Introduced Version
House Bill 3009 History
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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted
H. B. 3009
(By Delegates Householder, Sobonya, Overington,
Cadle and Gearheart)
[Introduced March 20, 2013; referred to the
Committee on Education then the Judiciary.]
A BILL to amend the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, by
adding thereto a new article, designated §18-33-1, §18-33-2,
§18-33-3, §18-33-4, §18-33-5, §18-33-6 and §18-33-7, all
relating to enacting a Schoolchildren's Religious Liberties
Act; prohibiting discrimination based on a religious
perspective; requiring a policy establishing a limited public
forum for student speakers; prohibiting a penalty or reward on
account of the religious content of student work; allowing
organization of prayer groups, religious clubs and other
religious gatherings before, during and after school;
requiring policy regarding limited public forum and voluntary
student expression of religious perspectives; and providing a
model policy.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended
by adding thereto a new article, designated §18-33-1, §18-33-2, §18-33-3, §18-33-4, §18-33-5, §18-33-6 and §18-33-7, all to read as
follows:
ARTICLE 33. SCHOOLCHILDREN'S RELIGIOUS LIBERTIES ACT.
§18-33-1. Short title.
_____This article may be known and cited as the "Schoolchildren's
Religious Liberties Act."
§18-33-2. Nondiscrimination based on a religious perspective.
_____Each county school district shall treat a student's voluntary
expression of a religious perspective on an otherwise permissible
subject in the same manner that the district treats a student's
voluntary expression of a secular or other perspective on an
otherwise permissible subject. A county school district may not
discriminate against a student based on a religious perspective
expressed by the student on an otherwise permissible subject.
§18-33-3. Policy establishing a limited public forum for student
speakers required.
_____(a) To ensure that local school districts do not discriminate
against a student's publicly stated voluntary expression of a
religious perspective and to eliminate any actual or perceived
affirmative school sponsorship or attribution to a school district
of a student's expression of a religious perspective, the board of
education of each school district shall adopt a policy establishing
a limited public forum for student speakers at all school events at which a student is to publicly speak. The policy regarding the
limited public forum must require the school district to:
_____(1) Provide the forum in a manner that does not discriminate
against a student's voluntary expression of a religious perspective
on an otherwise permissible subject;
_____(2) Provide a method, based on neutral criteria, for the
selection of student speakers at school events and graduation
ceremonies;
_____(3) Ensure that a student speaker does not engage in obscene,
vulgar, offensively lewd or indecent speech; and
_____(4) State orally or in writing, or both, that the student's
speech does not reflect the endorsement, sponsorship, position or
expression of the school district.
_____(b) The school district disclaimer required by subsection (a)
of this section must be provided at all graduation ceremonies. The
school district shall also provide the disclaimer at any other
event in which a student speaks publicly for so long as a need
exists to dispel any confusion over the district's nonsponsorship
of the student's speech.
_____(c) Student expression on an otherwise permissible subject may
not be excluded from a limited public forum because the subject is
expressed from a religious perspective.
§18-33-4. No penalty or reward on account of the religious
content of student work.
_____Students may express their beliefs about religion in homework,
artwork and other written and oral assignments free from
discrimination based on the religious content of their submissions.
Homework and classroom assignments must be judged by ordinary
academic standards of substance and relevance and against other
legitimate pedagogical concerns identified by the school district.
Students may not be penalized or rewarded on account of the
religious content of their work.
§18-33-5. Organization of prayer groups, religious clubs, or
other religious gatherings before, during and after
school allowed.
_____Students may organize prayer groups, religious clubs, "see you
at the pole" gatherings or other religious gatherings before,
during and after school to the same extent that students are
permitted to organize other noncurricular student activities and
groups. School districts must provide religious groups the same
access to school facilities for assembling that is given to other
noncurricular groups without discrimination based on the religious
content of the students' expression. If student groups that meet
for nonreligious activities are permitted to advertise or announce
meetings of the groups, the school district may not discriminate
against any group that meets for prayer or other religious speech.
A school district may disclaim school sponsorship of noncurricular
groups and events in a manner that neither favors nor disfavors groups that meet to engage in prayer or religious speech.
§18-33-6. Policy regarding limited public forum and voluntary
student expression of religious perspectives
required.
_____The board of education of each school district shall adopt and
implement a policy regarding a limited public forum and voluntary
student expression of religious perspectives. If a school district
adopts and follows the model policy governing voluntary religious
expression in public schools provided by section seven of this
article, the district shall be presumed to be in compliance with
those provisions of this chapter which are addressed by the model
policy.
