Mayor: No proof of teen pregnancy pact
GLOUCESTER, Mass. (AP) - June 23, 2008 "Any planned blood-oath bond to become pregnant - there is
absolutely no evidence of," Mayor Carolyn Kirk said Monday after a
closed-door meeting with city, school and health leaders.
Conspicuously absent from that meeting was Gloucester High
School Principal Joseph Sullivan, who has not responded to repeated
requests for comment after he was quoted last week in a Time
magazine story saying the girls planned to get pregnant together.
The mayor, who also sits on the school committee, said she was
not comfortable having Sullivan at the meeting.
Kirk cited privacy concerns in refusing to answer many questions
about the 17 girls who became pregnant this school year - more than
quadruple the number who generally become pregnant as the school.
Kirk said she and Superintendent Christopher Farmer have been in
touch with Sullivan, and that he was "foggy in his memory" about
how he came to believe there was a pact.
"When pressed, his memory failed," Kirk said.
Authorities have talked to school and health officials who work
most closely with the children and, Kirk said, "The people that
worked with the children on a daily basis have said there has been
no mention whatsoever of a pact."
Kirk said the spike in pregnancies is in keeping with similar
spikes in other cities.
Farmer said there was a "distinct possibility" that the girls
who found themselves in similar, challenging situations later
decided to "come together for mutual support."
He said the Time magazine piece did not distinguish between "a
pact to become pregnant or a pact because we are pregnant."
Farmer also said it was clear some of the girls were not trying
very hard not to become pregnant. The principal had said some girls
gave high-fives and planned baby showers while others were sullen
if their pregnancy tests at the high school clinic came back
negative.
Farmer defended Sullivan saying, "I don't believe anyone has
acted in particularly bad faith here."
Gloucester resident Annette Dion, a 45-year-old private music
teacher, said school and city officials should have done more to
find out whether the girls truly made a pact to become pregnant.
She said denying such a pact existed is "pretty naive."
"I don't think we heard the truth today," Dion said, adding
that pop culture has glamorized teen pregnancy and that movies and
celebrity pregnancies do not give girls an accurate picture of
parenthood.
"My personal feeling, my impression, is they probably talked
and discussed and thought it would be cool to get pregnant
together," she said.