Monday, May 2nd 2011, 7:26 pm
NewsOn6.com
TULSA, Oklahoma – More than a dozen parents of special needs children are suing four Tulsa-area schools for their fight against House Bill 3393, a law that requires districts to pay tuition scholarships for special education students whose parents choose to send them to private schools.
The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty filed the suit on April 25, 2011, against Tulsa, Jenks, Union and Broken Arrow Public Schools. The suit, which seeks a cash settlement, was filed on behalf of 20 parents of special education children.
The four districts originally refused to comply with the new law last fall, but reversed their decision. Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt threatened legal action against Jenks, Union, Broken Arrow and Liberty. Liberty was not included in last week's lawsuit.
The districts siad the law was unconstitutional because it would spend public money on private education.
"I wonder how those parents with students attending public schools will react when they understand the reality of this situation," said Dr. Jarod Mendenhall, Broken Arrow Public Schools Superintendent. "The reality is that their tax dollars are paying for someone else's private education."
Earlier this year, Jenks, Union, Broken Arrow, and Liberty voted to sue Attorney General Pruitt.
The lawsuit against the districts also asks a federal judge to overturn a provision in the Oklahoma Constitution which prohibits public funding of religion. The Washington, D.C. law firm claims the provision violates the U.S. Constitution.
But the superintendents of Tulsa, Jenks, Union, and Broken Arrow disagree.
"This provision is found in 37 other state constitutions, and the United States Supreme Court has upheld the same type of provision in the state of Washington's constitution after a similar challenge," said Dr. Kirby Lehman, Superintendent of Jenks Public Schools.
"By this lawsuit, it is obvious that the Becket Fund attorneys agree – it is a violation of the Oklahoma Constitution to pay public tax dollars to a religious school," said Dr. Cathy Burden, Union Public Schools Superintendent. "They want to modify the constitution, and our boards of education want to support the Oklahoma Constitution," she said.
The superintendents stressed they will follow the law, but expressed concern if similar laws are enacted.
"All Oklahoma children deserve a free, high-quality public education, but public schools cannot educate all learners with a limited amount of resources and also pay private school tuition – it's simply not possible," said Tulsa Public Schools Superintendent, Dr. Keith Ballard.
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