Parents Sue School After Disabled Teen's Sexual Assault: Patch PM
News
Salem MA
12 February, 2021
3:55 PM
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SALEM, MA — It's Friday, February 12. Here's what you should know this afternoon: The parents of a disabled high school student sued the Dennis-Yarmouth Public School District after the girl's 2018 sexual assault. Two new regional coronavirus vaccination clinics will be available to eligible residents of Beverly, Danvers, Marblehead, Salem and Swampscott next week.The recognition of Christopher Columbus takes another hit as officials get ready to discuss a new name for a Medford school. We don't know who Massachusetts' original Cupid is, but they're definitely from the Worcester area. Scroll down for those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today. Monday's Top Story The parents of a disabled high school student sued the Dennis-Yarmouth Public School District after their daughter was sexually assaulted in a high school bathroom by another student.According to the lawsuit, the sexual assault happened in February 2018 at Dennis-Yarmouth Regional High School. The girl was 16, but had the mental capacity of a 6-year-old child because she was born with Phelan-McDermid Syndrome, a rare genetic condition that causes significant cognitive impairments. As part of her learning plan, she required around-the-clock supervision while she was in school. The lawsuit was filed on Feb. 1 in the U.S. District Court in Boston and lists the Dennis-Yarmouth Regional School District, teachers Abir Zaineh, Susan Hardigan and two other staff members as defendants in the case. The plaintiffs, whose names were withheld to protect the identity of the child, are seeking $500,000 in damages. Superintendent Carol Woodbury did not respond to requests for comment. Today's Other Top Stories In MassachusettsBeverly, Danvers Add 'Pop-Up' Regional Vaccination Clinics: North Shore residents will have two additional options for coronavirus vaccinations next week with "pop up" clinics operating in Beverly and Danvers. The clinics are open to vaccine-eligible Beverly, Danvers, Marblehead, Salem and Swampscott residents in addition to the Salem State University clinic also open to residents of all five communities. Andrea Bocelli Elementary?: Official talks over a new name for the Columbus Elementary School won't begin until next month, but the School Committee briefly touched on some ideas for the renaming process at its meeting Monday. Some members said the new name should reflect Medford's Italian-American population. "I would hope if the name is going to be changed, we would think about other Italian-Americans or Italians that we would be able to recognize and honor the culture," Superintendent Marice Edouard-Vincent said. An example: Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli, whose music the superintendent said she "loves." Central Mass. Cupid: When you buy a Valentine's Day card for your sweetheart this weekend, you can thank Worcester's Esther Howland for the Feb. 14 tradition. Or maybe you should credit Grafton's Jotham Taft. Although people around the world were exchanging valentines long before the Massachusetts Bay Colony was established, the commercialization of the holiday in the U.S. was born in the Worcester area. But there's a bit of a dispute over whether it was Howland or Taft who invented the mass-market Valentine's Day card. 'We Did It!': One of the first people to get the vaccine in Westford was Hartwig "Dr. Hart" Achenbach – at age 99 last month. Now, the facility where he's staying is hoping to help him celebrate his 100th birthday surrounded by the well wishes of the community. By The Numbers 106: That's how old S. Prestley Blake, the co-founder of Friendly's, was when he died Thursday. The businessman and philanthropist, born in 1914, co-founded the ice cream shop in 1935. In Case You Missed It Police, DA Investigating Murder-Suicide In Lowell Mayor Galvin Names Replacements For Two Woburn Library Trustees Melrose Man Killed In ATV Crash
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