Jaman settles with YMCA, City of Port Townsend

Agreement doesn’t lift ban or admit liability

Julie Jaman, who was banned from the Mountainview Pool in July 2022 after confronting a transgender employee in the women’s locker room, has settled her dispute with the City of Port Townsend, Olympic Peninsula YMCA and four defendants, according to a Tuesday press release from the city.

Named in the suit were Port Townsend City Manager John Mauro; Olympic Peninsula YMCA CEO Wendy Bart; Marketing and Communications Manager Erin Hawkins; and Mountainview Pool Manager Rowen DeLuna.

The YMCA operates the indoor Mountainview Pool through a joint management agreement with the city.

The parties in the suit reached an agreement to settle all claims without an admission of liability by any of those involved.

Jaman and the defendents also agreed not to harass or make public statements, comment on social media or make statements to the media that they knew to be false.

As part of the settlement, Jaman will receive $65,000, paid for by YMCA insurers.

Of that amount, $6,682 will go to the Center for American Liberty for attorney costs and fees.

Jaman will receive $58,318.

The agreement noted that the payment was not an admission of liability by defendants, who continue to deny the allegations in a lawsuit by Jaman’s attorneys filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington on June 12, 2024 seeking the reinstatement of her pool privileges.

In her suit, Jaman argued that the defendants violated her rights under the First Amendment for free speech, and Fourteenth Amendment for due process and equal protection.

That ban from the Mountainview Pool and all Olympic Peninsula YMCA facilities, which includes branches in Port Angeles and Sequim, is now permanent.

The Olympic Peninsula YMCA issued its ban on July 26, 2022, saying Jarman had violated its code of conduct in her interaction with Clementine Adams, a transgender woman and summer camp employee.

The incident captured the attention of national media, including Fox News.

Jaman had originally sought $350,000 in damages, a formal apology and her ban lifted. When the city and the North Olympic YMCA did not comply, she proceeded with her lawsuit.

________

Reporter Paula Hunt can be reached by email at paula.hunt@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Hood Canal Bridge reopens after high-wind closure

The Hood Canal Bridge has reopened to traffic on Monday… Continue reading

TSR 
Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News
Chef Arron Stark gently inserts a piece of king salmon into a hot saute pan so as not to cause a splatter of hot oil. Stark was presenting a cooking demonstration to 35 people on Wednesday December 10th at the Jefferson County Fairgrounds who paid $30.00 each for the privilege of learning from one of the best chefs in the county.
Delicious demonstration

Chef Arron Stark gently inserts a piece of king salmon into a… Continue reading

Mahlum, an architecture firm, has been hired by the Sequim School District for design services related to renovation of Sequim High School and building a new Career and Technical Education building, the Ramponi Center for Technical Excellence. The high school’s renovation is part of a voter-approved bond while the CTE building is funded with grants and private contributions. (Sequim School District)
Sequim schools approve contracts

Projects approved by Public Review Committee

Andra Smith, Sequim Food Bank’s executive director, will take a job in February with the Washington Food Coalition, helping more than 300 hunger-relief agencies across the state with networking, finding new resources and understanding legislation. (Silas Crews)
Executive director to leave Sequim Food Bank

Smith accepts statewide position for hunger-relief agencies

Weekly flight operations scheduled

There will be field carrier landing practice operations for aircraft… Continue reading

Ned Hammar, left, is sworn in as Port Angeles School District Position 2 director by Clallam County Superior Court Judge Simon Barnhart on Thursday as Superintendent Michelle Olsen looks on. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Hammar, Hamilton sworn in to PASD board of directors

Major foundation work complete on Hurricane Ridge Middle School

Port Townsend plan may bump housing stock

Citizens concerned it may not be affordable

Port of Port Townsend reports strong revenues

Staffing changes, job vacancies contribute to net gain, official says

x
Grant funds help teen meal program at clubs

Boys, girls learning how to prepare nutritious dinners

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Budget planning set for boards, commissions

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Donna Bower, left, and Kristine Konapaski, volunteers from the Michael Trebert Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, unload one of the 115 boxes of Christmas wreaths and carry it to a waiting truck. (Dave Logan/For Peninsula Daily News)
Wreaths arrive for veterans

Donna Bower, left, and Kristine Konapaski, volunteers from the Michael Trebert Chapter… Continue reading

Coalition working to expand system

Anderson Lake section of ODT to open in ’26