In at least three recent cases, governmental bodies have decided to forgo the cost of defending against Establishment Clause challenges. In Lockland, Ohio (suburban Cincinnati) on Monday, officials took down a 10 Commandments sign that has been displayed for several years. Former Mayor Jim Brown paid $1000 of his own funds to put up the plastic replica, but when suit was filed against the village, attorneys advised the current mayor and council that they would not win. In the village, 100 yard signs display the 10 Commandments on private property to support the village's original decision. (Cincinnati Enquirer, 12/17).
In Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, Luzerne County Commissioners took town a creche and a menorah from the courthouse lawn after receiving a letter from the ACLU and Americans United objecting to the display. The the county-owned nativity scene had been displayed for decades, and a menorah was added 20 years ago. The county currently has a budget crisis. (AP, 12/17).
Lake Local School Board (near Canton, Ohio) gave temporary approval (to be made permanent at the Board's January meeting) to change the school district's mission statement. The Board removed from the mission statement a reference to valuing a belief in God, but left in a reference to valuing religious freedom. The changes came after the Freedom from Religion Foundation threatened to sue, and attorney advised that the school district would lose. (Canton Repository, 12/15).