The Freedom From Religion Foundation is slamming a West Virginia school district for several constitutional violations that have recently occurred there.
A concerned parent reported these infringements in the Logan County Schools system to the state/church watchdog.
On Aug. 23, Logan High School broadcast a Christian prayer over the loudspeaker prior to a football game against Man High School. FFRF had written in 2017 to the district regarding a similar violation occurring at Man High School, and the school district responded in April this year that it had provided Man High School with a copy of its policy on religious observances. FFRF understood this to mean that the issue had been resolved, but apparently that was not the case.
The U.S. Supreme Court has continually struck down school-sponsored prayer in public schools, FFRF informs the school district.
āMoreover, the Supreme Court has specifically struck down invocations given over the loudspeaker at public school athletic events, even when student-led,ā FFRF Patrick OāReiley Legal Fellow Chris Line writes to Logan County Schools Superintendent Patricia Lucas. āThe court reasoned that because the football game was a school-sponsored event, hosting prayer was a constitutional violation. Even if student-led, the court said prayers at a āregularly scheduled school-sponsored function conducted on school propertyā would lead an objective observer to perceive it as state endorsement of religion.ā
The Logan County Schools system is breaching the Constitution on other fronts, too.
FFRF first wrote to the district in 2016 regarding religious assemblies in its schools during the school day. It received a response on May 23, 2016, from then-Superintendent Phyllis Doty that āsteps have been taken to ensure that all principals are fully aware of the legal obligations school systems have to remain neutral towards religion.ā Despite this assurance, religious assemblies have continued to occur.
FFRFās complainant reported that on Aug. 24, their child came home with a religious pamphlet from Man Middle School entitled: āThe Romans Road Plan of Salvation & The Epistle to the Romans.ā It includes full excerpts from the bible, including topics titled, āBlood Redemption,ā āRepentance,ā and āBelieve Godās Book.ā The āBelieve Godās Bookā section declares, āWe must accept the Word of God, the Bible, as the only immutable truth.ā This was distributed to students following a āChristian magic showā that took place at the school during the school day. The group that put on this show proselytized to students and then distributed these religious pamphlets and other Christian-themed materials.
āIt is inappropriate to take away instructional time from students to expose them to a Christian proselytizing group, regardless of any secular message the group claims to be promoting,ā Line writes. āIn Lee v. Weisman, the Supreme Court extended the prohibition of school-sponsored religious activities beyond the classroom to all school functions. Thus, religious programming as part of a school assembly is in violation of the Establishment Clause.ā
When a school hosts a religious assembly and distributes religious literature to its students, it has unconstitutionally entangled itself with a religious message ā in this case, a Christian message. This alienates those non-Christian students, teachers, and members of the public whose religious beliefs are inconsistent with the message being promoted by the school.
āØFFRF is asking Logan County Schools to quit engaging in all these constitutional transgressions.
āThe behavior of the school district is extremely disheartening,ā says FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor. āIt fails to take into account all its non-Christian and nonbelieving residents.ā
FFRF has two ongoing lawsuits in the state of West Virginia, the first against Mercer County Schools over the school systemās egregiously unconstitutional āBible in the Schoolsā classes for elementary school students and the second challenging the Parkersburg City Councilās practice of reciting the āLordās Prayerā at each meeting.
The Freedom From Religion Foundation is a national nonprofit organization with 32,000 members nationwide, including in West Virginia. Its purposes are to protect the constitutional principle of separation between state and church, and to educate the public on nontheism.