Current:Home > MarketsCalifornia schools join growing list of districts across the country banning Pride flags-LoTradeCoin
California schools join growing list of districts across the country banning Pride flags
View Date:2025-01-11 13:53:52
As another academic year gets underway, more school boards across the country are debating banning LGBTQ Pride flags, with civil rights advocates arguing the flags are constitutionally protected expression.
This week, two California school boards voted to ban certain flags, including the LGBTQ Pride flag, amid concerns from parents who supported and opposed the bans.
In recent years, school districts across the country have presented flag restrictions as a means to avoid favoring any one group over another. Some measures limit flag displays to government and military flags – effectively banning the Pride flag, LGBTQ advocates say.
"It has become clear with a little analysis that their real focus is to ban the rainbow flag," said Jay Blotcher, co-founder of New York City's Gilbert Baker Foundation, an LGBTQ advocacy group named for the Pride flag's creator. "They're willing to put a ban on other flags in their zeal to ban the rainbow flag," Blotcher told USA TODAY.
For months, LGBTQ groups have warned banning gay Pride symbols in schools are an extension of curriculum bans restricting mentions of LGBTQ topics. In many states, LGBTQ curriculum bans were passed alongside bans on critical race theory, making the restrictions part of a larger push against inclusion and diversity, advocates say.
"What unites the efforts to further marginalize trans youth, ban books and ban Pride flags is a desire to make the world less safe for queer youth," said Gillian Branstetter, a spokesperson for the American Civil Liberties Union LGBTQ and HIV Project. "The message that flags send is that anywhere it is flown you will be safe and respected and loved for who you are."
The American Civil Liberties Union teamed up with the Gilbert Baker Foundation this year to create legal resources for communities across the country to fight back against proposals to ban the Pride flag.
Who is banning Pride flags?
In recent years, the Gilbert Baker Foundation has tracked dozens of instances of municipal governments across the country banning certain flags on government property, and school boards passing restrictions banning Pride flags in schools.
Most recently, municipalities in California and across the country voted in May and June against flying Pride flags, around the time flags would have been displayed in government buildings for Pride Month, Blotcher said.
California school boards ban Pride flags
This week, two California school boards passed flag bans after voting along ideological lines, local outlets reported.
In California's Alameda County, the Sunol school board voted 2-1 Tuesday to ban Pride flags at the town's only elementary school, the Mercury News reported. Sunol is part of northern California's Bay Area and has a population of under 1,000.
Also on Tuesday, the Temecula school board in southern California voted 3-2 to ban all flags except the U.S. flag and the state flag, with limited exceptions, the Press-Enterprise in Riverside reported.
In both cases, parents are considering recall attempts against conservative board members who voted in favor of the flag bans, the outlets reported.
Young LGBTQ people need all the affirmation they can get, including at school, Blotcher said, adding that rates of suicide for queer youth are higher than for other groups.
"Being LGBTQ in this country right now is getting tougher. Now kids are under fire," Blotcher said. "You're seeing a trend of LGBTQ kids who are being suppressed resorting to self harm, and banning the flag is another step towards harming these kids and putting them at risk," he said.
Are Pride flags constitutionally protected?
Municipal policies banning only the Pride flag are considered "viewpoint discrimination" under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, according to the ACLU.
In schools, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled First Amendment protections extend to "teachers and students," neither of whom "shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate," the ACLU says in its Pride flag legal resource.
But until a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Pride flag bans reaches the Supreme Court, municipalities and school boards can keep passing blanket flag bans, Blotcher said.
Contributing: Marc Ramirez
veryGood! (6672)
Related
- New Pentagon report on UFOs includes hundreds of new incidents but no evidence of aliens
- A college student fell asleep on the train. She woke up hours later trapped inside.
- Ohio board stands by disqualification of transgender candidate, despite others being allowed to run
- Strong magnitude 7.1 earthquake strikes remote western China, state media says
- Oregon's Dan Lanning, Indiana's Curt Cignetti pocket big bonuses after Week 11 wins
- Criminals are extorting money from taxi drivers in Mexico’s Cancun, as they have done in Acapulco
- Strike kills Hezbollah fighter, civilian in Lebanon, amid seeming Israeli shift to targeted killings
- Burton Wilde: Bear Market Stock Investment Strategy
- Michael Grimm, former House member convicted of tax fraud, is paralyzed in fall from horse
- Sarah Ferguson treated for skin cancer: What to know about melanoma, sunscreen
Ranking
- Former NFL coach Jack Del Rio charged with operating vehicle while intoxicated
- Could Champagne soon stop producing champagne?
- Clothing company Kyte Baby tries to fend off boycott after denying mom's request to work from preemie son's hospital
- Kourtney Kardashian Shares Penelope Disick's Sweet Gesture to Baby Rocky
- Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul press conference highlights: 'Problem Child' goads 'Iron Mike'
- Six-time IndyCar champ Scott Dixon aims for more milestones at Rolex 24 at Daytona
- Saturday's Texans vs. Ravens playoff game was ESPN's most-watched NFL game of all time
- What is the healthiest bell pepper? The real difference between red, green and yellow.
Recommendation
-
Statue of the late US Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights icon, is unveiled in his native Alabama
-
20 Kitchen Products Amazon Can't Keep In Stock
-
Chicago Cubs Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg reveals cancer diagnosis
-
Biden administration has admitted more than 1 million migrants into U.S. under parole policy Congress is considering restricting
-
New Yorkers vent their feelings over the election and the Knicks via subway tunnel sticky notes
-
Spain’s top court says the government broke the law when it sent child migrants back to Morocco
-
Macy's rejects $5.8 billion buyout ahead of layoffs, store shutdowns
-
Top religious leaders in Haiti denounce kidnapping of nuns and demand government action