The document discusses a court case regarding a public school teacher named Karen Jo Barrow. Barrow applied for an assistant principal position but was denied after refusing a senior official's request to move her children from private Christian school to the district's public schools. Barrow sued the school district claiming violations of her constitutional and civil rights. The court determined that the school superintendent who made the request was not the official policymaker, and that denying Barrow the promotion was due to her choice in her children's education, not her religion. The implications are that while superintendents have authority over personnel recommendations, school boards maintain final policymaking authority.
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Case Study Barrow V[1]. Greenville Isd
1. Bechtold, Bickham, & Singh
Prairie View A&M University
PUBLIC SCHOOL LAW
ADMN 5023
William Allan Kritsonis, PhD
Professor
Parent’s Rights
Submitted
by
Rebecca Bechtold, Michele Bickham, and Soul Singh
June 22, 2009
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Parent’s Rights
INTRODUCTION
“Parental rights do not become null and void just because the parent is a teacher. The
decision of whether or not to consider an employee for a job should never be based on where the
applicant chooses to educate her own children. Neither the state nor any school official has the
right to dictate how an employee’s child should be raised,” said ADF-allied attorney Kelly
Shackelford, president of Liberty Legal Institute.
For this report, we will look at a public school teacher’s right to educate their
children the best way one sees fit and their right to promotions even if the children attend a
private institution.
Case One
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit
Karen Jo Barrow, Plantiff-Appellants
v.
Greenville Independent School District, et al., Defendants-Appellees
Docket No. 05-11151
LITIGANTS
Plaintiff – Appelant: Karen Jo Barrow
Defendants – Appellees: Greenville Independent School District
BACKGROUND
Karen Jo Barrow was a teacher in the Greenville Independent School District. When the
Assistant Principal position at Greenville Middle School became available, the future
principal of the middle school encouraged Barrow to apply. Barrow was interested in and
qualified for the position.
At the direction of Dr. Herman Smith, superintendent of GISD, a senior school official
asked Barrow if she would move her children from a private Christian school to public
school so that Barrow could be considered for the job. Barrow affirmed her interest in the
job but stated she wouldn't sacrifice her children’s' religious education.
After Barrow's name was placed in the pool of applicants, Dr. Smith directed Assistant
Superintendent for personnel, William Smith, to see if Barrow would be willing to move her
children to public school. She was not, and another person was hired for the job.
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FACTS
Barrow sued Smith and GISD in federal district court under 42 USC§ 1983, claiming a
denial of constitutional rights, disparate impact and treatment in violation of Title VII, and
several violations of state law. 42 USC states: “every person who, under color of any statute,
ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia,
subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the
jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the
Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or
other proper proceeding for redress, except that in any action brought against a judicial officer
for an act or omission taken in such officer’s judicial capacity, injunctive relief shall not be
granted unless a declaratory decree was violated or declaratory relief was unavailable. For the
purposes of this section, any Act of Congress applicable exclusively to the District of Columbia
shall be considered to be a statute of the District of Columbia”.
GISD moved for summary judgment, which the court granted in part and denied in part.
Regarding 42 USC § 1983, the court concluded that the GISD Board of Trustees, not Smith, was
the policymaker because Smith only recommended candidates while the Board had final
approval. The district court also held that the circumstance that the Board rubber-stamped
Smith's recommendations was legally irrelevant and that a patronage requirement was not
custom or practice establishing GISD policy.
DECISION
The court granted summary judgment for GISD on the Title VII claims, except as to
Barrow's reasonable accommodation claim, concluding that the failure to promote was due to
Barrow's choice to put her children in private school, not because of her religion or the religious
nature of the private school she chose, and that Barrow presented no evidence of disparate
impact upon constitutionally protected conduct. The court denied summary judgment on the state
law claims, except as to the claim for injunctive relief. The court concluded that the GISD Board
of Trustees, not Smith, was the policymaker because Smith only recommended candidates while
the Board had final approval.
DICTA
A school district has no vicarious liability under 42 USC § 1983. Rather, it is liable for
the unconstitutional conduct of its policymakers, including persons to whom it has delegated
policymaking authority in certain areas. It was determined that, under Texas law, school
boards make policy and superintendents administer. It pointed to Texas law giving the
school board “exclusive authority to manage and govern the public free schools of the
district.”
IMPLICATIONS
Texas statute directs school districts to adopt a personnel policy giving superintendents
"sole authority to make recommendations to the board regarding the selection of all personnel,
except that the board may delegate final authority for those decisions to the superintendent....If
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the board rejects the superintendent's recommendation, the superintendent shall make alternative
recommendations until the board accepts a recommendation." Hence the superintendent's power
to recommend comes from the legislature, not from the board of trustees, although the board
retains the power to accept or reject those recommendations and to fire the superintendent.
Standing alone, Barrow's argument has purchase because the superintendent has "sole authority"
to recommend. But it cannot prevail against the backdrop of Texas's legislative scheme, which
generally makes the board the policymaker and the superintendent the head administrator.
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