FFRF persuades N.C. sheriff to drop religion from summer camp

Dare County
 
A North Carolina sheriff has listened to the Freedom From Religion Foundation and made secular a summer camp that his department operates.

Several county residents had reported to the national state/church watchdog that the Dare County Sheriffā€™s Office was planning to hold a ā€œfaith basedā€ camp (as the Sheriffā€™s Officeā€™s official Facebook page had been declaring it) for children during the summer called ā€œCamp S.A.L.T.ā€ The camp, which has been run by the Sheriffā€™s Office for many years, included religious worship. 

ā€œKids will pray and thank God for the day, that nobody got hurt. Itā€™s amazing to hear what these kids actually pray for,ā€ Dare County Sheriff Doug Doughtie told a local paper. ā€œThey pray for each other ā€” thatā€™s the amazing part. They know whatā€™s going on, they pray about health, even at the young age that they are.ā€ 

The Dare County Sheriffā€™s Officeā€™s endorsement of religion posed serious constitutional concerns, FFRF emphasized. 

ā€œThe Establishment Clause of the First Amendment prohibits the government from hosting or endorsing religious events or activities,ā€ FFRF Staff Attorney Chris Line wrote to Doughtie. ā€œBy hosting a ā€˜faith basedā€™ camp that includes religious worship, the Sheriffā€™s Office creates the appearance that it endorses religion.ā€ 

Minority religious and nonreligious citizens should not be made to feel excluded, like outsiders in their own community, because the Sheriffā€™s Office that they support with their taxes oversteps its power by hosting a faith-based event for the countyā€™s children, FFRF stressed, and asked that the Sheriffā€™s Office immediately end all government-sponsored religious activities or worship events from the camp and cease advertising it as ā€œfaith based.ā€ 

The sheriff took heed of FFRFā€™s exhortation. As ā€œFriendly Atheistā€ Hemant Mehta writes (emphasis his): The sheriff listened.

Mehta adds that Doughtie posted a message on Facebook explaining why his camp would drop the faith aspect:

A statement from one of the people that posted on our Facebook account was ā€œThere are many in our community that are not Christian or not religious at all and the Sheriffā€™s Office should be well attuned to that. Why would these children be made to feel ā€œotherā€ at a County camp?ā€

When I read that statement I realized that it shouldnā€™t make any child feel that way. This camp was established to offer an opportunity for kids who would be at home by themselves during the summer because their parents worked or for whatever the reason might be.

FFRF is pleased that its communication brought about this realization in the sheriff.

ā€œWeā€™re glad that Sheriff Doughtie had this epiphany about the discrimination inherent in a faith-based camp ā€” and weā€™re happy that we played a role in preventing this unconstitutional government sponsorship of religious evangelizing of children,ā€ says FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor.

The Freedom From Religion Foundation is a national nonprofit organization with over 36,000 members and several chapters across the country, including more than 800 members and a local chapter in North Carolina. Our purposes are to protect the constitutional principle of separation between state and church, and to educate the public on matters relating to nontheism. 

Freedom From Religion Foundation

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