The Massapequa School Board is Waging culture wars with our tax dollars at the expense of our children.

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On September 9th the Massapequa School Board passed a resolution denying transgender students access to their affirming bathrooms and locker rooms.

This ban is in violation of state law and the state constitution. On October 15th the policy was overturned. However, when the board passed the resolution, they also retained legal representation from Holtzman Vogel, a large firm out of D.C. with a history of fighting trans rights on the national stage, indicating this could the beginning of a larger legal strategy. As of October 17th, The Locust Valley School Board passed their own trans ban on bathrooms, locker rooms, and sports. Locust Valley has a history of joining Massapequa in politically-motivated lawsuits. They likely know this policy will be overturned, but are partnering on a long-term legal strategy.

The five members of the Massapequa school board have a long history of politically motivated actions, spending taxpayer dollars on frivolous lawsuits at the expense of our children, our reputation, and the trust of the community.

Do you want to stop seeing The Massapequa School District in the news for the wrong reasons?

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For a full timeline of the Boards past political actions, keep scrolling


2020

The Massapequa School District sues Section VIII, the governing body for school sports, to allow sports to continue during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Massapequa is the only school district to file such a suit. The case is dismissed within a month. The judge notes “Massapequa skipped over the appeals process before bringing the suit and failed to exhaust its administrative remedies."


2021

Massapequa and Locust Valley school districts file a joint lawsuit to end the mask mandate. Two months later, the lawsuit is denied. The school spends over $70,000 of taxpayer money on the case.


2023

The Board refuses to comply with the state’s Native American Mascot Ban, choosing to retain their mascot…

…a culturally inaccurate representation of a Plains Indian wearing a war bonnet. Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman attends the board meeting as a "very special guest" and pledges to join the fight. He remarks, to the board’s laughter, "This is going to drive the woke people crazy."


The Board declines to work with local tribes for approval, which is the legally viable option to retain the mascot.

They claim “conversations stalled,” but provide no transparency or documentation.


Massapequa and three other districts sue the State of New York to keep their mascots.

The judge dismisses the poorly-filed case because school districts cannot be plaintiffs against the state. Massapequa spends $45,000 of taxpayer money on the case. All other districts begin changing their names. Massapequa is the only school district in New York that remains noncompliant.


President Trump posts his support for the board on Truth Social.

Spring 2025


A week later, he posts a photo of himself on Instagram with a Massapequa sweatshirt.


Board President Kerry Wachter appears on Fox News, disregards the judicial system and the judge who ruled on the mascot case as “an Obama appointed judge” and declares, “We are a patriotic town and we love Trump."



She actually went on Fox News twice.

The board sends a letter to Linda McMahon asking President Trump to intervene, issue an executive order to protect the mascot, and redirect state education funds directly to Massapequa.


The board hosts a political rally with Linda McMahon in the high school gymnasium during school hours.

McMahon, who is working to dismantle the Department of Education, attends alongside Bruce Blakeman, champion of the Nassau county transgender sports ban. Students scheduled for gym class at that time are requested to sit in the bleachers as an “audience for the festivities”. Frank Black Cloud, a representative of NAGA, a Montana-based Native American advocacy group funded in part by former Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder, declares the event to be NAGA meets MAGA. This event is funded by the school.


A "Save the Chiefs" rally is held in the high school parking lot.

Board President Kerry Wachter attends and speaks at a “Save The Chiefs” rally, where MAGA and Trump merchandise is displayed, sold, and celebrated. Though students are present, this is not a student led event. The organizers and vendors are not students, and the vehicles pictured do not belong to students.

Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino, Board president Kerry Wachter, and vice president member Jeanine Caramore.

All photos from the “Save The Chief’s” rally, held June 7th, 2025, on Massapequa school grounds.


At the urging of the board, Linda McMahon refers the mascot case to the Department of Justice

The board holds an emergency meeting at noon on a school day, giving members of the community notice at 7pm the night before. The Board approves joining the DoJ’s civil rights lawsuit which claims that it is discriminatory against Native American’s to prevent majority-white districts from using Native American mascots at the exclusion of banning other cultural mascots (Vikings, Fighting Irish). This is viewed by many legal experts as a gross misinterpretation of the intent of civil rights law, and this argument has failed in court an every single previous case, including the Washington Redskins and the Cleveland Indians. The cost of this ongoing litigation is still unknown.


The board passes a policy that determines bathroom and locker room access by sex assigned at birth—in direct violation of state law.

Fall 2025

At the same board meeting they also approve a resolution to retain Holtzman Vogel, a large firm based out of D.C. with a strong track record of championing GOP policies. Previously, they represented Governor DeSantis' administration, defending his anti-trans policies.


The board holds another emergency session, designed to reduce community feedback, in which they enter executive session to compel the superintendent to enforce the new policy.

This behavior is not normal.

It is a pattern of escalating political theater that places students at risk and erodes trust in our institutions.

Every school district in New York faces the same challenges. But only one consistently chooses division, conflict, and costly lawsuits over conversation, collaboration, and student safety.

Massapequa has a population of nearly 50,000. Yet only 1,700 votes were cast in the last school board election. For the past six years, board members have run unopposed.

We are organizing to run new candidates in the upcoming May elections.

We believe Massapequa deserves better.

If you want to protect our schools, restore trust, and stop dangerous politicization then sign up!

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