Consider this post a follow-up to last weekās, in which we looked at Richard Cipro, an active duty police officer running for City Council, and all the problems inherent in that. Generally speaking, Cipro is riding a wave of resentment against City Hall for the decision to remove cops from the public schools, and heās doing surprisingly well. A little more on that later.Ā
Our main focus today is the School Committee race, which has really been tragically under-covered in general, by bothĀ the whole of local media and myself (sorry). In that race there exists a candidate posing a similar threat to Cipro, riding a similar wave of conservative resentment. But, unlike Cipro, School Committee candidate Shanel Soucy can more easily pass as a regular personāa PTA type, wrapped in a motherly whatās-best-for-the-children affect. Sheās anything but.Ā
In her public-facing campaign literature, Soucy describes herself as someone who can āidentify with Worcester's diversity, but truly understands, (sic) the cultural complexities and challenges our children and community face, not just during the school year, but all year.ā The three pillars of her campaign are ābolstering family engagement,ā supporting vocational education pathways and ācommon sense health education.ā All three are, on their face and to the average voter, sensible positions. But the devil is always always always in the details. A closer look at her third positionāthe ācommon sense health educationāāreveals her true intentions and the true core of her campaign.Ā
Soucy is a key organizer in the āOpt-Outā movement here in Worcester. You may have seen the lawn signs. They read āOpt-OUTā in the style of PornHub and they say describe the cityās sex education program as āpornographic.ā This movement is a right-wing backlash to the cityās decision to finally implement a comprehensive sex education program. It has huge fundamentalist Christian overtones and aims to cast a sex education curriculum which is non-judgmental and inclusive of LGBTQIA issues as grotesque.Ā
The group organizes in part on Facebook, in a private group called āInformed Worcester Parents on Sex Ed.ā Thereās over 200 members. Soucy is a moderator and, it turns out, quite the prolific poster. With a little help from a friend and a little trickery I managed to sneak my way into the group hehehe to see what they were saying and hoo boy!! Itās bad!
āI made the decision along with my son who is in 11th grade today to opt him out,ā she said, referring to the clear and easy process you can follow to take your child out of sex education, which is there for people who morally object to it and should be the end of the story for anyone uncomfortable with the curriculum, but itās not, because the people who oppose this curriculum are not so much concerned for their children as they are with imposing their morality on the rest of the population. Anyway, she continues:
āI have been so focused on the younger grades and hadnāt really looked in the higher grades. I read through last night and I just canāt believe what Iām reading. I also found what I believe to be critical race theory along with all other sorts of beliefs that are not fact based or health for my sons (sic) life or mental state. This excerpt is an exercise, in my opinion, that is pretty much brainwashing, using meditation tactics to undo thinking patterns and then create new ones. What I am most disturbed about is the idea of negative influencers on gender and gender identity. Parents are listed as an option for someone who might be a negative life influencer. Then it discusses how they can reduce these influencers in their life. This is absolutely incredible to me. Iām mind blown.ā
She attaches screenshots of the exercise in question, which is honestly something I wish I had and my classmates had when I was in high school. Itās an exercise about understanding your sexual identity and orientation, and understanding who makes you feel comfortable in that identity and who makes you feel uncomfortable. In the ālesson rationaleā guide for teachers, the author states āOften people will think, believe, or hold attitudes regarding all aspects of life without understanding why they feel or think the way they do. This lesson aims to allow students to analyze how the people, communities, and our personal identities can impact so much of what we believe.ā
Howāreally, HOWāis that at all a bad thing? How is that, as Soucy states, ābrainwashingā and not entirely the opposite? Itās literally an exercise in un-brainwashing? Examining your unconscious biases and how you impose them on other people? Itās a lesson in how to not be a bad person to people who are different and how to understand when people are being bad to you, even if they donāt mean it.Ā
Thatās just a small part of real, good sex education should accomplish. Itās not just about safe sex but feeling safe in who you are and the people you surround yourself in and in the decisions you make. Itās necessary and far more important for a childās mental development than learning who was the president in 1923 or the difference between animal and plant cell membranes. No slight to biology or history but you know what I mean. I see nothing wrong with a curriculum that gives children tools to navigate the awkward and uncomfortable period of sexual awakening. I see a whole lot wrong with people who object to it.
