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With the school year opening in much of the nation, educators will soon be facing two of their traditional challenges: how to raise funds for school operations and how to avoid legal challenges.

A recent federal district court decision may actually help schools with both of those issues, even though the court ruled for a group of parents and against a school district on a very particular issue involving free-speech and establishment-of-religion questions in the realm of school fundraisers.

A federal district judge in Houston has ruled that a Texas school district engaged in viewpoint discrimination in violation of the First Amendment’s free speech clause when it removed an explicit religious message as one option for greeting cards selected by parents as part of a school fundraiser.

U.S. District Judge Lee H. Rosenthal held that the district would not violate the First Amendment’s prohibition of any government establishment of religion by allowing parents to have this choice of message on the holiday cards sold through a third-party vendor: “And she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name Jesus; for He shall save his people from their sins. – Matthew 1:21.”

Pattison Elementary School in Katy, Texas, was selling the holiday cards as a fundraiser for art supplies. The program allowed parents to choose artwork created by their own child as well as one of several stock messages for inside the card. Among the messages the district did not seek to disallow were “Wishing you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year,” “Peace on Earth/Let it begin in our hearts,” and messages recognizing Hanukkah and Kwanzaa.

In a 2009 ruling in the case, the district court upheld the district’s restrictions on when and where the fundraiser could take place, and it held at that time that the greeting-card fundraiser did not violate the establishment clause of the First Amendment.

On reconsideration, however, the court held in its July 30 opinion in Pounds v. Katy Independent School District that the free-speech rights of parents were infringed by the school’s decision to black out the explicit religious message as a selection and that the district was not required by the establishment clause to take that action.

“The fact that the school sent the order form to the parents does not make the contents of the form pure government speech,” Judge Rosenthal said. “It was evident that the form was prepared by a third party and that it was the third party that created the twelve preset messages for the parents to choose. … The form created a forum for, or facilitated, the creation of the cards, which was clearly private expression.”

Noting that the case has been active since 2006, Judge Rosenthal lamented the legal minefield that school officials must navigate when dealing with anything touching on religion in public education.

“As this case demonstrates, decisions in such seemingly innocuous and benign activities as elementary school parties and fundraisers for elementary school art classes too often lead to protracted litigation,” the judge said.

A hat tip for this case goes to the National School Boards Association’s Legal Clips, which recently added a frequently updated Web site to its other outlets, which include an weekly e-mail newsletter.

The old Boynton High School has been at the center of political debates through the years.

It has been on the verge of being demolished several times in the past decade, and it also has been the subject of 12 studies since 1993, costing the city nearly $300,000 .

Despite all of the reports, discussions and spending, the old high school remains standing, empty, just as it has been since the day its doors closed in 1949.

Now the city has put out a request for another study regarding possible plans and financing sources for the old high school, and the Boynton Beach Community Redevelopment Agency has set aside $52,000 for this purpose.

But things will be different this time around, according to the city commissioners. For the first time in recent years, the entire commission supports saving the old high school.

At a team-building retreat in May, the commissioners agreed to make preserving the old high school a priority, and set a target date of Dec. 10 for putting together a design/construction schedule and budget.

When the idea of putting out a request for another study first came up at the Aug. 3 commission meeting, Commissioner Bill Orlove questioned whether that would be a smart move.

“We’re going through budget hearings, and we talk about how we’re trying to cut and save and scrimp,” he said. “We’ve studied this over and over again, and I just think it’s ridiculous to spend $52,000 on another study.”

Mayor José Rodriguez was quick to defend the study, saying it would be the first one to look at possible money sources, such as historic preservation and new market tax credits, grants and bonds.

“I’m not one of those mayors that’s going to do a study and have it sit on the shelf,” he said.

He also said it’s possible that the money spent on the study would be reimbursable through some of these programs.

Vice Mayor Marlene Ross said she’s wary of another study.

“No more studies,” she said. “It’s time to move forward and do something.”

She said that time is running out for the 83-year-old building.

“It’s in terrible condition,” she said.

Commissioner Woodrow Hay said he’s glad to see this next study moving forward.

“It’s about time,” he said. “I’m really hopeful that we’ll the get funding sources to move ahead with it. That’s going to be the difficult part. If we get that piece of the puzzle, the other pieces should fall into place.”

Although the commissioners all agree that the old high school should be preserved, they haven’t come to an agreement on a particular use. But that’s part of the reason why the newest study is being done, according to Commissioner Steven Holzman.

He said that past studies identified particular uses without first taking into account what’s financially feasible.

“Instead of putting the cart before the horse, let’s just see what the horse is,” he said.