Orlando Sentinel

Lawsuit over pregame prayer draws in Corcoran

- By Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — The Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n is awaiting a court ruling in a legal battle about whether Christian schools should have been allowed to offer a pregame prayer before a 2015 championsh­ip football game played in Orlando, as Education Commission­er Richard Corcoran pressures the associatio­n to reconsider its policies.

Corcoran recently sent a letter to associatio­n Executive Director George Tomyn calling on the highschool athletics governing body to “conduct an immediate review of its policies and procedures to ensure religious expression is permitted to the greatest extent possible under the law.”

Tomyn replied last week with a letter to Corcoran that noted a federal appeals court recently sent the lawsuit back to a district judge, who had initially backed the associatio­n’s decision to deny permission to use a stadium loudspeake­r for a pregame prayer.

“Based on the advice of counsel, the FHSAA will refrain from commenting on this ongoing litigation and allow this matter to be resolved in the forum in which it is now vested,” Tomyn said in the letter. “Rest assured the FHSAA has acted, and will continue to act, in a manner that is consistent­ly in the best interest of our member schools.”

Corcoran responded Monday with a letter to Tomyn requesting a briefing on the lawsuit and reiteratin­g his earlier calls for the board of directors to review and amend policies.

“The very existence of this lawsuit suggests that the FHSAA needs a consistent method of resolving these issues,” Corcoran wrote in Monday’s letter. “It is in the best interest of the associatio­n’s member schools and student athletes to promote free speech and to protect religious expression by our students.”

Cambridge Christian School of Tampa filed the lawsuit in 2016 after being denied access to a loudspeake­r to offer a prayer before a championsh­ip football game against Jacksonvil­le’s University Christian School at Camping World Stadium in Orlando.

The associatio­n said allowing the schools to offer a prayer over the loudspeake­r would have been viewed as “government speech.” U.S. District Judge Charlene Edwards Honeywell in 2017 agreed with the associatio­n and dismissed the case.

Honeywell wrote that Cambridge Christian’s position “amounts to a request that the FHSAA open its loudspeake­r, which otherwise is not accessible to private parties, to allow for prayer to be broadcast during a government-controlled and hosted event. This would likewise be perceived as state endorsemen­t of Cambridge Christian’s

religious message.” But a panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last month sent the case back to Honeywell, saying the issues deserve closer scrutiny.

“The lower court was too quick to pull the trigger insofar as it dismissed the appellants’ (Cambridge’s) free speech and free exercise (of religion) claims,” the 70-page appeals court decision said. “We cannot say whether these claims will ultimately succeed, but Cambridge Christian has plausibly alleged enough to enter the courtroom and be heard.”

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