Fresno district nixes chaplaincy program after FFRF intervenes

 

The Fresno Unified School District has replaced an official school chaplaincy program with a secular alternative after a complaint from the Freedom From Religion Foundation.

FFRF first contacted the district in June, after it was reported that the Fresno Unified School District had been operating a chaplaincy program in partnership with the Fresno Police Department and the Fresno Police Chaplaincy. According to records obtained, Fresno Unified School District was paying $65,000 a year to the Fresno Police Chaplaincy in order to bring chaplains into district elementary schools. These chaplains were tasked with ā€œbuilding characterā€ in younger students and serving as ā€œmentors.ā€ An advertisement for the program boasted that it reached 2,100 first-grade students each week. The program was scheduled to run through 2022.

One of these chaplains described her experience with the program on the chaplaincyā€™s website:

My prayer is that God will continue to use me as a beacon of His light to the kiddos at Susan B. Anthony. God is able to take our ashes and turn them into something beautiful. Iā€™m humbled and honored to be a chaplain to these children.

Another chaplain had described: ā€œWhen people hear that I am a school chaplain, they immediately ask, ā€˜What do you do?ā€™ My answer? ā€˜I put on the uniform and show up, never knowing what God has planned for that day.ā€™ā€

FFRF sent a letter to Superintendent Robert Nelson in June urging the district to stop allowing chaplains access to its students.

ā€œIt is inappropriate and unconstitutional for the district to offer religious chaplains unique access to befriend students during the school day on school property,ā€ FFRF Staff Attorney Chris Line wrote to the district. ā€œNo outside adults should be provided carte blanche access to minors ā€” a captive audience ā€” in public schools.ā€

The district and the Fresno Police Department have since partnered to establish the Resilience in Student Education (ā€œRISEā€) Mentorship Program, which will replace the School Chaplaincy Program.

ā€œThe RISE Mentorship Program will provide age-appropriate curriculum around resiliency, coping with bullying and impulse control,ā€ Nelson writes to FFRF. ā€œThe lessons taught by the RISE Mentorship Program are completely secular and reflect approved curriculum aligned with the stateā€™s and districtā€™s course framework.ā€

FFRF applauds the districtā€™s action in creating an inclusive program for its students of all faiths and none at all.

ā€œFFRF is very pleased with the districtā€™s prompt response to this issue,ā€ comments FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor. ā€œWe commend the district on its commitment to upholding the rights of conscience of its students and community members.ā€

The Freedom From Religion Foundation is a national nonprofit organization with more than 30,000 members and several chapters across the country, including nearly 4,000 members in California and a chapter in Sacramento. FFRFā€™s purposes are to protect the constitutional principle of separation between church and state, and to educate the public on matters relating to nontheism.

Freedom From Religion Foundation

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