A Virginia school board is considering revising its policies on after-school clubs following conflict over a new “After School Satan Club.”
- Security costs must be paid by an organization in advance.
- The school district determines the number of officers needed for security.
- Promotional materials cannot include the school or facility name without permission from the Office of Student Activities and Facility Use.
Another said limiting the club’s access to public property would be unconstitutional.
“I sincerely hope that The Satanic Temple takes this city to court for this blatant disregard of the constitution,” said another resident.
The Chesapeake school board is scheduled to vote on the proposed policy revisions at its Feb. 27 meeting.
In the meantime, Superintendent Jared Cotton assured the community the board wouldn’t discriminate against religious groups.
“It’s important for us to point out that the groups in particular that we’ve been discussing over the last couple of months are outside groups, not school-sponsored,” he explained. “We do have groups who ask to use our facility from time to time but we have to treat all groups fairly.”
After-School Satan Club, an initiative of The Satanic Temple, “exists to provide a safe and inclusive alternative to the religious clubs that use threats of eternal damnation to convert school children to their belief system.”
Fred Pry, associate vice president of USA Ministries for Child Evangelism Fellowship, was more optimistic.
“The reality is, parents are the gatekeepers for all the clubs in schools,” he said. “All of them need permission slips signed by the parents so parents hold the power. Parents are the ones who control the Satan clubs because if no children sign up, Satan clubs are not going to exist.”