On Tuesday, the American Civil Liberties Union demanded that officials with Alabama’s Franklin County School System reverse their decision that a lesbian student can’t attend the school prom with her girlfriend. Cynthia Stewart, a junior at Tharptown High School, was denied her request for the upcoming March 25 prom. From an ACLU press release,
“I can’t believe my school is doing all of this just to keep me from bringing my girlfriend to the prom,” said Stewart, a 17-year-old student who, as a member of the prom planning committee, has personally raised over $200 for the prom and created the theme her classmates chose for the dance. “All I want is to be able to be myself and go to my prom with the person I love, just like any other student wants to do.”
Stewart’s aunt and guardian, Kathy Baker, approached ACLU of Alabama board member and local attorney Henry F. Sherrod III last week for assistance after the school announced it was cancelling the prom. Baker had approached the school board to appeal the principal’s earlier decision that Stewart could not bring her girlfriend to the dance, but her plea on behalf of her niece was turned down. Some teachers told classes last Thursday that prom was being canceled altogether as a way to avoid having to let Cynthia bring her date.
At least one teacher made statements to students Monday indicating that the prom was back on, but there had still been no reversal on the decision that Stewart can’t bring her girlfriend to the event. “It’s just sad to see this school twisting itself in so many different directions to avoid its constitutional obligations to one student,” Sherrod said. “Cynthia doesn’t just deserve to be able to take her girlfriend with her to the prom like any other student – she has a federally-protected right to do so.”
In its letter to Franklin County School System officials, the ACLU cited cases both in Alabama state court as well as federal court guaranteeing students’ First Amendment right to bring same-sex dates to school dances. And along with illegally canceling the prom, the ACLU claimed that Tharptown High School’s principal further violated Stewart’s First Amendment rights by requiring her to remove a sticker she was wearing at school that read, “I’m a Lesbian.” Stewart said that when she told the principal she had a First Amendment right to wear the sticker, he replied, “You don’t have that much freedom of speech at school.”
The ACLU has given the school district until November 20 to respond to its letter.

RSS Subscribe
1 response so far ↓
1 Kari Chisholm // Nov 12, 2009 at 4:54 pm
Outrageous. Of course, this is in a part of the world where they have “black prom” and “white prom”.
Leave a Comment