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VisitOutcome of Nebo District Furries Controversy by 2024
Policies formalized • 33%
Issue fades without formal action • 33%
Legal action taken • 34%
Official school district statements, court documents, or verified news reports
Utah School Furries Controversy: Students Testify, Stage Walkout; District Denies Claims
Apr 19, 2024, 03:02 AM
Recent reports from a Utah school have sparked controversy regarding students identifying as 'furries'—individuals who adopt animal personas. Allegations have emerged of these students engaging in disruptive behaviors such as biting, scratching, spraying air freshener, and chasing other students. Despite these claims, the Nebo School District has officially stated that the accusations are 'completely unfounded.' The issue has attracted significant media attention, with differing accounts about the extent of the phenomenon and its impact on school dynamics, including students testifying and staging a walkout.
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No disciplinary action • 33%
Suspension of involved students • 33%
Expulsion of involved students • 34%
No action • 25%
Remove flags • 25%
Issue public statement defending the decision • 25%
Implement new policies related to diversity and inclusion • 25%
Full Denial of Allegations • 25%
Partial Admission and Settlement • 25%
Full Admission and Apology • 25%
No Response • 25%
Challenges successful • 33%
Challenges partially successful • 33%
Challenges unsuccessful • 34%
Settlement • 33%
Dismissal • 33%
Trial and verdict • 34%
Further legal action taken • 33%
No further legal action • 33%
Settlement without further court action • 34%
No further actions • 25%
Minor policy adjustments • 25%
Major policy overhaul • 25%
Legal penalties imposed • 25%
No legal action • 25%
Civil lawsuit • 25%
Criminal charges • 25%
Settlement out of court • 25%
Lawsuit won by Missouri AG • 33%
Lawsuit lost by Missouri AG • 33%
Settlement reached • 34%
Rule changes to prevent similar cases • 33%
No significant changes • 33%
Increased regulations but not outright bans • 33%
School district found liable • 33%
School principal found liable • 33%
Neither found liable • 34%
Widespread policy adoption • 33%
No significant response • 34%
Isolated policy changes • 33%