§18-33-7. Model policy.
_____For purposes of this article, the term "model policy" means a
policy adopted by the board of education of a local school district
which is substantially identical to the following:
ARTICLE I
STUDENT EXPRESSION OF RELIGIOUS PERSPECTIVES
_____The school district shall treat a student's voluntary
expression of a religious perspective on an otherwise permissible
subject in the same manner that the district treats a student's
voluntary expression of a secular or other perspective on an
otherwise permissible subject. The school district may not discriminate against the student based on a religious perspective
expressed by the student on an otherwise permissible subject.
ARTICLE II
STUDENT SPEAKERS AT NONGRADUATION EVENTS
_____A limited public forum for student speakers at all school
events at which a student is to publicly speak is created. For each
speaker, the school district shall set a maximum time limit
reasonable and appropriate to the occasion. Student speakers shall
introduce:
_____(1) Football games;
_____(2) Any other athletic events designated by the district;
_____(3) Opening announcements and greetings for the school day;
and
_____(4) Any additional events designated by the district, which
may include, but is not necessarily limited to, assemblies and pep
rallies.
_____The forum must be limited in the manner provided by this
article.
_____Except as otherwise provided in this article, eligibility to
use the limited public forum is limited to students who hold one of
the following positions of honor based on neutral criteria:
_____(1) Class officers of the highest grade level in the school;
and
_____(2) Student council officers, captains of the football team and other students holding positions of honor designated by the
county board of education in the highest two grade levels of the
school.
_____Each school shall notify all eligible students of their
eligibility to use the limited public forum. A student who wishes
to participate as an introducing speaker shall submit the student's
name to the student council or other designated body during a
specified period, which period may not be less than three days. The
specified period may be at the beginning of the school year, at the
end of the preceding school year so that student speakers are in
place for the new year, or, if the selection process will be
repeated each semester, at the beginning of each semester or at the
end of the preceding semester so speakers are in place for the next
semester. The names of the volunteering student speakers shall be
randomly drawn until all names have been selected, and the names
shall be listed in the order drawn. Each participating student will
be matched chronologically to the event for which the student will
be giving the introduction. Student speakers may speak for one week
at a time for all introductions of events that week, at a single
speaking event or in another manner as determined by the school
district. The list of student speakers shall be repeated
chronologically, as needed, in the same order. The district may
repeat the selection process each semester rather than once a year.
_____The subject of the student introductions must be related to the purpose of the event and to the purpose of marking the opening
of the event, honoring the occasion, participants and those in
attendance, bringing the audience to order and focusing the
audience on the purpose of the event. The subject must be
designated, a student must stay on the subject and the student may
not engage in obscene, vulgar, offensively lewd or indecent speech.
The school district shall treat a student's voluntary expression of
a religious perspective on an otherwise permissible subject in the
same manner that the district treats a student's voluntary
expression of a secular or other perspective on an otherwise
permissible subject. The school district may not discriminate
against the student based on a religious perspective expressed by
the student on an otherwise permissible subject.
_____For as long as there is a need to dispel confusion over the
nonsponsorship of the student's speech, at each event in which a
student will deliver an introduction, a disclaimer shall be stated
in written or oral form, or both, such as, "The student giving the
introduction for this event is a volunteering student selected on
neutral criteria to introduce the event. The content of the
introduction is the private expression of the student and does not
reflect the endorsement, sponsorship, position or expression of the
school district."
_____The school district recognizes that certain students who have
attained special positions of honor in a school traditionally have addressed school audiences from time to time as a tangential
component of their achieved positions of honor, such as the
captains of various sports teams, student council officers, class
officers, homecoming kings and queens, prom kings and queens, and
the like, based on neutral criteria. Nothing in this policy
eliminates the continuation of the practice of having these
students, irrespective of grade level, address school audiences in
the normal course of their respective positions. The school
district shall create a limited public forum for the speakers and
shall treat a student's voluntary expression of a religious
perspective on an otherwise permissible subject in the same manner
that the district treats a student's voluntary expression of a
secular or other perspective on an otherwise permissible subject.
The school district may not discriminate against the student based
on a religious perspective expressed by the student on an otherwise
permissible subject.
