about fashion or fashion
preferences; it is about the exercise of power and whether that
excercise is arbitrary and capricious," Fortunato wrote.
Brother Daniel Aubin, principal of St. Raphael's, had testified that the
hair regulations were put in place to promote a culture of calmness and
order, helping the school fulfill its educational mission.
Fortunato rejected that idea, writing the rule is "arbitrary and
capricious because it bears no rational relation to the legitimate
mission statement of the school, nor does it any ways inhibit or enhance
the learning process or order and discipline at the school. In short,
the length of a male student's hair is absolutely irrelevent to the
educational process and culture of calm and respect that the school
wishes to foster during the school day."
Indeed, he suggested that allowing children to question such roles as
part of their educational mission.
"Private schools are licensed by the state to educate children in large
part as they see fit, but with the express condition that they educate
children to be citizens of democracy," Fortunato wrote.
"It would be anomalous indeed if people entrusted with this important
mission were permitted to impose a 24-hour rule mandating a purposeless
conformity to an arbitrary hair code.
"Democracy does not require -- nor has it ever required -- robots.
Children protect themselves when they learn to question authority and
say 'no' to the arbitrary."
The judge opened his decision by quoting a song from the musical "Hair:"
"Gimme a head with hair.
"Long beautiful hair," the song says in part.
"My hair like Jesus wore it,
"Hallelujah, I adore it..."
Fortunato noted the irony that school officials would have objected to
the lengths of Jesus Christ's hair, preferring their students to keep
their hair in the well-groomed style of executives from Enron and Global
Crossing, two corporations that have come under scrutiny for dishonesty.
The question of a hair length regulation at a private school was a
unique case, and Fortunato noted that he made his ruling without the
benefit of previous decisions in Rhode Island.
Fortunato also noted that the decision does not improperly open the door
for governmental meddling into the affairs of private schools. He wrote,
"This decision does not in any way interfere with the curriculum of St.
Raphael Academy, its mission statement, or the doctrines of the Roman
Catholic Church with which it is affiliated."