|  | 
|  | A BILL TO BE ENTITLED | 
|  | AN ACT | 
|  | relating to voluntary student-initiated expression of religious | 
|  | viewpoints in public schools. | 
|  | BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: | 
|  | SECTION 1.  Subchapter Z, Chapter 25, Education Code, is | 
|  | amended by adding Section 25.904 to read as follows: | 
|  | Sec. 25.904.  STUDENT EXPRESSION OF RELIGIOUS VIEWPOINTS. | 
|  | (a)  A school district shall treat student expression of | 
|  | religious viewpoints in the same manner as the district treats | 
|  | student expression of secular or other viewpoints, without | 
|  | discrimination. | 
|  | (b)  To assure non-discrimination against a student's | 
|  | publicly stated voluntary expression of a religious viewpoint (if | 
|  | any), and to eliminate any actual or perceived affirmative school | 
|  | sponsorship or attribution to the school district of a student's | 
|  | voluntary expression of a religious viewpoint (if any), a school | 
|  | district shall establish a limited public forum for student | 
|  | speakers at school events in which students are to publicly speak. | 
|  | The school district must: | 
|  | (1)  provide the limited public forums in a manner that | 
|  | do not discriminate against a student's voluntary expression of a | 
|  | religious viewpoint (if any) on otherwise permissible | 
|  | subjects/topics; | 
|  | (2)  provide a method, based on neutral criteria, for | 
|  | selection of student speakers for school events and for | 
|  | graduations; and | 
|  | (3)  provide that a student speaker may not engage in | 
|  | obscene, vulgar, offensively lewd, or indecent speech. | 
|  | (4)  state that the student's speech does not reflect | 
|  | the endorsement, sponsorship, position, or expression of the school | 
|  | district, and continue to do so for as long as there is a need to | 
|  | dispel confusion over the non-sponsorship of the student's speech. | 
|  | (c)  Student expression concerning permissible | 
|  | subjects/topics, as determined by school district policy, may not | 
|  | be excluded on the basis that the subject/topic is expressed from a | 
|  | religious viewpoint. | 
|  | (d)  Students may express their beliefs about religion in | 
|  | homework, artwork, and other written and oral assignments free from | 
|  | discrimination based on the religious content of their submissions. | 
|  | Students shall neither be penalized nor rewarded on account of | 
|  | religious content.  Such home and classroom work shall be judged by | 
|  | ordinary academic standards of substance and relevance and against | 
|  | other legitimate pedagogical concerns identified by the school. | 
|  | (e)  Students may organize prayer groups, religious clubs, | 
|  | "see you at the pole" and other religious gatherings before, | 
|  | during, and after school to the same extent that students are | 
|  | permitted to organize other non-curricular student activities and | 
|  | groups.  Such groups must be given the same access to school | 
|  | facilities for assembling as is given to other non-curricular | 
|  | groups, without discrimination because of the religious content of | 
|  | their expression.  Where student groups that meet for nonreligious | 
|  | activities are permitted to advertise or announce their meetings, | 
|  | school authorities may not discriminate against groups who meet for | 
|  | prayer or other religious speech.  School authorities may disclaim | 
|  | sponsorship of non-curricular groups and events, provided they | 
|  | administer such disclaimers in a manner that neither favors nor | 
|  | disfavors groups that meet to engage in prayer or religious speech. | 
|  | (f)  A school district shall adopt and implement a local | 
|  | policy regarding the limited public forums and implementation of | 
|  | the other provisions of this Act.  If a school district voluntarily | 
|  | adopts and follows the Model Policy Governing Voluntary Religious | 
|  | Expression in Public Schools ("Model Policy"), the district shall | 
|  | be deemed to be in compliance with the provisions of this Act | 
|  | covered by the Model Policy. | 
|  | (g)  Definitions. | 
|  | (1)  "Model Policy Governing Voluntary Religious | 
|  | Expression in Public Schools" means a local policy passed by the | 
|  | district containing the following provisions: | 
|  | Student Speakers at Non-Graduation Events: | 
|  | The district hereby creates a limited public forum consisting | 
|  | of an opportunity for a student to speak to introduce school events | 
|  | such as sports events, assemblies, opening announcements/greetings | 
|  | for the school day, pep-rallies, and other school events, as | 
|  | determined by the district.  For each speaker, the district shall | 
|  | set a maximum time limit reasonable and appropriate to the | 
|  | occasion. | 
|  | The forum shall be limited in the following manner:  (a) Only | 
|  | those students in the highest two grade levels of the school and who | 
|  | hold one of the following positions of honor based on neutral | 
|  | criteria shall be eligible to use the limited public forum: student | 
|  | council officers, class officers of the highest grade level in the | 