ARTICLE III
STUDENT SPEAKERS AT GRADUATION CEREMONIES
_____A limited public forum consisting of an opportunity for a
student to speak to begin graduation ceremonies and another student
to speak to end graduation ceremonies is created. For each speaker,
the district shall set a maximum time limit reasonable and
appropriate to the occasion.
_____The forum shall be limited in the manner provided by this article.
_____Only students who are graduating and who hold one of the
following neutral criteria positions of honor are eligible to use
the limited public forum:
_____(1) Student council officers;
_____(2) Class officers of the graduating class;
_____(3) The top three academically ranked graduates; or
_____(4) A shorter or longer list of student leaders as the school
district may designate.
_____A student who has a speaking role in the graduation ceremonies
is ineligible to give the opening and closing remarks. The names of
the eligible volunteering students will be drawn randomly. The
student whose name is drawn first will give the opening remarks,
and the student whose name is drawn second will give the closing
remarks.
_____The topic of the opening and closing remarks must be related
to the purpose of the graduation ceremony and to the purpose of
marking the opening and closing of the event, honoring the
occasion, the participants, and those in attendance, bringing the
audience to order, and focusing the audience on the purpose of the
event.
_____In addition to the students giving the opening and closing
remarks, certain other students who have attained special positions
of honor based on neutral criteria, including, but not necessarily limited to, the valedictorian, will have speaking roles at
graduation ceremonies. For each speaker, the school district shall
set a maximum time limit reasonable and appropriate to the occasion
and to the position held by the speaker. For this purpose, the
district creates a limited public forum for these students to
deliver the addresses. The subject of the addresses must be related
to the purpose of the graduation ceremony, marking and honoring the
occasion, honoring the participants and those in attendance, and
the student's perspective on purpose, achievement, life, school,
graduation and looking forward to the future.
_____The subject must be designated for each student speaker, the
student must stay on the subject and the student may not engage in
obscene, vulgar, offensively lewd or indecent speech. The school
district shall treat a student's voluntary expression of a
religious perspective on an otherwise permissible subject in the
same manner that the district treats a student's voluntary
expression of a secular or other perspective on an otherwise
permissible subject. The school district may not discriminate
against the student based on a religious perspective expressed by
the student on an otherwise permissible subject.
_____A written disclaimer shall be printed in the graduation
program that states, "The students speaking at the graduation
ceremony were selected based on neutral criteria to deliver
messages of each student's own choice. The content of each student speaker's message is the private expression of the individual
student and does not reflect any position or expression of the
school district, the school board, the district's administration or
employees of the district or the views of any other graduate. The
contents of these messages were prepared by the student volunteers,
and the district refrained from any interaction with student
speakers regarding the student speakers' perspectives on
permissible subjects."
ARTICLE IV
RELIGIOUS EXPRESSION IN CLASS ASSIGNMENTS
_____A student may express the student's beliefs about religion in
homework, artwork and other written and oral assignments free from
discrimination based on the religious content of the student's
submission. Homework and classroom work must be judged by ordinary
academic standards of substance and relevance and against other
legitimate pedagogical concerns identified by the school district.
Students may not be penalized or rewarded on account of religious
content. If a teacher's assignment involves writing a poem, the
work of a student who submits a poem in the form of a prayer (for
example, a psalm) must be judged on the basis of academic
standards, including literary quality, and the student may not be
penalized or rewarded on account of the poem's religious content.
ARTICLE V
FREEDOM TO ORGANIZE RELIGIOUS GROUPS AND ACTIVITIES
_____Students may organize prayer groups, religious clubs, "see you
at the pole" gatherings and other religious gatherings before,
during and after school to the same extent that students are
permitted to organize other noncurricular student activities and
groups. Religious groups must be given the same access to school
facilities for assembling as other noncurricular groups, without
discrimination based on the religious content of the group's
expression. If student groups that meet for nonreligious activities
are permitted to advertise or announce the groups' meetings by
advertising in a student newspaper, putting up posters, making
announcements on a student activities bulletin board or public
address system, or handing out leaflets, the school district may
not prohibit any group that meets for prayer or other religious
speech from announcing or advertising its meetings in similar
manners. The school district may disclaim sponsorship of
noncurricular groups and events if the disclaimer is administered
in a manner that does not favor or disfavor groups that meet to
engage in prayer or other religious speech.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to enact a Schoolchildren's
Religious Liberties Act. The bill includes provisions requiring
county boards of education to implement policies to protect
students from discrimination based on a religious perspective.
This article is new; therefore, it has been completely
underscored.