ST. LOUIS COUNTY, Mo. — A Missouri substitute teacher has been banned from his former school all because he said he thanked students who stood for the Pledge of Allegiance.
Jim Furkin says he's been a substitute teacher for the St. Louis County, Missouri, school district for about 10 years.
[ [Teacher: School banned him after he thanked students for saying Pledge of Allegiance] ]
[ [Atlanta school eliminates morning Pledge of Allegiance recitation] ]
He’s filled in at Parkway South almost daily for the past five years, until now.
Furkin says 22 of 24 students he was teaching stood during the Pledge of Allegiance, and he thanked them.
“So I say, 'Thank you very much, all of you that participated. I appreciate that, and I'm sure all of those families that lost loved ones so we could have the freedoms we have today would appreciate that, too.’” Furkin said. “That's what I said."
School officials said his actions were a form of bullying to at least one student who didn’t stand.
District officials said Furkin can’t teach anymore at Parkway South, but he can teach at other schools in the district.
He said he will pass on the offer.
“Yeah, I've had enough, and it's a shame,” Furkin said. “That's what I'm going to miss. I'm going to miss the kids."
In a letter home to parents and staff, the school superintendent said the pledge incident was not the only factor in Furkin being banned from Parkway South, but they didn’t elaborate because it was a “personal matter.”
Read more top trending stories on wsoctv.com:
- Health officials: Strain of food poisoning caused illness at Cabarrus Co. church BBQ
- FBI works tirelessly to find teen abducted from Lumberton home
- North Carolina man's runny nose turns out to be leaking brain fluid
- WATCH: Jaclyn Shearer's Saturday forecast outlook
- CMPD: Woman escapes after carjacked at south Charlotte ATM, choked