First Amendment topicsAbout the First Amendment
News Story
 
print this   Print

Baptist school to appeal rejection from voucher program

By The Associated Press
10.29.03

DENVER — A private Baptist school will appeal a decision by Denver-area school officials to reject its voucher-program application because the school would expel homosexuals.

The rejections earlier this month by Denver Public Schools and Jefferson County officials are unfair and contradict the purpose of the state voucher plan, said Rodolfo Gomez, principal of Silver State Baptist School in Lakewood.

DPS board members rejected Silver State’s application, citing its discipline policy calling for automatic dismissal for premarital sex, homosexuality and “sexual perversion.”

Under the state voucher program, a school board can reject a private school’s application if it advocates or fosters unlawful behavior or teaches hatred of a person or group.

“The board’s interpretation of the statute is that a school cannot promote hate,” DPS school board president Elaine Berman said. “We believe that this school’s policy toward various groups does promote hate and discrimination.”

Jefferson County school board members rejected Silver State’s application for similar reasons.

Gomez said his school had not received formal notices of denial, but planned to appeal any rejection.

He said an openly gay student would be “counseled as to the biblical understanding as to what it is that is appropriate and inappropriate in that situation.”

He said the 202-student school has not had an openly gay student in its 39-year history.

“Because we don’t have a history, I would say we would treat it like other students caught with a smoking problem,” Gomez said. “We work with them through the process and once we see they don’t have any desire to correct the problem or they don’t want to deal with it appropriately, then we make those determinations” about expulsion.

Private schools whose applications to participate in the voucher program are rejected have 30 days to appeal to the state Board of Education, which is expected to begin hearing appeals in December.


Related

Hate speech or religious conviction? Voucher fight, round 2

By Charles C. Haynes Justice Breyer warned school-voucher programs could cause problems for religious schools; he was right. 11.02.03

News summary page
View the latest news stories throughout the First Amendment Center Online.



Last system update: Tuesday, February 9, 2010 | 12:51:11
 SEARCH  MORE
About this site
About the First Amendment
About the First Amendment Center
How to contribute
Video/RSS/podcasts
First Amendment programs
State of the First Amendment
reports

Religious liberty in public schools
First Reports
Supreme Court
Columnists
Experts
First Amendment publications
First Amendment Center history
Glossary
Freedom Sings™
Events
First Amendment
Schools

Congressional Research Service reports
Guest editorials
FOI material
The First Amendment
Library

Lesson plans
freedomforum.org
Newseum
Contact us
Privacy statement
Related links