From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


ELCA Board Addresses School Vouchers, Other Social Issues


From News News <NEWS@ELCA.ORG>
Date 29 Feb 2000 15:13:56

ELCA NEWS SERVICE

February 29, 2000

ELCA BOARD ADDRESSES SCHOOL VOUCHERS, OTHER SOCIAL ISSUES
00-044-FI

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- A social policy resolution on school vouchers
for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) has been
recommended by the ELCA Division for Church in Society (DCS).  The DCS
board met here Feb. 24-26, proposed the ELCA Church Council adopt the
voucher resolution, and addressed a number of issues it expects the
church to confront in the near future.
     The voucher resolution is meant to help the church's state public
policy offices as they evaluate school voucher proposals on a case-by-case 
basis, said the Rev. James M. Childs Jr., board chair.  Childs is
dean of academic affairs and professor of theology and ethics, Trinity
Lutheran Seminary, Columbus, Ohio.
     "When voucher issues are brought in various locations, there are
certain criteria that will guide us in how we do our advocacy -- for or
against," said Childs. "We are not taking the position of favoring
vouchers, and we are not suggesting that they would always be the wrong
choice."
     "Some voucher programs can be genuinely beneficial, given the
context, but always we have a total commitment to a high quality
education for all and to those measures that best enable persons who are
least advantaged to access high quality education.  We have no desire to
undermine public schools at all," he said.
     The resolution lists eight goals by which to evaluate proposals
for education reform:
+ provide public schools the support and resources necessary to fulfill
their tasks;
+ increase equal access to high quality education for all, especially
for children and youth who live in poverty or are otherwise
disadvantaged;
+ enhance families' -- especially families living in poverty and other
situations of hardship -- ability to select the right high quality
education for their children;
+ allow participating schools, including religious ones, to maintain
their distinctive character and mission;
+ protect against all forms of invidious discrimination against
students;
+ provide eligible families sufficient and accurate information on
participating schools;
+ ensure ways for measuring the educational achievements of students in
participating schools; and
+ establish means to evaluate the positive and negative results of the
program and, in light of these results, to consider if the program
should be continued, modified or ended.
     The Rev. Timothy J. Swenson, Our Savior Lutheran Church, Halliday,
N.D., voted against the resolution.  He said vouchers may allow parents
to put their children into religious schools not necessarily because
they provide a higher quality education than that provided by public
schools but because they provide education from a different perspective,
and he did not see that addressed in the resolution's goals.
     The Church Council will meet here April 7-10.  It will consider
making the social policy resolution on school vouchers an interim policy
of the church, for possible ratification in August 2001 by the ELCA
Churchwide Assembly in Indianapolis.
     The board discussed several other matters.
     The Rev. Charles S. Miller, executive director of the ELCA
Division for Church in Society, reported to the board that 1999 had been
a very successful year for the church's World Hunger Appeal.
     A special emphasis during the ELCA World Hunger Program's 25th
anniversary was expected to provide about $350,000 more than previously
was budgeted to distribute, he said.  While the board was meeting,
Miller received word that the figure may be closer to $600,000.
     "The allocation of the unanticipated increase in hunger money is
going to follow roughly the pattern of allocations that was originally
budgeted," said Childs.  "The programs toward which we are putting this
money are the programs on which we made the appeal to the church."
     "What was budgeted originally never comes close to meeting all the
needs.  Even the increase of money available, in all likelihood, will
still not meet all the needs; we are dealing with such a massive
problem," he said.
     Miller's report to the board set priorities for programs which
would receive any additional money.  At the top of the list were Jubilee
2000, the international movement to ease the debts of poorer nations;
Simba Circle, a summer camping program for young African American men;
urban agriculture; urban gardening programs, especially for people with
disabilities; and the ELCA's Women and Children Living in Poverty
program.  Additional money will also bolster the division's ability to
provide grants toward various hunger-related programs across the church,
said Miller.
     In other action, the DCS board:
+ voted unanimously to re-elect Miller to another four-year term as the
division's executive director;
+ heard reports on and discussed the ELCA's involvement in the
international Decade for a Culture of Nonviolence;
+ raised several topics for future consideration by the board, such as a
possible social justice message to state concisely the church's support
for the human rights of gay and lesbian people;
+ approved the ELCA Corporate Social Responsibility priorities of
environment, equity in the workplace, land mines and community
reinvestment for 2000-2001;
+ approved guidelines for ELCA participation in Lutheran World
Federation delegations to meetings and conferences of the United
Nations; and
+ recommended the ELCA Church Council transfer its participation in the
Chicago area's Advocate Health Care Network to the ELCA Metropolitan
Chicago Synod.
     The DCS board's next meeting will be Sept. 28-30 in Rockford, Ill.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://listserv.elca.org/archives/elcanews.html


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home