ODESSA — Each side in a lawsuit over a West Texas school district's Bible curriculum claimed victory Wednesday after a mediator's proposal gained final approval.
The Ector County Independent School District can continue to offer a Bible course but its course work will be developed by a committee of seven local educators appointed by the superintendent. The lawsuit challenged class material produced by the Greensboro, N.C.-based National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools.
A mediator in Dallas developed the proposal and the district trustees voted on Wednesday to approve the plan. Plaintiffs approved it earlier this week.
The curriculum must meet criteria set by state law and the class will be offered beginning in the 2008-09 school year.
"It's a great victory for ECISD because they're going to get to continue having a Bible course," Hiram Sasser of Liberty Legal Institute, which represented the district, said in a statement. "They're going to develop their own curriculum the way they want to do it without anybody getting in their business. They're going to have the Bible as the primary textbook. That's the most important thing. It's the thing the community wanted."
The lawsuit, filed in May on behalf of eight parents in the district, alleged the Bible course violated their religious liberty. Mediation began earlier this year.
The agreement, said T. Jeremy Gunn, of the American Civil Liberties Union, is a victory for putting religious education in parents' hands.
"It is unacceptable for government officials to decide which religious beliefs are true and which are not and then use the public school system as a means of proselytizing children," he said in a statement.
The state and national ACLU and the People for the American Way Foundation sued the school district in May. The Ector school board approved the course, a high school elective, by a 4-2 vote in December 2005.
At issue was a Bible course that teaches the King James version using material produced by the North Carolina group. The course uses the Bible as the students' textbook.
The National Council said its curriculum is used in hundreds of school districts, including more than 50 in Texas.
The parents' suit was dismissed.
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It also included the right to allow slavery. Then along came a little fracas known as the Civil War. The South lost, and the 14th Amendment was added to the Constitution. Under the doctrine of Incorporation, the 14th makes the Bill of Rights applicable to the States. Thus, whatever the Federal government previously was forbidden to do, the States were now forbidden as well. (I’m oversimplifying, but 3,000 characters doesn’t leave room for a full course on Constitutional Law.)
By the way, Star2, I suggest you review the entire website you cited to. It belongs to the so-called “National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools” whose curriculum started the lawsuit to begin with (since it’s goal is clearly proselytization). If the new curriculum is anything like that, the lawsuit will simply start all over again.