
The American
Civil Liberties Union on Wednesday asked a federal
judge to reopen a lawsuit it brought two years ago on behalf
of several students who had sought to form a
gay-straight alliance at Boyd County High School in
Ashland, Ky. In a motion, the ACLU points to failures by
the school district to keep up its end of the agreement to
provide a mandatory training focused on sexual
orientation and gender identity discrimination.
"The Boyd County Board of Education agreed to
take specific steps in settling this lawsuit, because
it knew that antigay harassment is rampant in its
schools," said Sharon McGowan, a staff attorney with the
ACLU's Lesbian and Gay Rights Project. "But this school
district's attempts at providing a training have been
laughably inadequate gestures that show no real
commitment to honoring the agreement or protecting its students."
Last year's settlement agreement came a few
months after Judge David Bunning of the U.S. district
court for the eastern district of Kentucky issued a
preliminary injunction against the school for blocking
formation of the GSA. In that ruling the judge noted
several examples of harassment in the school,
including students in an English class stating that they
needed to "take all the fucking faggots out in the back
woods and kill them."
Part of the settlement agreement called for the
school district to conduct a mandatory antiharassment
training for all district staff as well as all
students in high school and middle school. In papers filed
today with the court, the ACLU outlined the district's
failings in meeting the spirit of this agreement:
The school allowed students to "opt out" of what
was supposed to be a mandatory training session,
letting half the student body skip the training. At
the high school only 502 of the 965 students attended the
training, and at the middle school only 462 of the 730
students attended. The only consequence for those
students who "opted out" was a slap on the
wrists—they received a single unexcused absence,
making them ineligible to get perfect attendance for
the school year.
Although the school agreed to conduct a one-hour
training focused on sexual orientation and gender
identity discrimination for all middle and high school
students, the training video the school showed to students
to satisfy this requirement included barely 10
minutes' worth of content that directly addressed
these issues.
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