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School in dilemma over teacher's prostitution work

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Sun, 21 Sep 2008 12:00a.m.

The Teachers' Council may be asked to decide whether any action should be taken against an Auckland primary school teacher moonlighting as a prostitute.

The new teacher, a mother in her 30s with two children, has been working as a prostitute to supplement her income.

The newspaper, which did not name the teacher or her school, said a parent told the teacher's principal, who was balancing a possible negative reaction from parents with the woman's right to work in a job which has been legal in New Zealand since 2003.

It has been referred to the school's board of trustees, which will meet in committee to debate whether to ignore the issue, discipline the teacher or ask the Teachers' Council to decide.

The woman reportedly told the principal that her action in her own time was not his concern, and that it was not affecting her ability as a teacher.

Teachers' Council director Peter Lind said the most important factor was whether the teacher's second job was affecting her teaching duties, "and there would have to be actual evidence".

Employment lawyer John Hannan, who knew of the case, said a school could possibly take action even if it didn't have a policy either preventing teachers taking secondary jobs or ensuring they first seek approval from their board.

"It's a case of whether the outside employment is regarded as incompatible with the role of a teacher in terms of role-modelling and in terms of any policies that the board of trustees might have in place."

Another employment lawyer, Patrick Walsh, said the council could intervene if the school deemed the teacher's second job was "conduct that brings discredit to the profession".

Prostitutes Collective national co-ordinator Catherine Healy said there were several teachers who had second jobs as prostitutes.

Frances Nelson, the president of the New Zealand Education Institute, the union for 97 percent of primary school teachers, could not be contacted.

Two years ago, an Auckland policewoman was disciplined after it was discovered she had an extra job as a sex-worker.

Police bosses said they would not have approved the job because it was seen as inappropriate and incompatible with policing. The woman kept her police job following an investigation.

NZPA

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Comments [11]

Alien
22 Sep 2008 7:04p.m.

Paulette I strongly suggest you remove your child from the schools, because hey, the teachers are adults, and in their private lives they have sex. What an adult does in their private time is their business it is not yours, and it is certainly not yours to judge. Thank goodness we have laws that make this profession legal, giving these men and woman who work in the sex industry rights and protection, and clearing up the stupidity that was caused by police having to waste time and money and the courts with prosecuting adults doing adult things.

jayne
22 Sep 2008 5:17p.m.

me along with my female work mates think this teacher should keep her job well both of them what teachers do outside of work is their own business what about half the parents of these school children is what they do in their lives made public how many parents have affairs, or pay for sex i mean my gosh how many bloody parents have sex (married) so what this teacher has sex and gets paid for it is the parent who seen her worried her husband is going there..... good luck you have our support.......

mel
22 Sep 2008 4:22p.m.

why do you assume it was a mother that dobbed her in?lol it could have been a father and he could have been going to use her service

Glenn
22 Sep 2008 10:54a.m.

There was no problem and no complaints until a mother of a student found out, and why should it be a problem? Why should one's actions outside working hours be anyone's business? What right has this school got to determine if this woman should have a second job in this line of work? Absolutely none. It is the unfortunate effect caused by the PC world that we live in. Pretty soon we won't be able to take a crap without checking that the smell isn't going to offend anyone first.

Jane
22 Sep 2008 9:50a.m.

I actually feel so sorry for this woman! I myself know of at least 2 nurses 1 lawyer and a trainee doctor who have done this kind of work. Who are we to sit in judgment of this woman? I bet like the other poor sods I know who have done this job, they were doing it to pay off their totally disgusting high interest rates for student loans! Man! I didn't even know such a thing existed till I came here. What s that saying. "easier to point the finger than to give a helping hand" ..hmmmmm

Mayer
22 Sep 2008 9:31a.m.

The time has come New Zealand to face the production of political hypocrisy that lead to the legalization of prostitution and made it A respectable Profession!
Many people are allowed to work two jobs as long as both are LEGAL. So, a teacher, a doctor, a nurse, or even a Prime Minister can work as a prostitute, unless there is a conflict of interest. It Can’t be There is NO place and it is illegal to talk about Morality, Ethics, Role-Modeling, Family Values in this context...Those diamonds were buried when we legalized prostitution. I was taught for ages “Two wrongs does not make right”, But unfortunately, on the first existing wrong – having prostitutes in the streets as a reality that we should accept and protect- we made it right…How can being a teacher and a prostitute described as a "conduct that brings discredit to the profession" when it s LEGAL and RIGHT.
This dilemma is here to stay, till this wrong is corrected. Till the family has the final say on what is right and what is wrong to the society a bunch of hypocrites/politicians. Otherwise, all valuable principle that we grown up with will be down the drain…


Doppleganger
22 Sep 2008 8:50a.m.

This issue is not about whether a person can be a prostitute and a teacher. This is one of those "make your mind up" moments about how our morals as a society stack up. Reading the comments above there are predictably polarised views - for or against basically. If it is to be zero tolerance, beware that you can't pick and choose which bits - discarding a ciggy end out the car window is as bad as being a prostitute in the right and wrong stakes - you are either in or you are out, there is no middle ground. Also the liberals need to take heed that a "smile, be happy" attitude will ultimately lead to civil collapse - civilisations are rarely defeated from external sources, they mostly collapse from within.

Paulette
22 Sep 2008 8:11a.m.

Completely outrageous and very disappointing - I would have removed my child from that school immediately. We need a change maybe some one in government who has children and a families best interests at heart, who understands and can relate to what parents are going through.

Maromako
22 Sep 2008 6:07a.m.

I'm not sure about you, but my Primary teachers played a very influential part in my life. I even remember the name of my teachers when I was five years old and I'm hitting 50 now. I remember what they dressed like, whether they smoked cigarettes, the language they used and yes, also the standards and principles they taught me. How much of those 6hrs, 5 days a week would you like your kids being influenced by someone who sells her body for money? Need a second income? Get a cleaning job!

Maromako
22 Sep 2008 6:03a.m.

I'm not sure about you, but my Primary teachers played a very influential part in my life. I even remember the name of my teachers when I was five years old and I'm hitting 50 now. I remember what they dressed like, whether they smoked cigarettes, the language they used and yes, also the standards and principles they taught me. How much of those 6hrs, 5 days a week would you like your kids being influenced by someone who sells her body for money? Need a second income? Get a cleaning job!

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