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Also Available in PDF (244 kb - Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader) HSLDA in Texas HSLDA has retained Houston lawyer and home school father, Tom Sanders, to be our local counsel on behalf of our Texas HSLDA members. Tom has been defending the right of home schoolers for the last 15 years. He will also serve as a watchdog before the legislature in Austin on behalf of HSLDA members. Weekly E-mail Update for Texas We will provide weekly updates of legislative activities in Texas that could impact family and home school freedoms. (These e-mail updates will be sent to all Texas members who have registered for HSLDA's e-lert service. To sign up, go to www.hslda.org or call 540.339.5600.) Support Group Seminars HSLDA will host four regional seminars in 2001. These events will be open to all HSLDA members as well as support group leaders and "leaders-in-training." Watch your mail for details. Third-Party Custody Challenges In custody cases brought by a non-parent (i.e. grandparent or other relative) where home schooling is a material part of the basis of the challenge, HSLDA will provide members with defense for the home schooling component of the case. We will also provide representation in cases where the third-party is seeking termination of a parent's right to home school. How HSLDA Membership Protects Your Family
How HSLDA Membership Protects Others . . . and Your Family Every case in Texas affects other Texas home schoolers. Cases cross state lines. Your right to home school in Texas is protected by state and federal law. When home schoolers rely on Texas law in Texas courts, their case only affects families in Texas. But each time a family relies on their rights under the United States Constitution, their case affects families across state lines. This is especially true when cases reach the federal Courts of Appeals. Thus, when HSLDA successfully defended Fourth Amendment rights in the Ninth Circuit, families from Arizona to Alaska were better off. When the Tenth Circuit ruled against home schoolers who wanted to get on a public school team in Oklahoma, families as far away as Utah were affected. When a Massachusetts private school lost a First Amendment case in the First Circuit, home and private schools across New England suffered. Your membership in a relatively "safe" state like Texas provides the security for families in less safe states to home school with the assurance that if they ever do have trouble, the resources will be available to defend their rights. In the early 1980s, virtually every home school family in North Dakota was contacted. Pooled resources from these North Dakota families alone could never have provided the defense they needed. HSLDA's work at the state level-your membership allows us to:
HSLDA's work at the federal level-your membership allows us to:
How HSLDA Membership Promotes Home Schooling across the US . . . Your membership allows us to:
How HSLDA Membership Promotes Home Schooling Internationally . . . Your membership allows us to encourage international efforts to legalize home schooling in other countries. HSLDA is presently working with home schoolers in South Africa, Australia, Canada, Mexico, Germany, Japan, Sweden, Taiwan, Brazil, Hungary, England, France, Belgium, and the Czech Republic. The History of Home Schooling in Texas When HSLDA began in 1983, Texas had the reputation as one of the most difficult states in which to home school. In the early 1980s, legal contacts were serious. The Texas Education Agency had mandated prosecution of home schoolers. Many families, even where one parent was a certified teacher, were threatened with jail or loss of custody of their children. In 1994, the Texas Supreme Court Leeper decision greatly improved the legal atmosphere in Texas by affirming the right of home schools to operate as private schools without regulation. Despite the fact that TEA now promotes much more home school friendly policies, there are still school districts who misunderstand or misapply the law and an increasing number of social services investigations of families who home school. Even though we're lawyers, our primary objective is to avoid going to court and to resolve problems at the initial contact stage. When all good faith efforts to avoid litigation fail, we represent our members every step of the way. So far, by God's grace, no HSLDA member family has even been forced to stop home schooling. Highlights from our case record 1984 Katy/Houston- Area school districts filed truancy charges against nine HSLDA member families for home schooling, despite the fact that two of the mothers were certified teachers. With the assistance of Tom Sanders as local counsel, HSLDA protected the right of these member families to continue home schooling. 1985 Texas Education Agency et. al. v. Leeper, et. al. 1986 HSLDA defended 36 member families who were either prosecuted or threatened with prosecution. All of the cases were ultimately dismissed. 