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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: T L Comiskey who wrote (21538)7/5/2003 3:26:48 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
While here at home...BUSH SEEKS TO DESTROY HEAD START!!!!!
He is a sick power monger....
First Doctors can't speak to patients....
Now Head start can't DEFEND ITSELF....
FACISM LIVES in BUSH/ASHCROFT

NHSA Declares Victory In 1st Amendment Lawsuit As HHS
Retracts Threats Against 900,000 Head Start Teachers,
Parents

WASHINGTON - July 3 - In a development that is very much in the spirit of the 4th of July
holiday, the National Head Start Association (NHSA) announced today that it had prevailed
in its effort to force the Bush Administration to end its attempt at chilling the First
Amendment free-speech rights of 51,681 Head Start teachers and more than 870,000 parent
volunteers.

NHSA President Sarah Greene announced that the Bush Administration had capitulated in
the lawsuit by withdrawing a May 8, 2003 HHS letter sent to Head Start programs across the
U.S. In the widely criticized letter, HHS threatened Head Start teachers and parents with civil
action or even jail time if they spoke out against the Bush plan to dismantle the program
serving one million at-risk children across America.

On July 2nd, the Bush Administration indicated that it would withdraw the letter and replace
it with one making it clear that there is no basis for such a threat to be hanging over the
heads of Head Start teachers and parent/volunteers. HHS was asked last week by a federal
court judge to either write a letter that would address NHSA's objections or face a bench
ruling.

Commenting on the Association's success in the lawsuit, NHSA President Sarah Greene
said: "This is a great way for Head Start teachers and parents to be able to celebrate their
1st Amendment rights on a day - July 4th - that is all about free speech and other core rights
that define what it is to be American. I am delighted that the Bush Administration recognized
that its attempt to stifle free speech was unlawful and that it relented in its baseless attack
on the 1st Amendment rights of over 900,000 Head Start teachers and parents."

Greene said: "Emboldened by our success in this litigation, we look next for those who care
about Head Start to prevail in Congress. There is a growing groundswell of support to save
the 38-year-old program from those who would gut it and turn the money over to the
cash-strapped states that may know a lot about how to cut spending for early childhood
education, but very little about how to run such programs."

Edward T. Waters, managing partner, Feldesman Tucker Leifer Fidell LLP and outside
counsel for NHSA, said: "The legal problems with the Bush Administration letter were both
obvious and severe. The letter clearly exceeded the boundaries of any conceivably applicable
statute or regulation as to the actions it prevents and the sanctions it threatens. In so doing,
it unlawfully chilled the free expression of political speech by grantees, parents and staff with
their own money or on their own time ... HHS had no option but to relent here and take back
its threat."

BACKGROUND

On May 28, 2003, NHSA revealed an unprecedented attempt by the Bush Administration to
stifle the free speech rights of Head Start staff and volunteer/parents. On May 8, 2003,
Windy Hill, associate commissioner, Head Start Bureau, U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, sent a letter to local Head Start programs in the U.S. that asserted a new
and broad interpretation of the Head Start Act to threaten local Head Start programs with
legal action if they spoke out in any way against White House and House GOP proposals to
dismantle the program serving one million at-risk American children.

On May 27th, NHSA formally objected to the letter and indicated that, if it was not
overturned, a lawsuit would be filed to challenge it. To date, the Association's grave First
Amendment free-speech concerns have not been addressed publicly or privately by the Bush
Administration. To read the original NHSA statement on the Bush Administration's attack on
the First Amendment rights of Head Start teachers and parent/volunteers, click here. That
page includes the text of the original Windy Hill letter and the NHSA letter submitted in
response to Hill.

On June 11th, NHSA took HHS to court to stop the campaign of intimidation. The
Association's lawsuit contained the following passage: "Such a threat necessarily has a
chilling impact on the non-profit Head Start community. Funds or resources of non-profit
grantees not already committed to Head Start or other similar efforts are sparse to
non-existent. Many cannot even afford to hire counsel to advise them on the Hill letter, much
less to defend them should any sanctions be brought by HHS. Because of this ... the Hill
letter has made parents and staff of non-profit Head Start grantees afraid to communicate
their opinions concerning the proposed legislation, to Congress or elsewhere."

ABOUT NHSA

The National Head Start Association is a private not-for-profit membership organization
dedicated exclusively to meeting the needs of Head Start children and their families. The
Association provides support for the entire Head Start family by advocating for policies that
provide high-quality services to children and their families; by providing extensive training and
professional development services to all Head Start staff; and by developing and
disseminating research, information, and resources that impact Head Start program delivery.
NHSA provides a national forum for the continued delivery and enhancement of Head Start
services for at-risk children and their families.