Coalition Including BJC Opposes Vouchers in Letter to Senate Committee

Written by Don Byrd
The National Coalition for Public Education sent a letter to leaders of the Senate Education Committee urging them to oppose efforts to insert school voucher funding into the Education bill. The Baptist Joint Committee is one of 56 organizations that signed the letter, which laid out the many reasons to oppose school vouchers. It notes “voucher programs have proven ineffective, lack accountability to taxpayers, and deprive students of rights provided to public school students.”

Oregon Seeks Public Health-Religious Accommodation Balance

Written by Don Byrd
In Oregon, more parents citing religious reasons are opting out of vaccinations for their kndergarten-aged children than in any other state in the U.S. The state senate, concerned that non-medical exemptions have become too common, has responded by passing a law that would require parents to be made aware of the medical benefits of vaccination. The purpose of the regulation is to encourage vaccination thorough awareness. But many are concerned that the result is to stifle religious liberty.

House Committee Approves Chaplain Prayer Amendment

Written by Don Byrd
Last week, the House Armed Services Committee voted on amendments to the 2014 National Defense Authorization Act. Amendments that passed included one that allows service members to express personal beliefs provided they do not cause actual harm to others or are restricted by military necessity (current law disallows expression that “threatens” to harm others). Another deals with the contentious issue of chaplain prayers.

When Graduation Speeches Become Graduation Prayers

Written by Don Byrd
By now, you have probably seen or heard about video of the ripped-up graduation speech in South Carolina. There, a student speaker defied the rules and led a prayer instead of giving his approved remarks. I’ve already reached my yearly quota of graduation prayer rants. But please indulge me just a couple of thoughts to sum up my reaction.

Graduation is a time of celebration for students, families, teachers and school officials. Every student who earns a diploma deserves that moment of recognition for the hard work it represents. At public school commencements, we gather as a community across economic, racial, ethnic and religious divides to celebrate together. Each student and family brings their own story of accomplishment leading to that ceremony. A great triumph of American public education is that regardless of a student’s background, a diploma is achievable.

Ohio Bill Would Authorize Off-Campus Religion Courses

Written by Don Byrd
The Ohio House Education Committee is set to consider legislation that would authorize public schools to allow students release time for religious education off campus. HB 171 specifies students must provide their own transportation, and that no public funds may be used to support the courses. Students would receive school credit for the courses.