Gumleaf
June 19th, 2008, 06:31 PM
05:30 AEST Fri Jun 20 2008
A group of US schoolgirls in the Massachusetts fishing town of Gloucester made a pact to get pregnant and raise their babies together, a report says.
Time magazine reported that 17 girls at Gloucester High School are expecting babies "more than four times the number of pregnancies the 1200-student school had last year."
"Nearly half the expecting students, none older than 16, confessed to making a pact to get pregnant and raise their babies together," Joseph Sullivan, principal of the high school in the fishing and beach town told Time.
The father of one of the babies was a 24-year-old homeless man, Sullivan told the weekly news magazine.
According to the Boston Globe newspaper, other men "involved in the pregnancies are in their mid-20s, a fact that prompted Mayor Carolyn Kirk of Gloucester to ask about statutory rape charges at last month's School Committee meeting."
None of the girls who made the alleged pregnancy pact or their parents agreed to speak with Time, which wrote that Gloucester High "has done perhaps too good a job of embracing young mothers," providing them with on-site childcare and healthcare facilities.
School officials reportedly became suspicious as early as October after an unusually high number of girls began taking pregnancy tests at the school clinic.
By May, several students had returned several times and many appeared upset when they were told they were not pregnant.
A group of US schoolgirls in the Massachusetts fishing town of Gloucester made a pact to get pregnant and raise their babies together, a report says.
Time magazine reported that 17 girls at Gloucester High School are expecting babies "more than four times the number of pregnancies the 1200-student school had last year."
"Nearly half the expecting students, none older than 16, confessed to making a pact to get pregnant and raise their babies together," Joseph Sullivan, principal of the high school in the fishing and beach town told Time.
The father of one of the babies was a 24-year-old homeless man, Sullivan told the weekly news magazine.
According to the Boston Globe newspaper, other men "involved in the pregnancies are in their mid-20s, a fact that prompted Mayor Carolyn Kirk of Gloucester to ask about statutory rape charges at last month's School Committee meeting."
None of the girls who made the alleged pregnancy pact or their parents agreed to speak with Time, which wrote that Gloucester High "has done perhaps too good a job of embracing young mothers," providing them with on-site childcare and healthcare facilities.
School officials reportedly became suspicious as early as October after an unusually high number of girls began taking pregnancy tests at the school clinic.
By May, several students had returned several times and many appeared upset when they were told they were not pregnant.