Dear friend,
Some years ago THSC was contacted by a home
school mom in West Texas who was desperate
for help in fighting a lawsuit against her
family, which had been filed by her father.
The following is her story:
She was married to her second husband and had
one child from the previous marriage and two
by her current husband. The family was of
humble means and had chosen to homeschool
because they were concerned about the
negative influences of their children's peers
in the public school. Her parents, however,
did not agree with this decision and, in
fact, believed that the parents were being
"overprotective"; they were especially
critical of decisions related to the oldest
child. During one time together with the
family, the grandfather physically attacked
the husband in front of the whole family. As
a result, the parents sought and received a
restraining order to prohibit the grandfather
from being with the family.
The grandparents responded by filing suit
under the Grandparent Access Statute.
The grandparents' lawyer claimed that it was
in the best interest of the children to have
visitation with their grandfather. The
children's emotional well-being, he argued,
would be significantly impaired because they
were being homeschooled and did not have
enough interaction with other children.
In spite of the history of assault upon the
father, the judged ordered visitation for
both grandparents. The grandparents
continued the legal action against the
parents for years, seeking more and more
control of the children. At one point, they
told the parents they would drop the lawsuit
if they could have custody of the oldest
child while the parents maintained custody of
the younger two. After many years of
litigation, the parents finally yielded and
allowed their oldest child to live with the
grandparents.
In a similar case, a family in Houston had
homeschooled for many years, against the
strong dissent of the paternal grandparents.
The grandparents strongly disagreed with
many of the views of the parents, including
religious beliefs and educational decisions
of the family, and the father told his
parents at one point that if they continued
to interfere and cause discord, they would
not be allowed to visit the children. Then
the father suddenly became ill with cancer
and died within six months.
The grandparents began their attack almost
immediately after their son's death. A CPS
(Child Protective Services) caseworker later
testified in court she was certain the
grandparents had been responsible for a phony
tip that the mother had made a death pact to
kill herself and all her children so they
could join the soul of the deceased husband
and father. The grandparents filed suit for
visitation, and the mother unwisely took her
children and moved out of the country,
without notifying the authorities. The
grandparents then amended their suit from
visitation to custody. In the absence of the
family, a judge gave a default judgment of
custody to the grandparents who then spent
$200,000 to find the family. Armed soldiers
forcibly removed the children, allowing the
mother to accompany them, only to be arrested
when she reentered the country. The mother
was indicted for interfering with child
custody and jailed with bonds set totaling
three million dollars. She spent several
months in jail, until the bond was lowered to
$30,000. A court-appointed attorney for the
minor children said she had interviewed each
child and was moved by how close they were to
their mother and by their desire to be with
her. The grandparents sought joint custody
and wanted to make the educational decisions
for the children. After three and a half
years of litigation, the mother finally
regained sole custody of her children.
Unfortunately, not all such cases have this
positive an ending.
These kinds of stories are not unusual. In
fact, recently a widow, whose husband was
killed in the military overseas, was sued by
the paternal grandparents within two weeks
of her husband's death. Hundreds of
families have lived through such nightmares.
Others continue. The Texas Supreme Court
has ruled in two such cases-in 2006 and
2007-in the parents' favor. In both cases,
after the Supreme Court's ruling, the local
judge allowed the grandparents to simply file
suit again. These and many other parents
face the stark choice of bankruptcy or
yielding to the unreasonable demands of
grandparents regarding the upbringing and
education of their children.
In 1995 the Texas legislature amended the
Family Code to allow grandparents to sue
parents, or others who had custody, for
access to their grandchildren. This type of
legislation has been adopted in virtually
every state in the nation, driven by powerful
senior citizen groups. The purpose was to
allow a means to have access for grandparents
who were being kept from their grandchildren.
This change has had unintended consequences
that are destroying Texas families and
undermining the fundamental right of parents
to direct the education and upbringing of
their children. The law was amended again in
2005 to allow grandparents to sue for actual
possession, in addition to mere access. The
statute sets a lower standard of evidence
required for access or possession than is
required under other parts of the Family Code
for custody. That must change.
However, in the last legislative session,
THSC Association supported HB 3971 by Bryan
Hughes, which would have addressed many of
these issues in the current law. The bill
did not pass.
How do we restore parental rights in this
area and stop this abuse? We must change
the law!
