British Columbia

Education assistant with racy OnlyFans account fired for what employer calls 'egregious' conduct

Kristin MacDonald, 35, a single mom, said her work as an education assistant was not paying the bills. Her side hustle — adult model on the OnlyFans subscription website — drew the ire of the school district she worked for, which terminated her.

Kristin MacDonald says she is pursuing a grievance over her termination

Kristin MacDonald of Maple Ridge smiles in glasses.
Kristin MacDonald worked as an educational assistant at Terry Fox Secondary in Port Coquitlam, B.C., and ran social media accounts offering paid adult content for users who are 18 years or older. She was fired from the school in June. (Martin Diotte/CBC)

A Maple Ridge education assistant who says she was struggling to make ends meet has been fired over her second job: posting racy content online, including on OnlyFans.

Kristin MacDonald, 35, has posted titillating photos and videos for about a year under the name Ava James on the website known for custom pornography. 

That drew the ire of School District 43, where MacDonald had been an education assistant since 2015 at Terry Fox Secondary in Port Coquitlam.

The district ordered her to shut down her adult content on social media, including on OnlyFans, in April or risk being fired.

An OnlyFans account page with information blurred.
MacDonald was told her OnlyFans account, which she runs under a pseudonym offering adult content for a paid subscription, had to be shut down. (Kirstin MacDonald/OnlyFans)

She did not. On June 16 she was turfed.

"Your misconduct in this matter is egregious," read a termination letter from a district assistant superintendent, which listed six reasons for firing her.

Among them is allegedly posting material on public social media accounts that "involves the sexualization of the school environment."

It also claims MacDonald disparaged the district in media interviews, linked her education assistant and adult performance work through those interviews, and capitalized on the link between being a school employee and adult performer via her OnlyFans subscription offerings.

"In the employer's view, each of the above six points independently constitutes a fundamental breach of your obligations as an employee and cause for termination of your employment," the letter reads. 

"As such, your employment is terminated for just cause effective immediately."

'It seems very petty'

MacDonald spoke about the firing for the first time in an interview Monday because she had been travelling.

She said being fired was a foregone conclusion. She suspects a TikTok video of her in a schoolgirl outfit may have been a particular problem for the district.

"I feel like they're making connections to, you know, me defaming the education system by wearing this outfit," MacDonald said. "It's so far-fetched to me. It seems very petty."

MacDonald said she and her union have put in for a grievance. Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) 561 did not immediately respond to CBC News' request for comment Monday.

WATCH | Kristin MacDonald discusses 'misconceptions' about OnlyFans work:

School worker dismissed for OnlyFans account says it shouldn't be a firing offence

1 year ago
Duration 0:51
Kristin MacDonald says OnlyFans is part of the evolving face of sex work and puts women like herself more in control.

"There's been a lot of mixed emotions about it," MacDonald said. "Certainly, disappointment and everything. But I'm also optimistic that the process is not over yet."

MacDonald said being an education assistant only earned her $1,000 every two weeks after deductions. She insisted that while on duty at school, she was solely focused on helping students and had never been the subject of complaints about her behaviour with students.

She says there needs to be more attention given to the low pay of education assistants and there needs to be less stigma around sex work. She doesn't regret speaking out.

"I feel strongly that in this day and age, we should be able to do what we want as long as it's not illegal," MacDonald said. "I'm not hurting anybody."

School District 43 did not respond to an interview request Monday. 

In a late June statement, it said all employees are treated fairly and equitably when investigations are undertaken.

"The district does not comment on individual employee matters."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Liam Britten

Digital journalist

Liam Britten is an award-winning journalist for CBC Vancouver. You can contact him at liam.britten@cbc.ca or follow him on Twitter: @liam_britten.

With files from Yvette Brend