Hanna Strong, former Syracuse women’s soccer player, reportedly loses job over 2014 video
Daily Orange File Photo
Former Syracuse women’s soccer player Hanna Strong recently lost her substitute teaching job over a 2014 video that showed her calling another person a “F—-a— n—,” per MassLive.com.
She had been working in the Springfield Public Schools, but Bishop Talbert Swan, the president of the Springfield chapter of the NAACP urged Mayor Domenic Sarno and the Springfield Schools Superintendent Daniel Warwick to dismiss Strong.
“We spoke a couple of times after (Swan) brought it to our attention,” Sarno said to MassLive. Sarno and Warwick “moved quickly to investigate,” according to the mayor, which prompted them to let Strong go.
“That is not tolerated in our system,” he said.
An email obtained by MassLive from Swan to Sarno intimates that staff at Indian Orchard (Massachusetts) Elementary School and residents had worries about Strong teaching at Springfield Public Schools.
In 2014, she was indefinitely suspended by the SU women’s soccer team and didn’t come back to finish her senior season.
In the video, she approaches an unidentified person holding the camera and instructs him or her not to record the video.
“Call me out on saying the N-word, I don’t give a s— ,” Strong said after her tirade.
After the video was posted, she released a statement to The Daily Orange, apologizing for her actions in the video.
Published on January 21, 2016 at 11:10 pm
Contact Chris: cjlibona@syr.edu | @ChrisLibonati
Related Stories
- Hanna Strong, Syracuse women's soccer player, uses derogatory language in video, has been suspended indefinitely from team
- SU NAACP chapter: 'Deeply saddened' by Hanna Strong video
- Dean of Student Affairs on Hanna Strong video: SU is taking 'swift action'
- Hanna Strong's derogatory comments spark campus outrage
- Hanna Strong statement: Women's soccer player speaks up for 1st time since viral video