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Congress Elementary School District v. Warren : ウィキペディア英語版 | Congress Elementary School District v. Warren
Congress School District v. Warren In January 2010, the Congress (Ariz.) school district filed a lawsuit against Jean Warren, Barbara Rejon, Cindy Regis and Jennifer Renee Hoge. The district claims illegal harassment by the various requests for public records. The Congress Elementary School District has a history of alleged violations of the Arizona public records law and other state and federal laws that guarantee parents the right to see school records about their children. The lawsuit also seeks to prevent the four women from requesting investigations by state agencies even if they suspect state sunshine laws have been violated. ==Background== At different times, Jean Warren, Barbara Rejon, Cyndi Regis and Renee Behl-Hoge, parents who currently or formerly had children in the Congress Elementary School district, requested to see various documents considered to be basic public records, including agendas and minutes of school board meetings. Rejon, Regis and Behl-Hoge also asked to see records about their children when they attended school in the district. However, Behl-Hoge’s family no longer lived in Congress and she had not requested to see any school district records in more than six years. The defendants' requests for public records with the school district date back to 2002 when Warren requested public records four different times while her grandson was attending the Congress elementary school.〔Flatten, Mark.("Congress, Ariz. school district sues taxpayers to stop questions" ), Goldwater Institute Watchdog Report, March 10, 2010.〕 According to the Attorney General’s office, the district was not properly posting governing board agendas or making minutes available to the public under the state’s open meeting law. In 2007, the school imposed a dress code citing a survey conducted which showed overwhelming parental support (35 parents out of 75 families). Rejon objected to the dress code, and requested to see the results of the survey. The school refused to release them. Regis, who also objected to the school dress code, was not allowed to speak at a school board meeting on the issue. Although the Attorney General’s office stated that the school district did not break state law, the school was admonished yet again for not releasing public records. Since 2007, the school district’s response to releasing public records did not improve, according to the defendants.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Congress Elementary School District v. Warren」の詳細全文を読む
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