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Omaha,
NE - In response to a demand letter from Liberty Counsel, the
Millard School District has agreed to allow Child Evangelism Fellowship
of Omaha (CEF) to use school facilities to hold Good News Clubs on
the same basis as secular clubs that meet in the schools. Liberty
Counsel wrote a letter to the district advising the board that the
First Amendment requires equal access to school facilities for religiously
based, nonprofit youth groups such as Good News Clubs. Equal access
means that religious groups are given access on the same terms and
conditions as secular groups.
In
August, the district informed Jackie Weiss, director of CEF of Omaha,
that CEF would start being charged to use local school facilities
to hold Good News Clubs. CEF had been using school facilities without
charge in past years, just like the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, and similar
groups, until the district decided that CEF would not be entitled
to the free use provided to other non-profit groups serving children
because CEF was religious.
Good
News Club meetings are designed for elementary-age students. Children
attend the after-school clubs with consent of their parents for one
hour per week to learn moral values, character qualities, and respect
for authority from a biblical perspective.
Mathew
D. Staver, Founder of Liberty Counsel and Dean of Liberty University
School of Law, commented: "The Courts have spoken loudly and
clearly about equal access. School districts may not charge discriminatory
fees to Good News Clubs for using school facilities just because they
have a religious affiliation. Equal access under the First Amendment
means equal treatment across the board." |