W.Va. City Council Ordered To Stop Reciting The Lord's Prayer

A West Virginia city was ordered Tuesday to stop opening its council meetings with The Lord’s Prayer.

A West Virginia city was ordered Tuesday to stop opening its council meetings with The Lord’s Prayer.

U.S. District Judge John T. Copenhaver Jr. ruled that Parkersburg City Council’s practice of opening its meetings with the New Testament prayer violates the establishment clause of the First Amendment, which prohibits government from favoring one religion over others.

The judge issued a permanent injunction against the prayer recital and awarded $1 in damages to each plaintiff.

Copenhaver ruled in a lawsuit filed by the Freedom from Religion Foundation. The Madison, Wisconsin-based group and two of its members sued the city in 2018.

The judge issued a permanent injunction against the prayer recital and awarded $1 in damages to each plaintiff.

The lawsuit said residents stood at each Parkersburg City Council meeting to recite the prayer with council members. Plaintiffs Daryl Cobranchi and Eric Engle of Parkersburg attended some meetings, remained seated and did not participate in the prayer’s recital.

City Council Rejects Nondiscrimination Ordinance

A city council in West Virginia has voted against a nondiscrimination ordinance that would have extended protections to LGBT residents.

News outlets report the Parkersburg City Council rejected the ordinance with a 6-3 vote Tuesday. The ordinance would have prohibited discrimination in housing, employment and public accommodations based on various factors, including veteran status, genetic information, sexual orientation and gender identity, which are not incorporated in the West Virginia Human Rights Act.

Councilman Jeff Fox says the public accommodations provision caused the most consternation. Council members initially considered the issue in March.

Mayor Tom Joyce opposed the ordinance, asking the council to reject it because he says there could be unintended consequences to small businesses.

Ten cities in West Virginia have similar resolutions, with five of them passing in 2016.

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