FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: media@aclu.org
ATLANTA, GA –
Trial was held today in an American Civil Liberties Union federal lawsuit
asking for a permanent injunction requiring officials at White County High
School in Cleveland, Georgia to recognize a gay-straight alliance club
(GSA). Administrators at White
County High School in Cleveland, Georgia have been blocking the GSA from meeting
since the beginning of the 2005-2006 school year while allowing other clubs to
meet, a clear violation of the Federal Equal Access Act.
“All we’re asking for is to be
treated the same as all the other clubs that the school has been allowing to
meet.” said Charlene Hammersen, a 17-year-old lesbian who is one of the founding
members of the GSA. “Harassment and
violence are pretty bad at our school, and we think having a gay-straight
alliance would help make our school a safer place,” “I don’t understand why a
club dedicated to making the school safer for everyone doesn’t get to meet when
clubs like the dance team and student council do.”
The federal Equal Access Act
requires public schools to treat all non-curricular student clubs equally. Several students from WCHS testified
during the trial about other clubs that have been allowed to meet while the GSA,
known as PRIDE, has been kept from doing so, including a school dance team,
student council, Beta Club, and the prom committee, all of which are
non-curricular.
Last year school administrators reluctantly agreed to let the
GSA form after the ACLU of Georgia stepped in and negotiated on the students’
behalf. The students, who wanted to
start the club to address rampant anti-gay harassment at the school, named the
club PRIDE (“Peers Rising in Diverse Education”). A few days later, school officials
announced plans to ban all non-curricular student groups in the 2005-2006
academic year. PRIDE hasn’t been
permitted to meet on campus this school year, but several other clubs –
including a school dance team and student council – were allowed to meet at WCHS
throughout the school year. These
clubs weren’t relevant to the curriculum, students don’t get academic credit for
participating in them, and participation isn’t required for any course.
“The law is crystal clear about
how public schools have to treat student clubs: they have to treat them equally
regardless of their viewpoint,” said Beth Littrell, a staff attorney with the
ACLU of Georgia who represents several members of PRIDE and their parents. “White County High School has been
trying to get around that by saying it has banned all clubs, when in reality
it’s been playing favorites and letting clubs that administrators like continue
to meet. Students at White County High School have a right to decide for
themselves which clubs they want to participate in, and that right has been
trampled by the school.”
In February, the ACLU sued White
County School District officials for violating the students’ rights under the
federal Equal Access Act and the U.S. Constitution. Federal courts have repeatedly ruled in
favor of GSA’s where schools tried to block their formation, upholding students’
right to form the groups in Salt Lake City, Utah; Orange County, California;
Franklin Township, Indiana; and Boyd County, Kentucky.
The PRIDE members are
represented by Littrell, Ken Choe of the ACLU’s national Lesbian Gay Bisexual
Transgender Project, and Frank White and Scott Titshaw of Arnall Golden Gregory,
LLP in Atlanta.
Legal
documents in the case, a timeline of events at White County High School, and
additional information