1987 Tarrant County-April 1987, the district court ruled in favor of the home schoolers in favor of the home schoolers in Texas Education Agency, et al. v. Leeper, et al. The state and school districts appealed. HSLDA represented nearly 100 families who were being threatened with prosecution by truancy officers and social workers. 1988 Post-HSLDA was able to get seven truancy cases dismissed against member families. Linden-A local judge gave an HSLDA father one week to send his children to public school, telling him that "home schooling was not allowed in their town." After intervention by HSLDA, the school district backed off. 1989 Criminal charges of truancy were brought against the Brazell family right before Christmas. HSLDA attorney Christopher Klicka immediately called the truant officer and the charges were dismissed. 1991 Texas Court of Appeals-On November 27, 1991, the court of appeals affirmed the Tarrant County District Court's 1987 decision in Texas Education Agency, et al v. Leeper, et al. The TEA appealed again, this time to the Texas Supreme Court. 1992 San Antonio-A home schooling mother was visited by a social worker who alleged that her children were not in school, unsupervised, dirty, abused, and that the house was possibly used as a center for drug trafficking. HSLDA convinced the social worker that home schooling was a completely legitimate option and explained that the other allegations were false since: the mother had a fenced-in yard, the boys were dirty only from play, and people were coming and going from her house because she sold curriculum from her home. HSLDA refused the social worker's demand to interview each of the children separately, and despite threats of a court order, the case was deemed unfounded and was closed. Nueces County-The 214th Judicial District Court was called to order on August 28, 1992, to review the case of a young man named "Brian" (not his real name). "Brian's" natural mother challenged his legal guardians' decision to remove him from a special education classroom and teach him at home. HSLDA's Special Needs Coordinator attended the hearing and testified on behalf of Paul and Janis Chapman's decision to home school "Brian." The judge ordered that the Chapmans be allowed to continue home schooling the boy. Tyler-John and Rachel Stephens were summoned to appear before the justice of the peace on the allegation that their child was not attending school. The school district had not made any inquiries or notified the family-an official had simply turned the matter over to the justice of the peace. 1993 Austin-On January 26, 1993, the Texas Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case of Texas Education Agency, et al v. Leeper, et al. Under questioning by the justices, Attorney Shelby Sharpe emphasized that the statues do not give the TEA any authority to regulate home schools or private schools. The lawyers for the state, on the other hand, pointed out that the previous rulings severely restricted their authority to monitor home schools. Outside the courtroom, over 5000 people gathered at the south steps of the Capitol in Austin to demonstrate their support of parental rights and family values. In the Interest of A.B. 1994 Santa Fe-The Moser family was prosecuted for withdrawing their child from public school and initiating a home schooling program. Through phone contact, HSLDA persuaded the school district and the court to drop the charges. Austin-On June 15, 1994, the Texas Supreme Court handed down a unanimous decision in favor of the home school plaintiffs in Texas Education Agency et. al. v. Leeper, et. al. The rights home schoolers enjoyed since the first decision of the Leeper case in 1987 remained securely in place. In fact, the Texas Supreme Court affirmed the right of home schools to operate as private schools without regulation. 1995 Garland-After the Spencer family withdrew their children from public school and even submitted a letter indicating their compliance with the Leeper decision, a school official turned them over to the Justice of the Peace. HSLDA persuaded the court to drop the charges because the family was legally home schooling. 1996 State of Texas v. Diana Billingslea HSLDA explained to the school principal who initiated the charges that a home school is a private school in the State of Texas and the parent need only provide assurance that she has a written curriculum and that she is providing instruction in five required subjects. At the same time, Ms. Billingslea provided written assurance to the school district that she had a written curriculum and was providing education in the five required subjects. The superintendent dropped the case. 1997 State of Texas v. Patricia Rogers State v. Dorcas Hill HSLDA obtained dismissal of the charge, but, the school district again initiated criminal complaints against Mrs. Hill and her daughter. On June 22, 1998, HSLDA appeared for trial on their behalf. The case was dismissed on September 14, 1998. State of Texas v. Richard G. 1998 State of Texas v. Gini H. State v. Mr. & Mrs. Edward Ortiz City of Balch Springs v. Edmon James 1999 State v. Family of P 2000 State v. Mrs. E State v. Mr. & Mrs. B Also Available in PDF (244 kb - Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader) |
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