Following ACLU Lawsuit, Colorado Springs High School Ends Second-Class Status for Gay-Straight Alliance (11/22/2005)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
DENVER -- The American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado today announced a
settlement agreement in a federal lawsuit it had filed against Colorado Springs
School District 11 on behalf of the Palmer High School Gay-Straight Alliance
(GSA) in 2003. The school board approved the settlement at its meeting Monday
evening.
"The students acted in the best American traditions of fairness and respect
for their fellow citizens," said Alf McDonnell, of Arnold & Porter, who
represented the GSA as an ACLU volunteer attorney. "This is a great day for
students’ rights to freedom of expression and freedom of association."
Student-led and student-initiated gay-straight alliances exist at 50 high
schools in Colorado and in more than 3,000 high schools around the country.
Among other activities, they work to reduce anti-gay harassment in schools and
facilitate discussion on such subjects as harassment, discrimination, and bias
based on sexual orientation between gay students, straight students, and those
who are questioning their sexual identity..
The ACLU lawsuit was filed in 2003 after Palmer High School denied
recognition to the newly formed GSA. Without recognition, the lawsuit asserted,
the student group could not meet on school property on the same terms as other
student groups; could not post club-related information at the school; could not
use the public address system to make announcements; and was omitted from the
school’s yearbook and official list of student-organized activities.
The lawsuit relied in part on the Equal Access Act, a federal statute that
outlaws discrimination against student clubs. The law applies to schools that
allow "noncurricular" student organizations, which are clubs that are not
directly tied to the subject matter taught in the school’s courses. According to
the law, if a school permits even one noncurricular student club to use school
facilities, then it must permit all noncurricular clubs. When the lawsuit was
filed, Palmer High School recognized a number of noncurricular student clubs,
and the ACLU argued that it must therefore recognize the Gay-Straight Alliance.
Soon after the lawsuit was filed, the school board announced a new "two-tier"
policy for student clubs The new policy granted full privileges to clubs deemed
to be related to the curriculum, but denied many privileges to a new a category
of student clubs which were called "Independent Student Groups."
"In applying this new policy, the school classified the GSA as an
'Independent Student Group' and thereby assigned it a second-class status," said
Mark Silverstein, Legal Director of the ACLU of Colorado. "Unlike other student
clubs, the GSA could not announce its meetings, was forbidden to post
announcements on most bulletin boards, and was not allowed to appear in the
school yearbook."
The school contended that this new policy treated all "non-curricular"
student clubs equally and therefore did not discriminate illegally against the
GSA. But the ACLU argued that the new two-tier student club policy was invented
and implemented solely because of the GSA and the ACLU lawsuit.
Silverstein noted that almost a dozen other non-curricular clubs, including a
book club, a chess/strategy club, and a mountain biking club also lost
privileges because of the new policy. With today's settlement agreement, he
said, District 11 has agreed that all student clubs will be treated equally.
"That is a welcome relief not only to the GSA, but to all other student groups
that were treated less favorably under this now-abandoned two-tier policy."
In addition to McDonnell and Silverstein, Michael Rollin of Hoffman, Reilly
& Pozner also served as an ACLU cooperating attorney working on behalf of
the GSA.
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