The Chicago Sun-Times reports that students at Nequa Valley High School will be allowed to wear t-shirts expressing their views on homosexuality:

Neuqua Valley High School students would be allowed to wear “Be Happy, Not Gay” T-shirts under a ruling Tuesday by the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The court had rejected Indian Prairie School District 204’s argument that school officials could prohibit students from wearing the shirts to prevent some students from having their feelings hurt.

In its opinion, the court said a “school that permits advocacy of the rights of homosexual students cannot be allowed to stifle criticism of homosexuality.”

“The school argued (and still argues) that banning ‘Be Happy, Not Gay’ was just a matter of protecting the ‘rights’ of the students against whom derogatory comments are directed,” the court said. “But people in our society do not have a legal right to prevent criticism of their beliefs or even their way of life.”

When this case was previously before the appellate court in 2008, the ACLU of Illinois filed an amicus brief that urged the court to balance two competing and equally important legal rights when determining whether public high schools can limit student speech that disparages other people on the basis of race, religion, sexual orientation, and other protected identities. First, public high school students have the fundamental right to free speech, including the in-school expression of controversial and offensive messages. Second, students also have the fundamental right to freedom from discrimination on the basis of protected identities.

To reconcile these two fundamental rights, the ACLU urged the court to adopt a “harassment” standard, based on the standard developed in decades of anti-discrimination case law. Specifically, in-school expression by a public high school student is unprotected harassment only when it is reasonably forecast by school officials to be severe or pervasive enough to (1) significantly hinder a reasonable student in obtaining an education, or (2) significantly harm a reasonable student’s physical, mental, or emotional well-being. Application of this standard is fact-intensive and takes into account the age of the students among other factors. Under this test, some derogatory messages will be protected speech, and others will be unprotected harassment.

The ACLU concluded its amicus brief by applying this standard to the facts of this case. First, the school’s speech policy was unlawful on its face, because it broadly prohibited all speech that disparages protected identities, rather than carefully distinguishing protected speech from unprotected harassment. Second, the school in 2006 should have allowed two students on one day to wear the “be happy, not gay” t-shirts. The ACLU did not take a position regarding the students’ plans for future expression, because those plans were vague, which prevented application of the “harassment” standard.

In this “be happy not gay” controversy, the ACLU stood up for speech it vehemently disagrees with. We do so because the First Amendment will protect either everyone or no one. Notably, the First Amendment has played a critical role in ensuring that lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender students and their allies can form clubs that seek to promote understanding and tolerance of LGBT students, such as Gay Straight Alliances, and express themselves by, for example, identifying themselves as lesbian or gay or wearing a pro-tolerance T-shirt within public schools.

See You Have the Right to Be Yourself for more information on the rights of LGBT students and allies.

Date

Wednesday, March 2, 2011 - 11:06pm

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Related issues

First Amendment Advocacy LGBTQ and HIV Advocacy

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

28

Style

Standard with sidebar

2011 has been a precarious year for women’s health care. Across the nation, political leaders seem determined to undermine the ability of women to access even the most basic health care – especially reproductive health care. The U.S. House recently voted to slash federal funding that provided more than 2 million breast cancer screenings and more than 2 million pap smears in the United States. In the same week, the House also slashed all funding for Planned Parenthood across America.

State legislatures have been equally egregious. Officials in some states have introduced legislation that apparently authorized the murder of some reproductive health care providers and broadly we are seeing some of the most onerous restrictions on reproductive health care offered in decades.

Illinois is not immune. In recent weeks, we have seen a spate of anti-choice bills introduced in Illinois, including:

  • House Bill 1919 takes a very deceptive route to limit access to reproductive health care for women in Illinois. The bill mandates that every woman seeking an abortion in Illinois would be offered a viewing of her fetus on ultrasound and would have to attest in writing if they did not want to view the fetal image. This legislation adds nothing to safe abortion practice in the state and interferes with the physician-patient relationship, often in a manner that is harmful to women. Download the fact sheet.

  • House Bill 1569 creates Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) as an insurance option for state employees. Then comes the damaging part. The legislation bars not only the use of state-contributed funds for abortion related expenses, but fails to assure that state employees can use their own contributions for abortions – even those that are medically necessary. House Bill 1569 unfairly penalizes those who have chosen a career in public service. Download the fact sheet.

  • House Bill 3156 amends the Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act to largely revoke the benefits of the longstanding Consent Decree in Ragsdale v. Turnock, under which abortion facilities have been safely and effectively regulated for the past 20 years. The bill will require facilities that offer safe, early abortions to comply with excessive requirements unrelated to patient health and safety at significant cost and will decrease access to abortion services in Illinois where 92 percent of the counties already do not have an abortion provider. Download the fact sheet.

We will keep watching this legislation. We will continue to oppose it – and other proposals – designed to substitute the judgment of Springfield politicians for the real-life experiences of women across our State. And, we will keep you updated on these proposals as the session moves forward.

Date

Wednesday, March 2, 2011 - 7:15pm

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Related issues

Women's and Reproductive Rights

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

28

Style

Standard with sidebar

According to the Chicago Tribune, state officials are investigating religiously-affiliated foster care agencies are in violation of Illinois' Human Rights Act and other anti-discrimination laws if they refuse to grant foster care licenses to LGBT parents:

Benjamin Wolf of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, an attorney who represents juvenile state wards as part of a court-monitored consent decree with DCFS, said limiting the pool of prospective foster care parents because certain religious traditions believe same-sex relationships are sinful is irresponsible when children are in need.

"We don't know for sure if a loving lesbian or gay family turned away from a discriminatory agency is necessarily going to go to another agency because of the disruption and harm caused to them," he said.

The religious institutions' policies might send a hurtful message to the large number of children in the foster care system who landed there after suffering neglect, abuse or rejection because they were gay, some experts say. Marlowe said 240 children out of more than 15,000 in the foster care system currently identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or questioning.

Foster children should be placed with a relative whenever possible, experts say. If that relative is gay, a religious agency may insist on referring them to a new agency, severing the child's relationship with a caseworker.

"To communicate to that kid that ... you have to change caseworkers in order to get the services you need is a very bad message," Wolf said. "The other thing we're saying to the subpopulation of kids that are gay and lesbian is, 'Once you grow up you can never be a foster parent in our agency' — another troubling message."

A study by the University of Illinois' Children and Family Research Center found some children bounce between foster homes because they face difficulties when they reveal their sexual orientation.

"I don't think you can (overemphasize) the damage done by a disruption," said John Knight, another ACLU attorney.

We hope this issue can be resolved so that vulnerable foster kids can get the care and attention they need in loving homes - regardless of the sexual orientation of the foster parents.

Read the whole article
. Meet parents, Corynne and Michelle, who were forced to hide their relationship in order to adopt.

Date

Wednesday, March 2, 2011 - 5:23pm

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Related issues

LGBTQ and HIV Advocacy

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

28

Style

Standard with sidebar

Pages

Subscribe to ACLU of Illinois RSS