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WAREHAM – School Superintendent Kimberly Shaver-Hood is suing the town, the School Committee and three members individually for discrimination based on her sexual orientation, gender, age and protected activity.
Shaver-Hood is described in the complaint as a 64-year-old lesbian. The complaint was filed with Plymouth County Superior Court on Dec. 24. The protected activity comes into play because she had previously made a formal complaint to the town of discrimination.
The individual members named are Michael Flaherty, Mary Morgan and Apryl Rossi. Morgan and Rossi are also being sued for defamation, according to the complaint.
Shaver-Hood has been Wareham superintendent since 2013. She filed a complaint with the town on Nov. 15, 2019 alleging discriminatory employment practices and harassment by the committee and its members.
Police said they responded that day to a home at 211 Green St. for a medical emergency.
Two people a man and a woman were treated for non-life-threatening injuries sustained during a machete attack and taken by ambulance to a local hospital.
Police said they identified Gonzalez-Colon as the suspect, but he fled prior to their arrival at the scene.
At the time of the incident, police released a photo of Gonzalez-Colon and sought the public s help in locating him because he was being charged in connection with the attack.
The recent indictment moves the case from Brockton District Court to Plymouth County Superior Court in Brockton, where more serious crimes are prosecuted and penalties are more severe if defendants are convicted.
By WXTK News
Dec 31, 2020
The historic Stage Harbor Coast Guard Boathouse doesn t look like it s going to make it back to Chatham.
The Cape Cod Chronicle reports a deal reached to relocate the boathouse from its current location in Hull has fallen through.
The structure was the home of the Coast Guard boat that famously rescued crew members of the SS Pendleton in 1952.
According to the Chronicle report, a Plymouth County Superior Court judge ordered current owner Michael McDevitt to remove the dilapidated boathouse from a shorefront property by January 1st or face heavy fines.
The town of Hull has been fighting to get it removed since it was moved across the bay on a barge from Quincy.