Bill Text: TX HB4949 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating to a period of prayer and Bible reading in public schools.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2023-03-23 - Referred to State Affairs [HB4949 Detail]
Download: Texas-2023-HB4949-Introduced.html
By: Cain | H.B. No. 4949 |
|
||
|
||
relating to a period of prayer and Bible reading in public schools. | ||
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: | ||
SECTION 1. Subchapter C, Chapter 25, Education Code, is | ||
amended by adding Section 25.0823 to read as follows: | ||
Sec. 25.0823. PERIOD OF PRAYER AND BIBLE READING. (a) The | ||
board of trustees of a school district or the governing body of an | ||
open-enrollment charter school that is not operated by or | ||
affiliated with a religious organization may by record vote adopt a | ||
policy requiring every campus of the district or school to provide | ||
students and employees with an opportunity to participate in a | ||
period of prayer and Bible reading on each school day in accordance | ||
with this section. | ||
(b) A policy adopted under Subsection (a) must prohibit: | ||
(1) a student or employee of the school district or | ||
open-enrollment charter school from being permitted to participate | ||
in the period of prayer and Bible reading unless the employee or | ||
parent or guardian of the student submits to the district a signed | ||
consent form that includes: | ||
(A) an acknowledgment that the student or | ||
employee has a choice as to whether to participate in the period of | ||
prayer and Bible reading; | ||
(B) a statement that the person has no objection | ||
to the student's or employee's participation in or hearing of the | ||
prayers or Bible readings offered during the period; and | ||
(C) an express waiver of the person's right to | ||
bring a claim under state or federal law arising out of the adoption | ||
of a policy under this section, including claims under the United | ||
States Supreme Court's interpretations of the Establishment | ||
Clause, which forever releases the school district and all school | ||
officials from any such claims that the signatory might assert in | ||
state or federal court; and | ||
(2) the provision of a prayer or Bible reading over a | ||
public address system. | ||
(c) An employee or parent or guardian of a student may | ||
revoke the person's consent provided under Subsection (b)(1) by | ||
informing the appropriate school administrator, as determined by | ||
the school district or open-enrollment charter school, and no | ||
student or employee whose consent has been withdrawn may continue | ||
participating in the period of prayer and readings from the Bible | ||
unless and until a new consent form is executed and submitted in | ||
accordance with Subsection (b)(1). A person who withdraws consent | ||
under this section remains bound by the waiver of claims described | ||
in Subsection (b)(1)(C). | ||
(d) A policy providing for a period of prayer and Bible | ||
reading adopted under Subsection (a) must include provisions | ||
ensuring a prayer or Bible reading is not provided in the physical | ||
presence or within the hearing of a person for whom a signed consent | ||
form has not been submitted under Subsection (b)(1) or has been | ||
revoked under Subsection (c), or in any manner that would inflict | ||
"injury in fact" on such a person under Article III of the | ||
Constitution. In order to comply with this subsection, a policy may | ||
require that the period of prayer and Bible reading be provided: | ||
(1) before normal school hours; | ||
(2) only in classrooms or other areas in which a | ||
consent form under Subsection (b)(1) has been submitted for every | ||
employee and student, which may include an entire district or | ||
school campus if a consent form has been submitted for each employee | ||
and student at the campus; or | ||
(3) by any other method recommended by the attorney | ||
general or legal counsel for the district or school. | ||
(e) The attorney general, on request from the board of | ||
trustees of a school district or the governing body of an | ||
open-enrollment charter school, shall: | ||
(1) provide advice on best methods for a district or | ||
school to comply with the requirements of this section; | ||
(2) provide a model consent form that may be used for | ||
purposes of providing consent under Subsection (b)(1); and | ||
(3) defend the district or school in a cause of action | ||
arising out of the adoption of a policy providing for a period of | ||
prayer and Bible reading under Subsection (a). | ||
(f) If the attorney general defends a district or school | ||
under Subsection (e)(3), the state is liable for the expenses, | ||
costs, judgments, or settlements of the claims arising out of the | ||
representation. The attorney general may settle or compromise any | ||
and all claims under this subsection. The state may not be liable | ||
for any expenses, costs, judgments, or settlements of any claims | ||
arising out of the adoption of a policy providing for a period of | ||
prayer and Bible reading under Subsection (a) against a district or | ||
school not being represented by the attorney general. | ||
(g) Notwithstanding any other law, any person, including an | ||
entity, attorney, or law firm, who seeks declaratory or injunctive | ||
relief to prevent a school district or open-enrollment charter | ||
school from adopting or implementing a policy providing for a | ||
period of prayer and Bible reading under Subsection (a) in any state | ||
or federal court, or that represents any litigant seeking such | ||
relief in any state or federal court, is jointly and severally | ||
liable to pay the costs and reasonable attorney's fees, including | ||
interest, of the prevailing party, including the costs and | ||
reasonable attorney's fees that the prevailing party incurs in its | ||
efforts to recover costs and fees. | ||
(h) For purposes of this section, a party is considered a | ||
prevailing party if a state or federal court: | ||
(1) dismisses any claim or cause of action brought | ||
against the party that seeks the declaratory or injunctive relief | ||
described by Subsection (g), regardless of the reason for the | ||
dismissal; or | ||
(2) enters judgment in the party's favor on any such | ||
claim or cause of action. | ||
(i) A prevailing party may recover costs and attorney's fees | ||
under Subsection (h) only to the extent that those costs and | ||
attorney's fees were incurred while defending claims or causes of | ||
action on which the party prevailed. | ||
(j) Regardless of whether a prevailing party sought to | ||