|  | school, captain(s) of the football team, and other students holding | 
|  | positions of honor as the district may designate. | 
|  | The eligible students shall be notified of their eligibility | 
|  | and those who wish to participate as an introducing speaker shall | 
|  | submit their names to the student council or other designated body | 
|  | during an announced minimum 3 day period.  This announced period may | 
|  | be at the beginning of the school year, at the end of the preceding | 
|  | school year so student speakers are in place for the new year, or, | 
|  | if the selection process will be repeated each semester, at the | 
|  | beginning of each semester or at the end of the preceding semester | 
|  | so speakers are in place for the next semester.  The names of the | 
|  | volunteering student speakers shall be randomly drawn until all | 
|  | names have been selected, and the names shall be listed in the order | 
|  | drawn.  Each selected student will be matched chronologically to | 
|  | the event for which he/she will be giving the introduction. Each | 
|  | student may speak for one week at a time for all introductions of | 
|  | events that week, or rotate after each speaking event, or | 
|  | otherwise, as the district determines.  The list of student | 
|  | speakers shall be chronologically repeated as needed, in the same | 
|  | order.  The district may repeat the selection process each semester | 
|  | rather than once a year. | 
|  | The subject/topic of the student introductions must be | 
|  | related to the purpose of the event and to the purpose of marking | 
|  | the opening of the event, honoring the occasion, the participants, | 
|  | and those in attendance, bringing the audience to order, and | 
|  | focusing the audience on the purpose of the event.  Although the | 
|  | subject/topic has been designated and a student must stay on the | 
|  | subject/topic, and the student may not engage in obscene, vulgar, | 
|  | offensively lewd, or indecent speech, the district shall treat | 
|  | student expression of religious viewpoints, if any, in the same | 
|  | manner as the district treats student expression of secular or | 
|  | other viewpoints, without discrimination. | 
|  | For as long as there is a need to dispel confusion over the | 
|  | non-sponsorship of the student's speech, at each event in which a | 
|  | student will deliver an introduction, a disclaimer shall be stated | 
|  | in either written or oral form, such as, "The student giving the | 
|  | introduction for this event is a volunteering student selected on | 
|  | neutral criteria to introduce the event.  The content of the | 
|  | introduction is the private expression of the student and does not | 
|  | reflect the endorsement, sponsorship, position, or expression of | 
|  | the school district." | 
|  | Certain students who have attained special positions of honor | 
|  | within the school have traditionally addressed school audiences | 
|  | from time to time as a tangential component of their achieved | 
|  | positions of honor, such as the captain(s) of various sports teams, | 
|  | student council officers, class officers, homecoming kings and | 
|  | queens, prom kings and queens, and the like.  Such students have | 
|  | attained their positions based upon neutral criteria. Nothing in | 
|  | this policy eliminates the continuation of the practice of having | 
|  | such students, irrespective of grade level, address school | 
|  | audiences in the normal course of their respective positions.  The | 
|  | district shall treat such students' expressions of religious | 
|  | viewpoints, if any, in the same manner as the district would treat | 
|  | such students' expressions of secular or other viewpoints, without | 
|  | discrimination. | 
|  | Student Speakers at Graduation Ceremonies: | 
|  | The district hereby creates a limited public forum consisting | 
|  | of an opportunity for a student to speak to begin graduation | 
|  | ceremonies and another student to speak to end graduation | 
|  | ceremonies.  For each speaker, the district shall set a maximum time | 
|  | limit reasonable and appropriate to the occasion. | 
|  | The forum shall be limited in the following manner:  (a) Only | 
|  | students who are graduating who hold one of the following neutral | 
|  | criteria positions of honor shall be eligible to use the limited | 
|  | public forum:  student council officers, class officers of the | 
|  | graduating class, and top three academically ranked graduates (or a | 
|  | shorter or longer list of student leaders as the district may | 
|  | designate).  Any student, however, who will otherwise have a | 
|  | speaking role in the graduation ceremonies is ineligible to give | 
|  | the opening and closing.  The names of the eligible volunteering | 
|  | students will be randomly drawn.  The first name drawn will give the | 
|  | opening, and the second name drawn will give the closing. | 
|  | The topic of the opening and closing must be related to the | 
|  | purpose of the graduation ceremonies and to the purpose of marking | 
|  | the opening and closing of the event, honoring the occasion, the | 
