Justices: Religious schools can get aid
Maine's denial of funds ruled unconstitutional
By: John Fritze
USA Today
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court on Tuesday [06/21/2022] shot down a state prohibition on using public money to attend schools that offer religious instruction, the latest case in which the high court has permitted taxpayer funds to be used for religious purposes.
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At issue was an unusual program in Maine that provides subsidies for education in rural districts that don't have their own high school. The state allows parents in that situation to use the money that would have been spent locally to send their children to other public or private schools - but not to programs that offer religious instruction.
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Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the opinion for a 6-3 majority of conservative justices, holding the state's prohibition violates the First Amendment.
..... "The state pays tuition for certain students at private schools - so long as the schools are not religious," Roberts wrote. "That is discrimination against religion."
..... Though the decision's immediate impact was limited to Maine, critics - including the three liberal justices who dissented - questioned whether it might have broader implications for school choice and other movement-funded programs elsewhere.
..... "This court continues to dismantle the wall of separation between church and state that the framers fought to build," Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote. "With growing concern for where this court will lead us next, I respectfully dissent.
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"The court is forcing taxpayers to fund religious education," said Rachel Laser, president of American United for Separation of Church and State. "The court has opened the door to government-enforced tithing, an invitation religious extremists will not ignore."
..... Maine Attorney General Aaron Frey, a Democrat, said he is "terribly disappointed" by the decision and intends to ask state lawmakers to ensure taxpayer money isn't sent to schools that "promote discrimination." Critics, including Associate Justice Stephen Breyer in his dissent, said some of the schools at issue have polices of denying enrollment to students based on sexual orientation or gender identity
..... "Public education should expose children to a variety of viewpoints,: Frey said.
..... Maine's critics countered that the prohibition blocked parents from making decision for their children.
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"Parents have a constitutional right to choose such schools for their children and the court today [06/21/2022] held that a state cannot deny them that choice in programs that allow for other private options,: said Michael binds, a senior attorney with the Institute for Justice who represented the parent challenging the Maine policy.
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Two families that wanted to sue the state subsidy for religious education sued in 2018, asserting that Maine;s policy violated their First amendment right to practice religion free from government interference. Maine countered that using public money for religious instruction would create a bevy of problems - including how to accommodate students who belong to religions for which there are no schools.
..... In the opinion Tuesday, [06/21/2022] Roberts pushed back on the notion that the court is forcing school districts to fund religious schools. Maine doesn't have to fund private schools at all, he asserted in the opinion. The state could increase transportation options for students in remote area, so they could more easily access other public schools. Or Maine could "operate boarding schools of its own."
..... The depute was similar to one the Supreme Court considered in 2020. Roberts wrote in a 5-4 majority that a Montana scholarship program could not exclude religious schools. Roberts said a state doesn't have to provide Mooney to private schools, but if it chooses to do so, it can't "disqualify some private schools solely because they are religious."
.... That decision dealt with a school that had religious ties but didn't explicitly teach religion in the classroom. Lower federal courts have distinguished between denying taxpayer money to an entity because of its statue as a religious institution and withholding money used for a religious purpose, such as teaching the Bible. It's a subtle distinction but one with potentially wide implications: Some schools may have a sectarian affiliation, but their curriculum may look more or less like that of secular public schools. in the Maine case, the Boston-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit ruled for the state, concluding that the funding was not denied because the schools are Christianity but because of the Christianity the schools teach.
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In the opinion Tuesday, [06/21/2022] the court threw cold water on the separate a suggesting any attempt to separate a school's religious status from its instruction would "raise serious concerns about state entanglement with religion and denominational favoritism."
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"This ruling affirms that parents should be able to choose a school that is compatible with their values or that honor and respect their values," said Leslie Hiner, vice president of legal affairs at EDChoice, a group that supports school choice programs. "By shutting out parents with certain values, that's discrimination run rampant."
..... Others said the decision will under mine traditional public schools.
..... Forcing American taxpayers to fund private religious education ... erodes the foundation of our democracy and harms students," said Becky Pringle, present of the National Education Association, a teachers union.