A substitute teacher in Georgia is suing her former employer for firing her after she asked for a religious exemption for her children.
Lindsey Barr worked at Bryan County Schools, where her children attended, when she asked that her children be excused from a library reading hour that featured a book that contradicted her personal religious beliefs, according to Fox News. In Barr's lawsuit, she claims that within hours of her request, she was locked out of the online system that lists substitute assignments, essentially firing her from teaching again without any notice.
The book All Are Welcome centers on"a group of children through a day in their school, where everyone is welcomed with open arms. A school where students from all backgrounds learn from and celebrate each other's traditions. A school that shows the world as we will make it to be," according to an online listing. Barr claimed the book had images that were against her religious beliefs.
"The public schools have no business pushing radical ideology on our students, especially the youngest of our students," Barr said of the matter."They have no business doing that."Alliance Defending Freedom, a nonprofit organization, sent the district a letter in September on Barr's behalf, criticizing it for violating her rights and demanding she be reinstated. When the organization received no response, it filed the lawsuit for Barr on Friday.
ADF recently won a similar First Amendment case on behalf of a math professor in Texas over a joke, earning him $165,000 from Texas University.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
How one neutrino physicist hunts for new and hidden particles.carguelles314 uses neutrinos to try to discover what lies beyond the standard model. SN10
Read more »
Today in history: Oct. 1Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor denied an emergency appeal from a group of teachers to block New York City’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for public school teachers and other staff from going into effect.
Read more »
Judge throws out lawsuit over 2018 Georgia governor's electionThe suit was looking to change how Georgia administers elections.
Read more »
Brie and camembert cheeses sold in stores across US, Mexico recalled due to ListeriaIllnesses have been reported in New Jersey, Massachusetts, California, Texas, Georgia and Michigan.
Read more »
Teacher holds 13 world records, featured in 2023 Guinness World Records bookImagine having your photo in the Guinness World Records book.For one California teacher, that's her reality.Carrie Swidecki is not only a teacher at Laurelglen
Read more »
First Everhome Suites extended-stay hotel opens in CoronaAdditional Everhome hotels are planned for Arizona, Georgia, South Carolina and Texas.
Read more »