A New York teen picketed his high school on Monday after being arrested on school grounds last week following his suspension for attending in-person classes on his designated remote learning day.
Maverick Stow, 17, is protesting the coronavirus regulations in place at William Floyd High School in Mastic, N.Y. He was across the street from the school on Monday morning with signs reading "At desks, not laptops" and "Zoom are not school."
NEW YORK HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT ARRESTED FOR ATTENDING IN-PERSON CLASSES ON REMOTE LEARNING DAY
Some cars honked as they drove by.
"[T]his student was suspended for insubordination, which he readily admitted that he was in various media reports," a school district spokesperson told Fox News on Monday. "What he does off of school grounds is his prerogative."
Stow was suspended on Sept. 8. Despite his suspension, Stow returned to William Floyd High School on Wednesday, prompting a police response, according to the school district. When he returned on Thursday, he was arrested.
Stow spoke to ABC7 New York on Tuesday following his suspension.
"I was going to school like students should be going to school," he said. "I think that a five-day suspension is out of line."
The district said that while it agrees with Stow’s position that school should be held in person five days a week, it must follow the state’s social distancing guidelines during the coronavirus pandemic. The district encouraged the 17-year-old to “take his advocacy” to the state’s elected officials.
Stow's parents both support their son going to school despite the state’s social distancing mandate.
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"He's a very smart kid,” Richard Stow told the station. "He knows what he's doing. When he said this is how he wanted to handle things, we were like, 'Then go for it.'"
Fox News' Kathleen Foster, Maria Paronich and Stephen Sorace contributed to this report.