Jon Miltimore |
A school board in Minnesota settled a federal
lawsuit filed last week that had accused the district of violating the First
Amendment rights of conservative students.
Edina High School, which has long enjoyed a
reputation as one of the Minnesota’s best schools, came under scrutiny last
year after it was revealed the school had implemented an ideologically-driven
curriculum (first reported by Intellectual Takeout here
and here).
The controversy reached a crescendo last
fall when a group of conservative students sued the school district after
claiming their organization, the Young Conservative Club, was terminated after
club members took to social media to criticize a student-led protest of the
U.S. flag and the National Anthem. (The district denies terminating the club.)
Erick Kaardal, an attorney representing the
students, had called the school’s action “a clear case of discrimination
against students with conservative beliefs by a school whose policies have been
documented as promoting an extreme ideological agenda.”
According to attorneys representing the
students, Edina High School agreed to the following:
- U.S. flags will hang in every classroom.
- The Young Conservatives Club can be reinstated as a school-sponsored club, or a non-sponsored club…with the ability to exercise free speech without consequence.
- USA Day is restored to Spirit Week, and district administration cannot object to the theme.
- District Policy 628 (Education Programs, Student Activities Program) and the EHS Club Guidelines and Responsibilities policies were amended to include language that respects students’ right to free speech, and that revocation may not be based on the exercise of free speech or free association rights.
“The result of the settlement for the students
is First Amendment freedom—something they did not have before the settlement,”
Kaardal said. “Now and forevermore, the Young Conservatives Club will be able
to criticize Edina Public Schools’ ideology in a First Amendment-protected
way.”
Though the district agreed to tweak its free
speech policies, officials denied wrongdoing and pointed out no monetary
damages or fees were paid.
Officials also said the absence of U.S. flags
in many classrooms was the result a two-year construction project, during which
flags were removed so they would not be damaged.
You can read Edina School District's entire
statement here.
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Jon Miltimore is the Director of Digital Media
of IntellectualTakeout.org where this article was originally published.
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