Quantcast
breaking news

"By the Book" Program Settlement

By: Nadia Bashir
Updated: September 14, 2009
watch video
The Huntington County Community School Corp. has settled a case alleging a violation of civil rights because of a "By the Book" bible-based program on public school property. A judge issued a temporary injunction preventing the programs trailers from being on public school property after the Indiana chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union filed suit on behalf of a parent. After several months of litigation, HCCSC chose to settle the case rather than pursue further legal action which it believed would cost the district a great amount of money. Additionally, HCCSC believed it would not prevail in a higher court under current federal law as established by the U.S. Supreme Court. "By the Book" is a religious based program taught to 3rd and 4th graders in a trailer that used to be on public school property. Parents had to sign permission slips in order for students to participate. The program has been around for about 65 years. The Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution as interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court prohibits religious programs from being taught on public school property during instructional hours. HCCSC emphasizes no monetary damages were paid to the plaintiffs in this case and only attorneys fees were included in the settlement. A judge must still approve the settlement before it is finalized. "By the Book" organizers say they are working on bringing the program back. This time they will lease property close to the eight elementary schools the program used to be at. Students will then be able to participate in the program off public school property. HCCSC has about six-thousand students, 950 of them participate in the program.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

An elderly couple from Pierceton says they lost over $100,000 in a Jamaican lottery scam....

The Board of Trustees for Purdue University agreed today to raise tuition rates at IPFW, as every two years they increase their rates....

Kelly DiMarzio now calls Fort Wayne home, but she used to live in Oklahoma City and work in Moore--the city hit hardest by the tornados.  ...

Fifty-five people were injured Wednesday near North Manchester when four school buses crashed....

A new project is designed to help foster children who have aged out of the system.Former foster kids that WFFT spoke with tell me they're thrilled to have a new place to call home....

Local organizations are already helping with relief efforts in Oklahoma...We spoke with a couple of organizations that are lending a helping hand.   ...

Officials at Fort Wayne Community Schools review tornado safety procedures in the wake of the Oklahoma tragedy....

Tuesday is the deadline to sign up for the Do Not Call Registry....

The average teenager can't wait to turn 18, graduate High School, and navigate the road to adulthood.  For hundreds of kids in Northeast Indiana, turning 18 signals a whole different kind of...

A Fort Wayne man is facing murder charges following a shootout Friday with police. Nobody was killed or even injured, but police say under Indiana law, that doesn't matter....

 
 
 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Fortwaynehomepage.net
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved