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Law professors question whether GSA policy complies with law
GSA cleared to meet until injunction lifted
Published Thursday, 21-Aug-2003 in issue 817
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Two law professors from Louisville, Kentucky, are questioning whether a school board policy that will allow a Gay-Straight Alliance (GSA) to meet after school complies with federal equal access laws.
The Boyd County School board is expected to give final approval to the policy. The board also will ask a federal judge to lift an injunction that now allows the Boyd County High School GSA to meet at school before or after school hours or during the lunch period.
The board contends the new policy treats the alliance the same as other non-curricular clubs, in compliance with the federal Equal Access Act.
Sam Marcosson, a civil-rights and constitutional-law professor at the University of Louisville, says that depends on how it’s enforced.
“On the face of it, the (policy’s) terms seem consistent with the Equal Access Act,” said Marcosson. “But the big question in all of this is not what their policy says on its face but what is actually happening in the schools.”
Carolyn Bratt, a University of Kentucky law professor who works on gender issues, said she doubts the policy would prompt the judge — U.S. District Judge David L. Bunning — to lift the injunction because it grew out of a desire to stop the alliance from meeting.
“No matter how they try to dress this up, it is motivated by an attempt to exclude the Gay-Straight Alliance,” Bratt said. “I don’t think the court is going to forget where this all started. It started from an impermissible intention.”
The controversy heated up last October, when the high school’s teacher-parent council voted to let the alliance meet at school. The action prompted a school boycott and opposition from local ministers and others.
The school board then voted in December to ban all clubs from meeting at the high school and pledged to write a new policy on clubs. A month later, the American Civil Liberties Union sued the district on behalf of the alliance, saying the high school violated the Equal Access Act by letting some noncurricular clubs meet despite the ban while not allowing the alliance to meet.
The district denied the allegations, but Bunning issued a preliminary injunction in April saying the school had violated the Equal Access Act. He ordered the school to let the alliance meet and ordered the two sides to mediate their differences.
The ACLU and the district couldn’t come to an agreement and the new policy was drafted.
Winter Huff, a Somerset lawyer who helped write the policy, said the district plans to take the new policy to Bunning and ask him to lift the injunction.
“It is the fulfillment of an issue that has existed since before this specific controversy, and that is to what extent are activities other than course work appropriate during the school day and to what extent does the school district need to be involved in that?” Huff said. “What the district is saying is we want the school day to fulfill (academic) purposes; we want the school day to be spent on things that are instructional or curricular.”
Huff said that noncurricular clubs such as the alliance, the Bible Club and the Key Club community service group would be allowed to meet at school on the same terms, and that she believes the policy is in compliance with the Equal Access Act.
The policy would allow noncurricular activities to take place at the school only after school hours — defined as the time buses begin loading, around 4:00 p.m.
Kaye King, an English teacher who is the alliance’s adviser, said that after Bunning issued the injunction last spring, the group met Friday mornings before the 8:00 a.m. start of classes because it was the most convenient time.
She said that the alliance plans to hold its first meeting of the fall semester on Friday before school, and that she was assured by superintendent Bill Capehart the group can meet at that time until Bunning lifts the injunction.
“I never would have dreamed it would have lasted this long to start with,” King said. “The kids are not going to give up.”
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