'There are a variety of things being considered'
By Bob Unruh
Members of Congress privately are infuriated and worried over a
California appeals court ruling that essentially banned homeschooling
in the state, where at least 166,000 students are being educated that
way, according to a homeschooling expert who has met with them.
"There's a lot of concern and outrage from members of Congress,"
Michael Farris, the chairman of the Home School Legal Defense
Association, told WND today, shortly after he met with several members
on this issue.
"There's a variety of things being considered," he said. "There could
be a brief by members filed in the appellate court in support of
parental rights. There could be a resolution from Congress there."
Plans still were being develeped, he said. But the ultimate resolution,
Farris suggested, would be an amendment to the U.S. Constitution
recognizing the rights and responsibilities of parents to direct their
own children's education.
That effort already was under way under the banner of Parental Rights.
The website notes the campaign exists "to secure a constitutional
amendment that defends the rights of parents to direct the upbringing
and education of their children. … We believe that no government,
regardless of how well-intentioned it might be, can replace the love
and nurture of a parent in the life of a child."
The campaign said, "Without secured parental rights, the vital
child-parent relationship is exposed to the imminent danger posed by
anti-parent judges within the federal courts, as well as to the risks
of international law which seeks to undermine the parental role."
The California case involved the family of Phillip and Mary Long, and
stemmed from a juvenile proceeding. That case already had been closed
by the court when court-appointed attorneys for their children appealed
specifically trying to have homeschooling banned, and the ruling from
the Court of Appeal for the 2nd Appellate District in Los Angeles
essentially met their desires.
The opinion, by H. Walt Croskey, holds that homeschooling simply is not
a legal option in California. The HSLDA said if the opinion stands,
California would have the most regressive law in the nation.
Spokesman Allan Carlson of the The World Congress of Families said that
would put California on the same standard as Germany and Brazil, two
other governments that ban homeschooling.
The court ruling said: "We find no reason to strike down the
Legislature's evaluation of what constitutes an adequate education
scheme sufficient to promote the 'general diffusion of knowledge and
intelligence … We agree … 'the educational program of the State of
California was designed to promote the general welfare of all the
people and was not designed to accommodate the personal ideas of any
individual in the field of education.'"
Those words echoed the ideas of officials from Germany, where
homeschooling has been outlawed since 1938 under a law adopted when
Adolf Hitler decided he wanted the state, and no one else, to control
the minds of the nation's youth.
Wolfgang Drautz, consul general for the Federal Republic of Germany,
has said "school teaches not only knowledge but also social conduct,
encourages dialogue among people of different beliefs and cultures, and
helps students to become responsible citizens."
The appeals ruling said California law requires "persons between the
ages of six and 18" to be in school, "the public full-time day school,"
with exemptions being allowed for those in a "private full-time day
school" or those "instructed by a tutor who holds a valid state
teaching credential for the grade being taught."
Nor did the family's religious beliefs matter to the court.
Their "sincerely held religious beliefs" are "not the quality of
evidence that permits us to say that application of California's
compulsory public school education law to them violates their First
Amendment rights," the court said.
The family told WND it was working on its options for appeal, but they
remained indefinite. But there are other developments already.
Assemblyman Joel Anderson has proposed a resolution in the state
Legislature in California that calls for the Croskey ruling to be
overturned.
Gov. Schwarzenegger said, "if the courts don't protect parents' rights,
then, as elected officials, we will."
California Supt. of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell said, "Parents
still have the right to homeschool in this state."
The HSLDA said it would coordinate a petition seeking to have the legal
opinion "de-published," which is a process that would prevent it from
being used as a widespread precedent for other homeschooling
families.Another petition appeals to Schwarzenegger and the state
legislature and is being run by the Pacific Justice Institute, which is
working with the website PetitionsToday.org.
Yet another petition also is under way, at the ReverseTheRuling.com
website. That organization offers information for homeschoolers who
want to follow the California case, because of that state's influence
throughout the nation. It was assembled by the organization Learning By
Grace, an outreach dedicated to providing parents with innovative
online Christian homeschool materials.
"We have seen God’s hand of protection on the homeschooling movement
for the 25 years we have been working together for this cause. There is
no reason to begin to doubt God now," Farris said.
Pacific Justice also is representing Sunland Christian School, which
has been working with the family's children in a study program, on an
appeal to the state Supreme Court.
"Don't panic," the school said in a statement. "Help those who feel
distraught and afraid, to be at peace and have faith for a favorable
outcome. While we are appealing this ruling, it won’t be used in court
against homeschoolers. Continue to homeschool effectively, caring about
your family, children, their growth and development and their academic
instruction," the school said.
Pacific Justice chief Brad Dacus promised, "I will leave no stone
unturned in an effort to reverse this heinous attack on parental
rights, and that includes asking for your swift and immediate help."
The Longs previously told WND of their concerns with the public school
district's advocacy for alternative sexual lifestyles and promotion of
the theory of evolution.
"The parent-child relationship existed long before any government and
makes it the responsibility of the parent to educate the child,"
Phillip Long told California reporters.
He said the responsibility includes protecting children from things
that are hazardous "emotionally" as well as physically.
Croskey's ruling reversed a decision from Superior Court Judge Stephen
Marpet, who said "parents have a constitutional right to school their
children in their own home."
As WND has reported, the Longs had their children enrolled in Sunland
Christian School, a private homeschooling program.
But Croskey, without hearing arguments from the school, opined that the
situation was a "ruse of enrolling [children] in a private school and
then letting them stay home and be taught by a non-credentialed parent."
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Congress outraged by California homeschool case
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