11 Jan 12th–Jan 18th, 2023 phoenixnewtimes.com phoenix new Times | cONTeNTs | feeDBacK | OPiNiON | NeWs | feaTuRe | NighT+Day | culTuRe | film | cafe | music | Valley Christian Schools, declined to discuss the lawsuit with Phoenix New Times. McDorman, through attorney Krista Robinson, also would not comment. In November 2021, McDorman began to butt heads with the school’s leadership over its treatment of LGBTQ students when an unnamed Valley Christian High School student — called Jane Doe in the lawsuit — came out on social media as pansexual. Specifically, he clashed with Principal Josh LeSage, a former education official in Louisiana who joined VCS in 2020. On November 1, after LeSage learned of Jane Doe’s identity shortly, he called a staff meeting and said that teachers and staff supportive of LGBTQ students were “like a cancer that needed to be removed from VCS.” At another staff meeting a few days later, McDorman spoke out about the discrimination at the school. LeSage informed staff in an email that he planned to meet with Jane Doe — without her parents present — to speak with her about her sexual orientation. In the email, according to a copy in the complaint, he called the idea that LGBTQ people could also be Christians “a hideous lie” and “so offensive.” “Right now we have a faculty member … who supposedly suggested in a meeting today that we invite a pastor of a local gay- friendly church to come and speak to our faculty to help us better understand this lifestyle and better minister to those kids we may have,” LeSage wrote. “Hell no! We are not doing that.” Lawsuit: Principal Called Student ‘Sinful’ McDorman was fired on November 9, 2021, which was a day after he confronted LeSage again and requested that the prin- cipal not meet with Jane Doe without her parents present. The meeting with Jane Doe, however, proceeded. The student recorded the hours-long meeting between her, LeSage, and Chizzy Anderson, the school’s supposed “student health and wellness coordinator.” The two called the student “sinful” and said that “same-sex relations are an abomination to God,” according to the lawsuit. Neither LeSage nor Anderson responded to emails from New Times seeking comment. By firing McDorman, the school discriminated against him for his own reli- gious beliefs, his attorney argued. “The school fired him because his Christian faith includes acceptance for all LBGT persons, and he does not tolerate hostility or discrimination against them, especially the school’s students,” Robinson wrote in a press release Wednesday. Valley Christian Schools, which began as a single high school in Tempe in 1982, has about 900 students across its three campuses. It calls itself Arizona’s “fastest growing Christian school.” The school is a private, religious institu- tion — a status that helps evade lawsuits brought under Title IX, which prohibits sex-based discrimination for publicly funded schools. But in April 2020, VCS accepted a $1 million federal Paycheck Protection Program loan, according to the lawsuit. The federal funding could make VCS vulnerable to Title IX claims, such as McDorman’s. And VCS does not hide its views on gender and sexuality. In a screed under the “Foundational Positions” section of its website, VCS writes, among other things, that “rejection of one’s biological gender is a rejection of the image of God within that person” and “any form of sexual immorality … is sinful and offensive to God” and could result in a student’s expulsion. Valley Christian Schools has yet to file a response to the complaint in court. | NEWS | Matt Hennie Hostile from p 8 A teacher at Valley Christian High School in Chandler said he was fired after objecting to the mistreatment of an LGBTQ student by school officials.