Judges: STEVE CLARK, Attorney General
Filed Date: 10/29/1984
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Hon. John Dawson State Representative Post Office Box 336 Camden, AR 71701
Dear Representative Dawson:
This is in response to your opinion request wherein you posed the following inquiries:
1. Is it permissible for the Fairview Public School District to allow the Ouachita Bible Society to present non-denominational religious programs at various schools within the district during school hours and with attendance voluntary in nature?
2. If this action is improper, can the programs be presented off campus by the Society during school hours?
For the following reasons, the answer to both of your inquiries is no, and this office must advise against either of the above practices.
The
Inasmuch as there are cases on point with respect to your first inquiry, application of the above analysis is unnecessary. In McCollum v. Bd. of Ed.,
There is also a case on point which at first glance would appear to make permissible the second situation you described. In 1952, the United States Supreme Court found as constitutional "released time" for public school students to attend religious classes off-campus. Zorach v. Clauson,
When Lemon is applied to the question of whether a religious program can be presented off-campus during school hours, an affirmative answer to the following questions is required in order that the practice not be considered unconstitutional. Are the students allowed to attend the programs for non-religious purposes? Does the policy or practice neither advance nor inhibit religion? Does the policy or practice avoid an excessive intanglement with religion?
Because presentation of the religious program off-campus is an apparent alternative to on-campus teaching, it would appear that it would be difficult to claim that the practice was not for religious purposes. Additionally, is not the alternative practice being developed in order to make possible or available the religious studies otherwise not allowable? Without addressing the third question, it is the opinion of this office that since all three questions cannot be answered in the affirmative, as required under Lemon, the practice of presenting religious studies off-campus during school hours is constitutionally suspect.
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General C. R. McNair III.