recover costs or attorney's fees in the underlying action, a | ||
prevailing party under this section may bring a civil action to | ||
recover costs and attorney's fees against a person, including an | ||
entity, attorney, or law firm, that sought declaratory or | ||
injunctive relief described by Subsection (g) not later than the | ||
third anniversary of the date on which, as applicable: | ||
(1) the dismissal or judgment described by Subsection | ||
(h) becomes final on the conclusion of appellate review; or | ||
(2) the time for seeking appellate review expires. | ||
(k) It is not a defense to an action brought under | ||
Subsection (j) that: | ||
(1) a prevailing party under this section failed to | ||
seek recovery of costs or attorney's fees in the underlying action; | ||
(2) the court in the underlying action declined to | ||
recognize or enforce the requirements of this section; or | ||
(3) the court in the underlying action held that any | ||
provisions of this section are invalid, unconstitutional, or | ||
preempted by federal law, notwithstanding the doctrines of issue or | ||
claim preclusion. | ||
(l) Notwithstanding any other law, the state has sovereign | ||
immunity, its officers and employees have sovereign and official | ||
immunity, a school district or open-enrollment charter school has | ||
governmental immunity, and each member of the governing body of a | ||
school district or open-enrollment charter school and employee of a | ||
school district or open-enrollment charter school has governmental | ||
and official immunity in any action, claim, or counterclaim or any | ||
type of legal or equitable action that challenges the validity of | ||
any provision or application of this section, on constitutional | ||
grounds or otherwise, unless that immunity has been abrogated or | ||
preempted by federal law in a manner consistent with the | ||
Constitution of the United States. The sovereign immunity | ||
conferred by this section upon the state and each of its officers | ||
and employees includes the constitutional sovereign immunity | ||
recognized by the Supreme Court of the United States in Seminole | ||
Tribe of Florida v. Florida, 517 U.S. 44 (1996), and Alden v. Maine, , 517 U.S. 44 (1996), and Alden v. Maine, | ||
527 U.S. 706 (1999), which applies in both state and federal court | ||
and which may not be abrogated by Congress or by any state or | ||
federal court except pursuant to legislation authorized by section | ||
5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, by the Bankruptcy Clause of Article | ||
I, or by Congress's powers to raise and support Armies and to | ||
provide and maintain a Navy. | ||
(m) Notwithstanding any other law, the immunities conferred | ||
by Subsection (l) shall apply in every court, both state and | ||
federal, and in every adjudicative proceeding of any type | ||
whatsoever. | ||
(n) Notwithstanding any other law, a provision of state law | ||
may not be construed to waive or abrogate an immunity described by | ||
Subsection (l) unless it expressly waives or abrogates immunity | ||
with specific reference to this section. | ||
(o) Notwithstanding any other law, no attorney representing | ||
the state, its political subdivisions, or any officer, employee, or | ||
agent of this state or a political subdivision is authorized or | ||
permitted to waive an immunity described in Subsection (l) or take | ||
any action that would result in a waiver of that immunity, and any | ||
such action or purported waiver shall be regarded as a legal nullity | ||
and an ultra vires act. | ||
(p) Notwithstanding any other law, including Chapter 37, | ||
Civil Practice and Remedies Code, and sections 22.002, 22.221, and | ||
24.007 through 24.011, Government Code, no court of this state may | ||
award declaratory or injunctive relief, or any type of writ, that | ||
would declare or pronounce any provision or application of this | ||
section invalid or unconstitutional, or that would restrain the | ||
state, its political subdivisions, including a school district or | ||
open-enrollment charter school, any officer, employee, or agent of | ||
this state or a political subdivision, including each member of the | ||
governing body of a school district or open-enrollment charter | ||
school and employee of a school district or open-enrollment charter | ||
school, or any person from enforcing any provision or application | ||
of this section, and no court of this state shall have jurisdiction | ||
to consider any action, claim, or counterclaim that seeks such | ||
relief. | ||
(q) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent a | ||
litigant from asserting the invalidity or unconstitutionality of | ||
any provision or application of this section as a defense to any | ||
action, claim, or counterclaim brought against that litigant. | ||
(r) Notwithstanding any other law, any judicial relief | ||
issued by a court of this state that disregards the immunities | ||
conferred by Subsection (l), or the jurisdictional and remedial | ||
limitations imposed by Subsection (p), shall be regarded as a legal | ||
nullity because it was issued by a court without jurisdiction, and | ||
may not be enforced or obeyed by any officer, employee, or agent of | ||
this state or a political subdivision, judicial or otherwise. | ||
SECTION 2. Section 25.901, Education Code, is amended to | ||
read as follows: | ||
Sec. 25.901. EXERCISE OF CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO PRAY. A | ||
public school student has an absolute right to individually, | ||
voluntarily, and silently pray or meditate in school in a manner | ||
that does not disrupt the instructional or other activities of the | ||
school. A person may not require[ |
||
to engage in or refrain from such prayer or meditation during any | ||
school activity. | ||
SECTION 3. Each board of trustees of a school district and | ||
each governing body of an open-enrollment charter school shall take | ||
a record vote not later than six months after the effective date of | ||
this Act on whether to adopt a policy requiring every campus of the | ||
district or school to provide a period of prayer and Bible reading | ||
under Section 25.0823, Education Code, as added by this Act. | ||
SECTION 4. This Act applies beginning with the 2023-2024 | ||
school year. | ||
SECTION 5. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives | ||
a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as | ||
provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this | ||
Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this | ||
Act takes effect September 1, 2023. |