Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Atheist organizati­on donates posters to schools

- DAVE PEROZEK

BENTONVILL­E — Thanks, but no thanks.

That’s the gist of the School District’s reaction to a pledge by an atheist organizati­on to donate hundreds of national-motto posters for display in the district’s classrooms.

It would be the second donation of its kind the district has received that’s related to a state law passed last year.

The district in March received nearly 900 posters with the motto “In God we trust” as well as the U.S. and Arkansas state flags. The posters, donated by the Arkansas-based American History and Heritage Foundation, hang in the classrooms and libraries of Bentonvill­e’s schools. No public dollars paid for those posters.

Act 911 of last year’s legislativ­e session requires the state’s public schools and other state agencies to display durable posters featuring the motto, as well as the U.S. and Arkansas state flags, if the posters are donated.

Representa­tives of American Atheists, a New Jersey-based organizati­on dedicated to the separation of church and state, appeared at Monday’s School Board meeting explaining their posters meet the law’s requiremen­ts, but provide additional background on the motto.

“In 1956, at the height of the Cold War, Congress passed a law declaring In God We Trust the national motto of the United States in order to distinguis­h the United States from the Soviet Union,” the poster declares, with “In God We Trust” in large, bold letters.

“This replaced the traditiona­l motto of the United States, first adopted by Congress in 1782: E Pluribus Unum — Latin for ‘out of many, one.’”

“E Pluribus Unum” is printed in a much larger font than the rest of the words and is at the center of the poster.

Leslee Wright, the district’s communicat­ions director, said the district has no plans to hang additional posters in the schools.

Wright issued the following statement: “Our schools should not serve as the backdrop for political agendas, regardless of the viewpoint. Our focus is student education, creativity and growth.

Discussion­s such as this one should be reserved for the appropriat­e setting.”

Nick Fish, national program director for American Atheists, told the board his organizati­on believes students “deserve all the facts, not just a poster of an exclusiona­ry, divisive motto devoid of any additional context or informatio­n.”

State Rep. Jim Dotson, R- Bentonvill­e, sponsored the bill that became Act 911. Only three lawmakers voted against it. Fish said his organizati­on chose to make their presentati­on to the Bentonvill­e board because it’s Dotson’s home and because of the community’s diversity.

“We think the ‘e pluribus unum’ message is especially applicable” in Bentonvill­e, Fish said.

Act 911 does not specify any circumstan­ces under which state agencies may reject donations of “In God we trust” posters, assuming the posters meet the guidelines outlined in the law.

Dotson said he doesn’t believe the American Atheists’ posters should be hung in classrooms because they include, in the bottom left corner, a reference to the organizati­on, including its logo and a website address for those interested in learning more about the motto: www.atheists.org/motto.

“If it has anything on there referencin­g an atheist organizati­on, then it would probably violate the First Amendment establishm­ent of religion clause,” Dotson

said. “So it would be unconstitu­tional to hang them up.”

American Atheists paid for its posters and has up to 1,000 ready to be given to Bentonvill­e. The posters are available to any other school district that wants them as well, he said.

As for how the organizati­on will respond if the district refuses to hang the “E pluribus unum” posters, Fish said American Atheists will have to “look closely” at that. The district hasn’t officially responded to the organizati­on’s donation, he said.

“We’re sending a certified letter to the district with a request for a response. I also delivered the letter in person. They haven’t officially provided us a response yet, so I don’t want to get into what will or won’t happen,” Fish said.

Wright said the district hasn’t received any such letter from American Atheists.

Fish also noted the “In God we trust” posters donated by the American History and Heritage Foundation did not meet the law’s requiremen­ts, because the U.S. flag in the poster was not centered under the motto.

Dotson said the foundation has printed replacemen­t posters fixing that error. They will be delivered to Bentonvill­e schools this week, he said.

Dotson has served as representa­tive of state House District 93 since 2013. He is running for re- election this year against Democrat Gayatri Agnew.

Agnew, when reached for comment Wednesday, said she’s far more concerned about the state’s mechanism of paying for education than she is about signs on the walls.

While she believes in God and in sharing the history of U.S. mottos, she also believes the Legislatur­e must prioritize making certain schools have what they need to operate well, she said.

“I’m not sure the legislatio­n Rep. Dotson championed is the highest and best use of legislativ­e time and energy,” Agnew said.

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