This is a horrible situation no matter how you look at it. I worked with victims of domestic violence for almost 10 years and the most dangerous time for the victim is when they finally leave for good. This woman finally did , and her abuser did what many do; set about to systematically terrify and destroy her life. More than likely when she left her promised her he would do so, most do. He was at least partially successful. She was honest about her situation with the school, so when he showed up they could protect the students. She lost her job to protect the same students.
My sister is a teacher, and most teacher’s are on year to year contracts, not having your contract renewed is the equivalent of being fired and at least in the public school system difficult to do. It is hard not to renew renew even bad teacher’s contracts, even in right to work states like Texas, so to treat this situation as though this teacher hasn’t been fired would be less than honest. In addition, I am not sure the school can legally not renew her contract because of her husband’s actions. It seems to me the school handled him showing up well, they also could not be expected to do so , or to require the children enrolled there to live in fear of this occurring on a regular basis.
Maybe the school should have waited to see if their standing up to him worked. They did call the police,have him arrested, and he is in jail. If the school had issued a criminal trespass warning while he was there, gotten their own order , and already shown they were willing to stand up to the abuser there is a relatively high likelihood he would have stayed away from his wife at the school. Abusers tend to be bullies, and bullies tend to be cowards. My biggest problem with the school’s actions is that they acted too hastily. They tried nothing else, and victimized a woman who spent 20 years gaining the courage to walk away from a violent spouse.
For those who think that it would be easy to suspend an abusive husband’s visitation, it isn’t. Time and time again I saw abusers granted unfettered visitation, by judges, the logic being that the abuser hit the spouse not the child. They would usually have to trade the kids off in a safe and supervised situation but never did I see a spousal abuser lose visitation.
I am not a lawyer, I was a social worker who worked almost exclusively within the court system.