Iām getting so riled up about this as Iām making my case here. I am big mad right now. Letās take another look at how Soucy tries to frame this particular lesson plan. Letās really think about it here. Soucy is ādisturbedā by the idea that there could be ānegative influencersā on gender identity. And sheās doubly concerned that parents could be negative influencers. I got news for ya, Shanel: parents are probably the best example that exists of negative influence on a personās sexual identity. Iāve got the mass grave of all of human historyās children who would rather take their own life than approach their parents with their sexual identity to prove it to you. I struggle to read Soucyās remarks in a way that isnāt inherently biased against LGBTQIA children. Soucy is aghast that a student might come to understand that parents are a negative influence on their sexual and gender identity. Sheās āmind blownā that a student may for their own mental well being distance themselves from oppressive parents.Ā
This is just one of the dozens of posts Soucy is a part of on that particular organizing group. A person who thinks like that is not a person I want to hold power in my city. It is not someone I want making decisions for this cityās children. Couch it in whatever moralizing language she wants, hers is a position that is hostile to any child in the city who does not conform to her narrow morality. Ā
It took Worcester a long, long time to pass the Three Rs sex education curriculum. Past iterations of the School Committee have had enough people like Soucy, who actively rail against Planned Parenthood and aboriton and sex education, that theyāve been able to forestall, undercut and scuttle proposal after proposal. Iāve been covering this subject for a long time, and Iāve got the receipts.
We canāt now, after just narrowly summoning the political will to get a sex education program past the anti-abortion folks, let the board slide back into that territory. It is obviously not enough for people like Soucy to have the option to opt their children out of sex education. They wonāt stop until they get the program removed.Ā
Unlike Cipro, we really have no idea how Soucy is going to track in the Nov. 2 general election. With only four challengers, the School Committee did not have enough candidates to trigger a preliminary election. But the wave Cipro rode to success in the preliminary electionābeating the incumbent, Sean Rose, and getting the most votes of anyone in the contest, small as it wasāis very much the same wave Soucy is catching.Ā
Though their issues du jour are different, Soucy and Cipro both represent a reactionary brand of townie conservatism with a strong presence in Worcester. Think outrage over ācritical race theoryā in schools, cheap moralizing about abortion and sex education, āthin blue lineā propagandizing and outrage at the Black Lives Matter movement and its demands. Think of the recent quickly-deleted post on the Worcester police union facebook page depicting Mayor Joe Petty with a poorly photoshopped Hitler mustacheāan attempt to draw a parallel between the horrors of the Third Reich and Worcesterās decision to reinstate a mask mandate.


These are the sort of people who went to the QAnon rally in Auburn over the summer, celebrating the āHeroesā of Jan. 6.
They live in a different reality. They cannot be reasoned with. They see standard Democrats like Joe Petty as Marxists or fascists or both and anyone to his left as Antifa thugs waiting to break into their home and replace all their family photos with pictures of Peppa Pig dying a horribly violent death. They donāt understand politics and they donāt want to. They just want an āoutsider,ā a Trump-like carnival barker, who they see as outside some vague machine.Ā
Worcester City Hall, over the past few years, has implemented a few modest, well-intentioned reforms. The City Council voted narrowly to replace school resource officers with a public safety plan that does not require the constant presence of armed police officers. The School Committee, after years and years of buck-passing and sabotage, finally found the political will to implement a decent comprehensive sex education program after a decade plus without any sort of sex education whatsoever. These two reforms have, in the months since, ignited the cityās right-wing reactionary townie set, and that anger is being funnelled into right-wing candidates like Cipro and Soucy. On the other hand, these reforms were so tepid and came so late that they havenāt inspired much enthusiasm at all from the cityās left, and the cityās left is already a whole hell of a lot smaller than the cityās right.Ā
Itās entirely possible weāre looking at an election in November which turns the cityās executive boards rightward, effectively nullifying the tepid progress weāve made in the last two years under Petty and City Manager Ed Augustus, Jr. While only a possibility, itās a decent freakinā possibility. There are a handful of candidates for City Council and School Committee running good campaigns that challenge the status quo from the left, buuuut it is historically a lot harder to get people to show up for the polls for those sorts of candidates than for candidates like Cipro.Ā
Soucyās candidacy has benefited from a lack of press attention. Her wingnut views on sex education and her activity in organizing against it have gone unreported, and she gets to face the public as someone whoās merely concerned with āstrong families.ā Whatās worse, her candidacy was lent major legitimacy by a recent endorsement from the local chapter of the AFL-CIO.Ā