The first step in changing this law is
to make Texas home schoolers and all parents
aware of the problem and how and why the law
needs to be changed. THSC will support the
Texas Parental Rights Restoration Act
(TPRRA) in the legislative session next
year. Please forward this information to
others. The TPRRA will be modeled on HB 3971
from last session. For more information on
this legislation and reasons that this law
needs to be amended, read the talking points and the commentary.
The second step in changing the law is
to speak now to your legislators (state
representatives and state senators), while
most of them are running campaigns for
election or reelection. If they have
contested races in the primary or general
election, they will very likely be much more
responsive to any questions or concerns that
you have. In fact, when I asked a legislator
earlier this week to co-sponsor the TPRRA, he
told me that a home schooler had spoken to
him a week before on the issue and that he
would be glad to make that commitment. I
also received a call from another legislator
whose home school constituents brought her a
copy of the February issue of the THSC
Review magazine with an article on the
issue. They convinced her to support the
legislation. Those candidates whom THSC PAC
has endorsed and who have committed to
co-sponsoring the TPRRA will be noted on the
PAC
Web site. If your legislators or candidates
for state House or Senate have not made that
commitment, call them and ask them to do so.
The more calls they get on this, the more
seriously they will view the issue and the
more likely they will be to sign on as
supporters.
The third step in fixing this problem
is to elect legislators sympathetic to our
cause. We need to have a heavy voter turnout
of home schoolers in the primary election on
March 4. THSC PAC plans to mail this message
to every household on the THSC list (almost
60,000), encouraging people to vote for
candidates who support parental rights and to
get their friends and family to do so as
well. When candidates see and hear from many
voters on this issue and have these same
families support their campaigns and help
them get elected, they will more likely be in
favor of this issue before they even get to
Austin.
In order to do the mailing, we must
raise $25,000. I often tell
candidates that THSC PAC is like Peter in
Acts, "Silver and gold have I none." What we
do have, however, is lots of home schoolers
who are willing to spend their time and
effort to help elect good candidates who
support parental rights. When we have been
able to raise the funds to do such a mailing
in the past, we have always received feedback
from some who tell us the only reason they
voted was because they had received our
mailing and knew for whom to vote. Early
voting starts on February 19th, and we need
to send this mailing as soon as possible.
If you can make a contribution to help us
accomplish this goal, it would move us much
closer to amending the law and protecting
parental rights to direct the education and
upbringing of their children. You may contribute
online. When you get to the payment
screen, type "PAC Contribution" in the
special instruction box. (Please note:
PAC contributions are not tax
deductible.) You can also send a
contribution to THSC PAC, PO Box 6221,
Lubbock, Texas 79493.
The fourth step is to repeat this
process during the general election in
November, to finish electing to the Texas
legislature candidates who believe that a
parent's right to direct the education and
upbringing of their children is fundamental
and must be protected.
Another step in this process will be
participation in the interim committee study
of this issue, which has been established for
review in both the Texas House and Senate.
We will make parents aware of the hearings
that are held and encourage people who have
suffered such problems to give testimony.
These committees will make a recommendation
to the legislature next year about changes to
the law that should take place. If you are
not on the THSC PAC E-Newsletter list, please
register for free regular updates on
this and other issues of importance to the
home school community of Texas.
Next year THSC Association will lead the
fight to gain support for the TPRRA at the
legislature and in meetings and rallies
across the state. We will also sponsor a
rally at the Capitol on this issue to show
grassroots support to restore parental rights.
Please pray for THSC Association and as we
seek to use all the means at our disposal to
restore parental rights. Time is short
before the primary, but we have already seen
significant movement on the part of many
legislators; you can help us turn the tide in
favor of parental rights with your
participation and support.
With your help and God's grace, we can
restore parental rights in Texas in the next
two years!
In your service,
Tim Lambert
PS In addition to working on the TPRRA, we
are also endorsing the effort by
ParentalRights.org
to amend the U.S.
Constitution with language that would state
unequivocally that a parent's right to direct
the education and upbringing of his/her child
is a fundamental right under the
Constitution. This group has a five-year
plan to amend the Constitution as a further
protection of parental rights. For more
information on that effort, visit the ParentalRights.org.
THSC
PAC Primary Election Endorsements
Tim Lambert
Texas Home School Coalition PAC
phone:
806-744-4106