ACLU of Florida Says Veterans for Peace to Be Granted Equal Access With Military Recruiters in Pinellas County Schools (7/17/2006)
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
media@aclu.org LARGO,
FL
–
The American Civil Liberties Union of Florida announced today that the Pinellas
School District has agreed to allow Veterans for Peace the same access to
students that military recruiters receive, for the purpose of presenting
alternative career information.
"Our
position is not whether students should or should not enlist in the military,"
said Rebecca Harrison Steele, Director of the ACLU of Florida's West Central
Office. "Our concern is that students be presented with all of the pertinent
information so that they can make informed decisions about their futures. We
hope that all public schools in Florida will take notice of the Pinellas school
board's decision to allow their students to receive information on careers that
do not involve enlistment in the military."
Following
intervention by the ACLU of Florida's Pinellas County Chapter, the Pinellas
Veterans for Peace (VFP) group will be permitted to offer printed material to
Pinellas County public school students and answer questions about careers that
don't require military enlistment first.
Steele
presented the Pinellas County School Board a letter on July 13 outlining the
First Amendment grounds why the VFP should be granted equal access to present
alternative career information.
"Federal
law provides equal access for those wishing to provide alternative career
information," said Bruce Howie, Legal Panel Chair for the Pinellas Chapter of
the ACLU of Florida. "In other words, once the school opened its doors to
employers, the military and post-secondary educational institutions to provide
career information, it cannot discriminate in who's allowed access based on the
content of the speech."
VFP
seeks to provide students with fact-based information about alternative careers
that focus on serving society, other than careers in the military. Their
intention is to provide alternate information, not to criticize the military as
a career choice. Among the opportunities presented to students by Veterans for
Peace are employment and careers in Americorps, the Peace Corps, international
development, as well as domestic opportunities in forests, parks, education and
health care.
The
following is an excerpt from the ACLU of Florida’s Pinellas County Chapter to
the school board:
The
First Amendment prohibits the government, including the Pinellas County School
District, from denying access to a speaker solely to suppress the point of view
he or she expresses. When the schools open their doors to one type of speech,
such as the career information presented by military recruiters, they cannot bar
the doors to others who seek to present the same type of information - but from
an alternative viewpoint that may not receive favor.
The entire letter to the school board can be read online at
www.aclufl.org/pdfs/PinellasCountyVFPLetter.pdf
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