Are Texas Republicans going off the rails or what?

http://chron.com/disp/story.mpl/headline/metro/4831635.html

The Senate easily passed and sent to the governor a bill Wednesday to 
teach Bible classes to high school students, but lawmakers immediately 
disagreed on whether the measure would make the courses mandatory.
Legislative leaders differed on whether school districts may offer the 
religion studies course, or whether they are obligated to do so if 15 
or more students sign up for it. Both "may" and "shall" show up in 
different sections of the House bill that the Senate passed 28-2 
without changing.

Sen. Craig Estes, R-Wichita Falls, sponsor of the legislation in the 
Senate, said his legislative intent clearly is to require school 
districts to offer the Bible course if at least 15 students sign up 
for it.

However, Rep. Scott Hochberg, D-Houston, noted that the House Public 
Education Committee specifically removed "shall" from the original 
legislation, House Bill 1287, which, he said, allows local school 
districts to decide whether to offer the course, intended to give 
students a fuller appreciation of religion's role in society.

"We'll just have to get some experts to look at it," Estes said after 
being told of Hochberg's interpretation of the bill.

Estes and other supporters got little disagreement from critics that 
people could benefit from more knowledge about Hebrew scripture, the 
Christian Bible and the Islamic Quran.

"People need to know both the good things and bad things that have 
happened in history in the name of religion," Estes said. "There's 
lots on both sides to go around, and an elective course like this is a 
wonderful forum to discuss those issues."

And it would be nearly impossible for students, he said, "to 
understand the writings and speeches of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." 
without a basic knowledge of the Bible.


Other religions
Sen. Rodney Ellis, D-Houston, asked Estes whether the legislation 
would obligate school districts to offer a study of the Quran if at 
least 15 students requested such a course.

Yes, Estes answered, explaining that non-Muslim students may want to 
study the impact of the Quran "because of the present problems that we 
have with the war on terror because of people's misrepresentation of 
the Quran."

Only two senators, Sen. Juan "Chuy" Hinojosa, D-McAllen, and Sen. 
Mario Gallegos, D-Houston, opposed the bill.

Hinojosa expressed fear that any religious study course would focus 
more on the Bible and Christianity than on other faiths.

And he seemed to support Estes' view that a group of 15 or more 
students could obligate a school district to offer a religious study 
course.

"Since when do we allow students to dictate to TEA (Texas Education 
Agency) or some school system what courses to teach?" Hinojosa asked.


Changes to original
The bill heading to Gov. Rick Perry's desk contains several changes 
from the original measure, all designed to satisfy skeptics. They 
include:

. Specifications for teacher training and qualifications.
. Requirements for curriculum standards and an actual textbook instead 
of using the Bible as the textbook.
. Stronger protections for the religious freedom of students and their 
families.
"Today, the Senate kept safeguards in this bill that should prevent 
government from telling our schoolchildren what to believe about the 
Bible," said Kathy Miller, president of a nonpartisan organization 
that supports religious freedom.

"We will now join with families across the state to ensure that 
schools adhere to the bill's clear standards that promote respect for 
both the Bible and the religious freedom of all students."



xponent

Liars Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to