Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Parents, Teachers, Students Seek To Bar School Board From Enforcing Consent Decree

Last May, the Santa Rosa County, Florida School Board agreed to settle a lawsuit brought against it by the ACLU challenging various religious practices in the school system. Under the consent decree, prayers are not to be delivered at school events; schools are not to sponsor religious baccalaureate services; school events are not to be held at religious venues where reasonable alternatives exist; and school personnel may not promote their personal religious beliefs to students in class or in conjunction with school events. (See prior posting.) In a case currently on appeal, a Christian teachers' organization tried unsuccessfully to intervene to challenge the settlement. (See prior posting.) Now opponents of the settlement have taken a new approach. A large group of parents, teachers, staff, students, former students, and community residents, in a lawsuit filed by Liberty Counsel, seek to enjoin the school board and superintendent from enforcing the settlement.

In Allen v. School Board for Santa Rosa County, Florida, (ND FL, filed 5/4/2010), the 308-paragraph complaint (full text) alleges that enforcement of the consent decree infringes First Amendment protections of speech, association, and free exercise of religion, violates the establishment clause and denies plaintiffs equal protection of the law. The complaint also asserts that the consent decree can no longer be enforced because plaintiffs in the original lawsuit, having graduated from high school, lack standing. They can no longer be injured by any conduct of the defendants. In a press release, Liberty Counsel summarizes the lengthy charges in the complaint as follows:
[P]rotected religious expression, such as voluntary, student-initiated prayers or off-the-clock religious discussion among adults, has been criminalized. Students can no longer say "God Bless," teachers must hide in closets to pray, parents cannot communicate frankly with teachers, volunteers cannot answer any questions regarding religion, Christian groups cannot rent school facilities for private religious functions benefiting students, and pastors are dictated how they can and cannot seat their audiences at private, religious baccalaureate services held inside their own houses of worship.

Initially, Liberty Counsel offered free consultation to the school district, but the school district decided instead to shake hands with the ACLU, pay the ACLU $200,000 in legal fees, and voluntarily enter into the Consent Decree that obliterates religious freedom and makes a mockery of the First Amendment.