
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
Contact: Nathan Bupp
Phone: (716) 636-4869 x 218
E-mail: nbupp@centerforinquiry.net
Washington, D.C.(February 26, 2010)—Representatives from the Council for Secular Humanism have participated in a first-of-its-kind White House briefing for members of America’s secular community. Officials of the Obama Administration met today with a delegation drawn from the nation’s leading secular humanist, humanist, atheist, and freethought organizations to discuss policy in areas of concern to the nonreligious community. These issues included protecting children from religion-related neglect and abuse, ending proselytizing in the military, and fixing the faith-based initiative to conform with accepted secular principles. The briefing was coordinated by the Secular Coalition for America (SCA), a Washington, D.C.-based coalition of national organizations that lobbies on issues of secular concern. The Council for Secular Humanism is a member of SCA.
The Council’s delegation included Tom Flynn (Buffalo, N.Y.), executive director of the Council and editor of its flagship magazine Free Inquiry, and three Washington-based activists: Toni van Pelt, executive director of the Center for Inquiry/Office of Public Policy; Melody Hensley, executive director of the Center for Inquiry/D.C., and Stuart Jordan, a retired NASA scientist and a science advisor for the Center for Inquiry/Office of Public Policy. The Center for Inquiry, a supporting organization of the Council for Secular Humanism, conducts lobbying and public education in the national capital area.
This briefing represents the first time a U.S. administration has engaged in a formal exchange of views with representatives of America’s fast-growing nonreligious community. President Obama was the first U. S. president to acknowledge nonbelievers in an inaugural address. In a press release issued prior to the briefing, the SCA described the briefing as “the latest indication that the secular movement is gaining significant momentum, and that secular Americans, numbering in the tens of millions, are a constituency that must be included.”
The Council for Secular Humanism—housed at the Center for Inquiry—is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit educational organization promoting rational inquiry, secular values and positive human development through the advancement of secular humanism. The Council, publisher of the bimonthly journal Free Inquiry, has a Web site at www.secularhumanism.org
###
CFI SUMMIT
OCTOBER 24-27 2013
TACOMA, WASHINGTON
Joint Conference of the Council for Secular Humanism, Center for Inquiry, and Committee for Skeptical Inquiry
The transnational secular humanist magazine
Renew your FREE INQUIRY subscription