Itās extremely disappointing that the AFL-CIO would do this and, in the context of who did and did not get endorsed this year, it reeks of skullduggery. Maybe more about that in another post, once I have more solid information on the endorsements and how they were made. For now something to keep in mind is that District 2 City Councilor Candy Mero-Carlsonās husband, Joe Carlson, is the union chapter president and the endorsements kind of seem like they fall along the lines of who dared and who did not dare to critique the Worcester Police Department.Ā
Anyway, there are a couple really strong candidates in the School Committee that deserve your vote. Jermoh Kamara is the most exciting challenger in the race, and sheās got my endorsement. Sue Mailman would be a competent and welcome addition to the board.Ā
As far as incumbents go, you need to vote for Tracy Novick. Sheās an expertās expert on education and we do not deserve her. Laura Clancey and Molly McCullough are fine. Dianna Biancheria, on the other hand⦠itās hard to overstate her incompetence and obvious lack of grasp on the issues facing the district. She is one of the dimmest public servants I have ever had the misfortune of listening to. It would be great if she were removed from the board.Ā
Wherever the election ends up, thereās going to be a big change. Jack Foley and John Monfredo, two longtime members of the board, are retiring. Assuming all incumbents take back their seat, the challengers who fill those two spots will greatly reshape the board.Ā
If the two seats are filled by Kamara and Mailman, weāll have a much stronger board. If Soucy takes one of the seats, weāre basically replacing John Monfredoāever the moralizing anti-Planned Parenthood type, and a deeply problematic one at thatāwith a younger female John Monfredo.
We need to show up on Nov. 2 and make sure that doesnāt happen.
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I have a couple quick updates on the Cipro situation while Iāve got you here, and itās a real good news/bad news situation.Ā
First, the bad news. Cipro has a lot more money on hand than Rose does heading into the last month of the campaign. Heās got $20,000 to spend.Ā
Rose, on the other hand, has about $11,000.Ā
You will also notice if you read these two reports carefully that Rose greatly outspent Cipro over the past few months and he still did worse. So thatās uhhhh... thatās pretty bad.Ā
But thereās good news! Ciproās ethical situation vis-Ć -vis his employment as a police officer in the City of Worcester is worse than I initially thought. Not only would he be barred by state ethics law from voting on anything related to the police department, he would not be able to review the city manager or take any action related to the city managerās employment. Reviewing the person who hires your department head, it turns out, is unethical. So in reality Ciproās candidacy would be even more functionally useless than we thought. He would still have the platform afforded an elected official to say whatever he wants, though. And we really donāt need that. Not at all.Ā
The strike at St. Vās passed its 200th day this week, so thatās great. Itās getting so bad that the governor of the state is tweeting that they need to wrap it up. It was disappointing as it is telling that doctors at Saint Vincent released a letter this week directed at the nurses, not the hospitalās management, calling for an end to the strike. The letter calls for a return to work as COVID cases spike and tacitly blames the striking nurses for an untenable situation at the hospital. Framing like this should be expected from the hospitalās management, but to see it come from the doctors is disheartening. In a sane world, these doctors would be standing with the nurses and using their bully pulpit to pressure Tenet, the hospitalās management company. But alas, ours is not a sane world.Ā
The thing to really keep in mind with this languishing strike is that the hospital could end the strike right now, right as Iām typing this, if they just agree to give all the nurses their jobs back. The company is refusing to do that. Tenet is refusing to give all the nurses their jobs back, even as a worsening pandemic comes crashing down on a hospital they have already understaffed in an effort to cast the nurses in a bad light. These people are monsters.Ā
Highly suggest attending one of the two community input sessions coming up this week about how the city should spend the $150 million itās getting from the federal Rescue Plan money. It would be nice if you showed up and just screamed āHousing housing housing invest it all into affordable housing!!ā Thereās one on Monday at 6 p.m. at the Intāl Brotherhood of Electrical Workers building at 242 Mill Street and one on Thursday at 6 p.m. at Worcester Tech, 1 Skyline Drive.Ā
On a lighter note, itās been a real delight to follow all the Breenās drama and worship on the āWorcester Eatsā Facebook page over the past couple weeks. Sparked by one somewhat bad review of the dive bar as confusingly named, dingy and staffed by rude bartenders, hundreds of people have been writing in with glowing comments about the food. Breenās is a great dive bar and perhaps the best place in the city to watch a Boston Bruins game. The food is actually pretty good too. Itās nice to see Worcester Facebook be a little wholesome for once.Ā
Iāll leave you with this thought: where would Worcester be if not for its dingy, rude, and confusingly named institutions?Ā