|  | participants, and those in attendance, bringing the audience to | 
|  | order, and focusing the audience on the purpose of the event. | 
|  | In addition to the students giving the opening and closing, | 
|  | there are certain other students such as Valedictorians who have | 
|  | attained special positions of honor based upon neutral criteria who | 
|  | will have speaking roles at graduation ceremonies.  For each such | 
|  | speaker, the district shall set a maximum time limit reasonable and | 
|  | appropriate to the occasion and to the position held by the speaker. | 
|  | For this purpose, the district creates a limited public forum for | 
|  | these students to deliver such addresses.  The subject/topic of the | 
|  | addresses must be related to the purpose of the graduation | 
|  | ceremonies, marking and honoring the occasion, honoring the | 
|  | participants and those in attendance, and the student's perspective | 
|  | on purpose, achievement, life, school, graduation, and looking | 
|  | forward to the future. | 
|  | Although the subject/topic has been designated for each | 
|  | student speaker and a student must stay on the subject/topic, and | 
|  | the student may not engage in obscene, vulgar, offensively lewd, or | 
|  | indecent speech, the district shall treat student expression of | 
|  | religious viewpoints, if any, in the same manner as the district | 
|  | treats student expression of secular or other viewpoints, without | 
|  | discrimination. | 
|  | A written disclaimer shall be printed in the graduation | 
|  | program that states, "The students who will be speaking at the | 
|  | graduation ceremonies were selected based upon neutral criteria to | 
|  | deliver messages of their own choice.  The content of each student | 
|  | speaker's message is the private expression of the individual | 
|  | student and does not reflect any position or expression of the | 
|  | district, its board, administration, or employees, or necessarily | 
|  | indicate the views of any other graduate.  The contents of these | 
|  | messages were prepared by the student volunteers, and the district | 
|  | refrained from any interaction with student speakers regarding the | 
|  | student speakers' viewpoints on permissible subjects/topics." | 
|  | Religious Expression and Prayer in Class Assignments: | 
|  | Students may express their beliefs about religion in | 
|  | homework, artwork, and other written and oral assignments free from | 
|  | discrimination based on the religious content of their submissions. | 
|  | Students shall neither be penalized nor rewarded on account of | 
|  | religious content.  Such home and classroom work shall be judged by | 
|  | ordinary academic standards of substance and relevance and against | 
|  | other legitimate pedagogical concerns identified by the school. | 
|  | Thus, if a teacher's assignment involves writing a poem, the work of | 
|  | a student who submits a poem in the form of a prayer (for example, a | 
|  | psalm) should be judged on the basis of academic standards (such as | 
|  | literary quality) and neither penalized nor rewarded on account of | 
|  | its religious content. | 
|  | Organized Prayer Groups and Activities: | 
|  | Students may organize prayer groups, religious clubs, "see | 
|  | you at the pole" and other religious gatherings before, during, and | 
|  | after school to the same extent that students are permitted to | 
|  | organize other non-curricular student activities and groups. Such | 
|  | groups must be given the same access to school facilities for | 
|  | assembling as is given to other non-curricular groups, without | 
|  | discrimination because of the religious content of their | 
|  | expression.  Where student groups that meet for nonreligious | 
|  | activities are permitted to advertise or announce their | 
|  | meetings--for example, by advertising in a student newspaper, | 
|  | putting up posters, making announcements on a student activities | 
|  | bulletin board or public address system, or handing out | 
|  | leaflets--school authorities may not discriminate against groups | 
|  | who meet for prayer or other religious speech.  School authorities | 
|  | may disclaim sponsorship of non-curricular groups and events, | 
|  | provided they administer such disclaimers in a manner that neither | 
|  | favors nor disfavors groups that meet to engage in prayer or other | 
|  | religious speech. | 
|  | SECTION 2.  If any provision of this Act or its application | 
|  | to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity shall | 
|  | not affect other provisions or applications of this Act, and to this | 
|  | end the provisions of this Act are severable. | 
|  | SECTION 3.  Short title.  This Act may be cited as the | 
|  | "Religious Viewpoint Anti-Discrimination Act" or "Marian's Law." | 
|  | SECTION 4.  This Act applies beginning with the 2007-2008 | 
|  | school year. | 
|  | SECTION 5.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives | 
|  | a vote of two thirds of all the members elected to each house, as | 
|  | provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this | 
|  | Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this | 
|  | Act takes effect September 1, 2007. |