BEULAH —-- Alycia Haynie had grown weary of high school problems when she swallowed a container of Vicodin and other pills at her family's Benzie County home in October, she said.
"I was tired of the drama," Alycia, 15, said.
The incident sent Alycia to the hospital.
Alycia survived, but her mother, Jenny Johnson, now blames her daughter's attempted suicide on bullying by a handful of her Benzie Central varsity volleyball teammates.
School leaders and others dispute Johnson's stance.
District officials said they investigated each of Johnson's allegations and found no violations of the school district's bullying policy, according to a school district memorandum.
"Our investigation included numerous student interviews, staff interviews and review of video camera footage," school officials wrote in the memo to David Micinski, Benzie County Central Schools superintendent.
School Board President Katherine Ross said the district won't discipline school employees. The school district has an extensive bullying policy and "the board is satisfied with the way our administration and counseling staff has implemented this policy."
We have explored this thing exhaustively and we find nothing that qualifies as bullying," Ross said.
Johnson cited a false rumor that claimed Alycia had a sexually transmitted disease, a story that circulated in September on a school bus, she said, and said Alycia persistently was undermined by a handful of fellow volleyball players to the extent she quit the team.
"Is this bullying or just girls being girls?" Johnson said. "It's bullying."
Alycia and Johnson said her daughter's problems started during a spat with another player prior to the hiring of a new volleyball coach.
"Things haven't been the same since," Johnson said. "It went from team problems the coach wasn't handling to bullying," Johnson said.
Johnson said high school Principal Peter Olson told her Oct. 11 that the school closed the investigation into her bullying complaint. On Oct. 12, Alycia swallowed the pills and spent the next five days in a Detroit-area hospital.
"The psychiatrist told me this wasn't just a child wanting attention ... she really wanted to die," Johnson said.
Johnson said Olson later called her to say he wanted information to help further the investigation.
The district's post-investigation memo stated that officials investigated multiple allegations from Johnson and found no violations of policy. Regarding the false rumor of a sexually transmitted disease, the district said, "Our investigation did not find that either the origination or perpetuation of this rumor was attributable to any students."
Lance Smith, whose daughter plays on the volleyball team, said he supports the school district's findings.
"My daughter was not involved with the accusations," Smith said. "The school board did its job. They handled it exactly according to policy."
Johnson argued the investigation was not objective or thorough.
"I'm very, very, very dissatisfied with the way this was handled," Johnson said.
Latest News - Mobile
Mom says girl was bullied; school says she wasn't
Benzie official: 'We find nothing that qualifies as bullying'
-
-
Grand Traverse officials to discuss Twin Lakes safety
Grand Traverse County Parks and Recreation commissioners will meet at 6 p.m. at the Governmental Center to talk about safety in the wake of Owen Williamson's recent drowning.
Continued ... -
Felon wants a firearm
Convicted felon. Bellaire resident Kent McNeil carries that brand, a label he earned after pleading guilty to kidnapping and extortion in 1988. Now he wants to legally possess firearms, though federal law prohibits felons from possessing guns.
Continued ... -
Cass Road crossing will develop with dam removals
It's time to stop talking and start replacing Cass Road Bridge, county officials said.
Continued ... -
Controversial anthropologist calls area home
Since 1999, one of America’s most famous and controversial anthropologists has lived quietly in a home set far off a wooded road with his wife and a hunting dog named Darwin.
Continued ... -
Tension boils over Benzie undersheriff position
Benzie County remains undersheriff-less as county commissioners and sheriff’s department leaders continue a six-month-long battle over pay and benefits that spurred talk of inter-government lawsuits.
Continued ... -
Kalkaska man gets 100 years for sex crimes
A Kalkaska man convicted of sex crimes against his stepdaughters likely will spend his remaining years behind bars.
Continued ... -
Old Mission named among top coastal drives
Old Mission Peninsula claimed a spot on USA Today’s recent list of 10 coastal drives.
Continued ... - Tuesday, June 18, 2013
-
Man could face 7th domestic violence conviction
A Traverse City man with six prior domestic violence convictions is due back in court on the same charge.
Continued ... -
DDA chief nurtured downtown TC growth
Bryan Crough loved to listen to people talk about downtown Traverse City and how it has become a hot spot for the arts, dining and commerce.
Continued ... -
Officials to meet on Cass, Hartman-Hammond river crossings
The Cass Road Bridge will be replaced after all.
Continued ... -
Clearing the Record: 06/18/2013
Because of a reporter’s error, the creator of the six dogmen costumes for the “Dogman 2: Wrath of the Litter” movie was misidentified in Saturday’s Record-Eagle.
Continued ... - Monday, June 17, 2013
-
BATA plan: Load more bikes on buses
Cyclists who pedal the Leelanau Trail between Traverse City and Suttons Bay now have more back-and-forth options.
Continued ... -
Goodwill to develop food truck
An area nonprofit will rely on more than $20,000 in taxpayer-funded grants to begin operating a food truck that accepts Bridge Cards.
Continued ... -
Downtown leader passes away
TRAVERSE CITY — A community pillar who literally helped shape downtown Traverse City died unexpectedly Sunday night of an apparent heart attack. For more than three decades, Bryan Crough, 59, left his mark on local politics and culture, serving as a
Continued ... -
Light & Power board balks at price of proposal
Traverse City Light & Power board members balked at a $60,000-plus, no-bid proposal to plot the city-owned utility’s future.
Continued ... -
Empire event to celebrate beloved soundman
The northern Michigan musical community will pay homage to one of its own during the Summer Solstice Celebration of Music and Community on June 23 from noon to 9 p.m. at Johnson Park in Empire.
Continued ... -
'Thunder' to roll to honor vets
Members of Rolling Thunder Michigan Chapter 1 invite the public to polish their chrome and join them as they hit the highway for their fourth annual Pure Thunder-escorted veterans memorial ride.
Continued ... -
Northern Notes: Just Mulch gets thank-you
Debra Norman, principal at Lake Ann Elementary School, wrote to thank Scott and Deb Talquist from Just Mulch for providing the school with the equipment and manpower to keep its pond and waterfall operating.
Continued ... - Sunday, June 16, 2013
-
TBAISD to hold budget hearing
Traverse Bay Area Intermediate School District Board of Education will hold a hearing on their fiscal year 2013-14 budget on Tuesday as board members consider whether to spend some of their nearly 58 percent fund balance.
Continued ... -
'Family is our whole life': Raising quadruplets plus two
Since her quadruplets grew out of diapers, life smoothed out for Tonya Lewandowski.
Continued ... -
Program aims to keep tenants in their homes
Charles Alexander sat in 86th District Court and uttered that he'd rather be dead than homeless.
Continued ... -
Acme beach buildings demo set
Acme Township purchased the last of three buildings on its growing project to create a mile-long shoreline park, and demolition crews are ready to dive into work.
Continued ... -
Free fishing day hooks young anglers
Screeches, squeals and screams of excitement could be heard from Northwestern Michigan College's Great Lakes Campus as kids reeled in rainbow trout.
Continued ... -
Fire damages Garfield Township home
Firefighters were called to 4327 Stoneridge Dr. Saturday at 2:12 a.m. and arrived to flames through the roof.
Continued ... - Saturday, June 15, 2013
-
Michigan still reeling out cash incentives
The heyday of Michigan’s movie incentives has faded, but director Rich Brauer lauded the state’s restructured movie incentive program as “very, very intelligent.”
Continued ...
-
Grand Traverse officials to discuss Twin Lakes safety



