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Trustees debate posting donated Ten Commandments posters; motion made to delay pending litigation

October 29, 2025 | CANUTILLO ISD, School Districts, Texas


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Trustees debate posting donated Ten Commandments posters; motion made to delay pending litigation
Trustees debated whether to post a donated set of Ten Commandments posters after administration reported the donation met statutory size and formatting requirements. District counsel and staff explained current guidance from the Texas attorney general and a pending injunction in a small number of districts; the attorney-general opinion cited specific ISDs but also advised that, once the law takes effect, donated posters meeting the statutory parameters must be accepted and posted.

Several trustees said they oppose posting religious text in classrooms on separation-of-church-and-state grounds, arguing the public school setting differs from optional events and holidays. Other trustees said the posters are a lawful, donated item and would not materially change the classroom experience for students. The transcript captures multiple trustees expressing personal religious beliefs and different views about whether posting would cause community division.

After extended discussion, one trustee moved that the board delay posting the donated Ten Commandments posters pending resolution of the litigation identified in attorneys advice; the motion was seconded. The provided transcript records the discussion and the recorded motion and second; the supplied excerpt does not show a final roll-call vote on that motion in the captured portion. Administration advised the board that returning the donated posters could expose the district to litigation risk for not following the statute as written; counsel added that the attorney general had identified a limited set of ISDs subject to an injunction but that other districts would be expected to comply when the law takes effect. Trustees asked for time to consult the legal briefs and for a fuller explanation of liability before moving forward with posting.

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Scribe from Workplace AI
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