Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Sunday, January 05, 2014
Two House Members Object To VA Hospital Christmas Celebration Policies
The Marine Times reported yesterday that two members of Congress have written VA Secretary Eric Shinseki about incidents at three VA hospitals involving Christmas celebration policy. At a Texas VA hospital, a group of schoolchildren were not allowed to deliver handwritten cards with greetings such as "Merry Christmas" and "God Bless You." VA officials say this involved a miscommunication, and that Christmas cards are permitted for patients who celebrate Christmas. At an Alabama hospital, goodie bags with Christmas cards were allowed only to the extent they met the hospital's requirement that only secular gifts can be distributed broadly to veterans. Finally, at a Georgia hospital, carolers were allowed to sing at public performances only from an approved list of songs. Officials said that more private space was available for carolers to sing more religious songs for veterans who choose to attend. Alabama Rep. Martha Roby, one of those complaining wrote in part that she was concerned about "the culture of bureaucracy at the VA [that] would encourage facility administrators to err on the side of suppressing religious expression and discouraging acts of kindness toward veterans." Rep. Jeff Miller, House Veterans' Affairs Committee chairman, wrote to Shinseki arguing that since Christmas is a federal holiday, VA may be violating veterans' rights by barring them from celebrating it.