

By Courtney Tanner
Education Reporter
The Salt Lake Tribune
A substitute teacher who told a class of fifth graders in Utah County last month that โhomosexuality is a sinโ has been fired.
The staffing company that employed the woman announced in a statement Monday morning that after an investigation into her comments โ which have received widespread attention โ it โmade the decision to end the employeeโs relationship with Kelly Services.โ
The woman was working at the time at Deerfield Elementary School in Alpine School District, which contracts with Kelly Services to hire substitutes. Itโs unclear how long she had been teaching there or elsewhere in the state. Neither the district nor the company has identified her.
On Nov. 21, a week before Thanksgiving, the woman was filling in at the school and asked students: โWhat are you thankful for this year?โ
An 11-year-old boy in the class responded, โIโm thankful that Iโm finally going to be adopted by my two dads.โ
Students later said that the substitute snapped, โWhy on earth would you be happy about that?โ And for the next 10 minutes she lectured the 30 kids about her own views, how โhomosexuality is wrongโ and โtwo men living together is a sin.โ She looked at the boy, too, and told him: โThatโs nothing to be thankful for.โ
She was escorted out of the school after three girls walked out of the room and told the principal.
One of the boyโs dads, Louis van Amstel, posted about the incident on social media after his son told him what happened. He told The Salt Lake Tribune last week that he appreciates the girls stepping up and defending his son, whom he asked to identify only as D.M. because his adoption process is not final until Dec. 19. But he questioned why the woman was in a classroom to begin with.
Previously a dancer on โDancing with the Stars,โ van Amstel said the encounter was discouraging and called out the woman for bullying his son. โItโs absolutely ridiculous and horrible what she did,โ he said. โWe were livid. Itโs 2019 and this is a public school.โ
He and his husband, Josh van Amstel, said their son has had two failed adoptions before and was worried that he might not be adopted this month because of the substituteโs comments.
โWe are concerned about any reports of inappropriate conduct and take these matters very seriously,โ Kelly Services reiterated in its statement Monday.
