Religious, political freedom bill receives final passage

FRANKFORT-A bill that would that specify in state law that Kentucky’s public school
students and public college or university students are allowed to express their
religious and political views in their school work, artwork, speeches and other ways
is heading to the governor for his signature.

Senate Bill 17, sponsored by Sen. Albert Robinson, R-London, also states that public
school students are allowed to display religious messages on their clothes while at
school, use school newspapers and public address systems to announce student
religious meetings, and distribute political literature on school grounds. And
Kentucky public colleges and universities would be prohibited from both unreasonable
restrictions on student speech exercised outdoors on campus and from give religious
and political organizations “equal access to public forums.”

Rep. Tim Moore, R-Elizabethtown, said SB 17 clarifies that liberties granted by the
U.S. and state constitutions will not be denied in Kentucky.

“We’ve seen in other locales where the clear constitutional right to religious
liberty has been imposed upon,” Moore said.

“It is right that we in Kentucky make very clear as a body-as our fellows down the
hallway have done by an overwhelming bipartisan majority-that we will protect the
right to express religious and political viewpoints in public schools and public
postsecondary institutions,” said Moore. SB 17 passed the Senate by a vote of 31-3
on Feb. 10.

Among those voting against the bill was Rep. Jim Wayne, D-Louisville. “At this time
in our nation’s history-when we are experiencing so much division, when we are
experiencing so much hatred against Jews, Muslims and whoever else is not in the
mainstream-I think we need to be really cautious about bills like this,” he said.