Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, November 05, 2010
Consent Decree Entered In Suit By Group Seeking To Distribute Bibles In High Schools
On Tuesday, a Florida federal district court entered a consent decree (full text) in World Changers of Florida, Inc. v. District School Board of Collier County, Florida, (MD FL, Nov. 2, 2010). The lawsuit challenged a school policy instituted in 2008 that only permitted distribution of literature in the schools by outside groups if administrators found that it promotes student interests. Applying the policy, the school ended the prior practice of allowing World Changers to set up a table in high schools to hand out Bibles on Religious Freedom Day. (See prior posting.) Under the settlement embodied in the consent decree, the school will create a limited public forum, allowing all non-profit groups to passively distribute literature to high school students from tables outside of classrooms on one day each year, set by the consent decree as January 16 (which is National Religious Freedom Day). Each table will carry a sign indicating the group handing out material and stating that the material is not endorsed by the school board. Certain materials can be excluded-- such as that promoting of alcohol, tobacco or illegal drugs; material likely to cause substantial disruption, incite imminent lawless action or material inappropriate for the age and maturity of high schoolers; pornographic or libelous material; commercial advertising; or material that infringes intellectual property or privacy rights. Liberty Counsel issued a press release announcing the settlement.