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Salt Lake School District Official Sued for Nixing
Yet Another Student Club
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, April 11, 2000
(NEW YORK, Tuesday, Aprill 11, 2000)--The same Salt Lake City school district that gained
notoriety by banning dozens of student clubs in order to block the formation of a gay-straight
alliance (GSA) is under fire once again.
In a lawsuit filed Monday, students charge the assistant superintendent with again violating the law
and the district’s own policies in order to keep clubs with a gay perspective off school grounds.
“All we want is to be treated just like the rest of the clubs,” said 11th-grader Jessi Cohen, age 16,
who along with classmate Maggie Hinckley is a plaintiff in the lawsuit. “Our club would be a place
for students to look at subjects we learn about in class from the perspective of lesbian and gay
people.”
Added Cohen, “Lesbians and gay men have played a role in many of the areas we discuss in our
classes. From American History to Government, and Sociology classes, issues affecting lesbian
and gay people come up all the time.”
The students’ application for their PRISM club, which stands for “People Respecting Important
Social Movements,” was submitted in February and explains that, in order to extend and enhance
their study of curriculum subjects, the students want to “talk about democracy, civil rights, equality,
discrimination and diversity” with an eye toward the perspectives of lesbians and gay men. The
lawsuit alleges that, in denying the club recognition, the assistant superintendent trampled
students’ first amendment rights of speech and expressive association. PRISM’s attorneys seek a
preliminary injunction to allow PRISM club members to meet on school grounds while the case
proceeds.
Lead counsel the American Civil Liberties Union of Utah, Lambda Legal Defense and Education
Fund, and the National Center for Lesbian Rights filed the lawsuit in United States District Court in
Salt Lake City on behalf of the East High School PRISM Club and two of its members, as well as
the East High Rainbow Club, a similar curricular club that was denied recognition during the 1999
academic year.
“Lesbian and gay students and their supportive classmates just want to be on an equal playing
field,” said Hinckley, the other 11th grade student involved in the case. “Students were stopped
from having a gay straight alliance, and last year the Rainbow club was blocked. Even though our
PRISM club fits all the criteria that the school board established, the officials are trying to hold our
club to a different standard. That’s unfair,” she said.
In Salt Lake City, only clubs the school district deems “curriculum-related” are recognized since
the district officially banned all non-curricular clubs in 1996 in order to thwart students’ attempts to
form a gay straight alliance. The legal challenge on behalf of that GSA, East High Gay/Straight
Alliance v. Board of Ed., continues on appeal. Last November, as part of that case, school
officials assured U.S. District Court Judge Bruce Jenkins that gay-positive views would not be
suppressed in curriculum-related clubs at East High.
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