More than 100 Texas chaplains have signed onto a that allows them to serve as counselors in public schools.
The letter released Tuesday urges school board members to reject the public school chaplain program, calling it 鈥渢hat the harmful to our public schools and the students and families they serve.鈥
Under , school boards have to vote whether to bring in hired or volunteer chaplains to 鈥減rovide support, services, and programs for students.鈥
Several groups organized the letter, including the , and
鈥淲e are troubled by SB 763 because religious instruction should be left to our houses of worship and religious institutions, not to our government,鈥 said Reverend Jennifer Hawks, ordained Baptist minister and Associate General Counsel with the BJC.
Texas school counselors are troubled too.
Jill Adams, a 16-year school counselor, is president of the Texas School Counselor Association. She said with training in child development, counseling skills, and mental health support, 鈥渟chool counselors are equipped, trained and certified to do just that for students.
鈥淭exas chaplains do not have any credential or certification that would give them the ability to say they鈥檙e qualified to support student mental health needs.鈥
Sheri Allen is a chaplain and Jewish Cantor at Makom Shelanu Congregation in Fort Worth and one of the signatories of the letter.
鈥淎s a chaplain myself,鈥 Allen said, 鈥淚 oppose school districts employing chaplains in place of licensed school counselors. We are not qualified to do that kind of work. Under this new law, school districts could allow chaplains to serve as a student鈥檚 first point of contact for mental health, suicide prevention and other behavioral health services.
鈥淐haplains aren鈥檛 trained to do that at all.鈥
Allen added chaplains lack training in other academic areas as well, including graduation, college and continuing education advice and information.
鈥淎s chaplains, we are trained to provide spiritual and emotional support to people that ask for it,鈥 she said.
In the case of children, she said they鈥檙e too young to give consent 鈥 that's another problem she has with the new law.
For Allen, context matters. She said a chaplain in the appropriate setting is fine. But a school doesn鈥檛 provide that.
鈥淭ake for instance a kid who might be LGBTQ and not out to their parents,鈥 Allen said. 鈥淭heir parents say, 鈥業 want you to talk to this counselor.鈥 I mean, how are they going to feel safe to talk to a chaplain who might not approve of who they are? They might even do major damage.鈥
Neither state Sen. Mayes Middleton, R-Galveston, who authored the bill, nor state Rep. Cole Hefner, R-Mt. Pleasant, who wrote the House version, responded to 四虎影院鈥檚 request for comment by deadline.
While the law starts Sept. 1, school board members would have to approve the move with a vote before March 2024.
Jill Adams with the Texas School Counselor Association said no school district had contacted her office expressing interest in adding a chaplain.