Re: Truth vs. Kent School District: Truth loses!
by
Primate
07/01/2009, 1:20 PM #
Sounds like the pledge is the problem. The brief article notes:
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the district did not violate the students' First Amendment rights by requiring them to allow all students full membership in their club.
Since the issue was this group's right to be chartered as an official school club (and I'm not sure what that means), an insistence by the school that "official" clubs be open to all students does not strike me as unreasonable. Obviously, The Supremes felt similarly.
Here's more detail from the Seattle Times which is a bit clearer on the details:
The U.S. Supreme Court declined Monday to hear the case between Kentridge High School and two former students who fought to form a Bible study group that excluded non-Christians from becoming voting members.
...The school in 2003 denied a charter for the group, called Truth, saying its membership requirements discriminated against students who refused to sign a statement accepting Jesus as their personal savior. Truth founders argued that the school denied their First Amendment rights and violated the Equal Access Act by preventing them from forming a group according to their religious beliefs.
Truth's founders filed their case with one major question in mind: Can a school district refuse to charter student organizations that restrict membership based on religion?
Yep. I'd certainly say so. Add this into the mix, from local station KPLU:
But an attorney for the Kent School District says other clubs at the school, including religious ones, don't make members sign an oath. "This group wanted to receive public funds, wanted to be an ASB club. To be an ASB club, your membership must be open to all students," says Kent Schools general counsel Chuck Lind.