Cara Fitpatrick
Palm Beach Post , May 13, 2008
FORT PIERCE —
Five months after approving a sex education curriculum, the St. Lucie County
School Board will consider Tuesday one of its most controversial pieces: a
video demonstrating the use of condoms.
School board members voted 4-1 in favor of using "Get Real About AIDS" in the schools,
but agreed to postpone consideration of the video until after its production.
Board member Troy Ingersoll was the only dissenting vote.
The board will consider the video at 6 p.m. at the district offices in
Fort Pierce . The video, an
item on the board's consent agenda, will not be discussed unless a board
members specifically requests to before the vote. The public will not have an
opportunity to speak until after the vote, according to the agenda.
The video is available online at the district's Web site,
www.stlucie.k12.fl.us [1], on the left side of the home page under "Health
Curriculum."
The video, which is about five minutes long, shows two doctors, one man and one
woman, providing messages about abstinence, a demonstration of the proper way
to use a condom, and a reminder that condoms do not guarantee protection
against pregnancy or sexually transmitted diseases.
Parents can ask that their children not participate in the lesson.
Superintendent Michael Lannon recommended Get Real About AIDS to the school
board last year, after the St. Lucie County Executive Roundtable presented it
to him. The roundtable, a group of 27 community leaders who spent a year
researching sex education programs, was concerned that the district's health
curriculum didn't do enough to combat the high rate of HIV and AIDS in the
county.
St. Lucie County has Florida 's
highest rate of HIV and AIDS among black residents, according to statistics the
health department released last year.
Opponents have derided the curriculum as focusing more on condoms and
contraceptives than waiting until marriage. Some of those opponents have spoken
at recent board meetings to remind board members of their opposition.
Pastor Bryan Longworth, a Port St. Lucie pastor who has been the most vocal
opponent, e-mailed his supporters and asked them to show up at the meeting.
"Lannon and the condom pushing school board members hope you don't show up
to Tuesday's meeting," he wrote. "The next generation depends on your
voice for protection."
Links:
[1] http://www.stlucie.k12.fl.us