Justice Neil Gorsuch's
first week on the Supreme Court bench features an important case about the
separation of church and state that has its roots on a Midwestern church
playground. The outcome could make it easier to use state money to pay for
private, religious schooling in many states.
Associated
Press report continues:
The
justices on Wednesday will hear a Missouri church's challenge to its exclusion
from a state programme that provides money to use ground-up tires to cushion
playgrounds. Missouri is among roughly three dozen states with constitutions
that explicitly prohibit using public money to aid a religious institution, an
even higher wall separating government and religion than the U.S. Constitution
erects.
Trinity
Lutheran Church of Columbia, Missouri, says its exclusion is discrimination
that violates its religious freedoms under the U.S. Constitution.
If
the justices agree, "the decision could have implications far beyond scrap
tires and playgrounds," said Michael Bindas of the Institute for Justice,
which is backing the church. "It has the potential to remove one of the
last legal clouds hanging over school choice."
That
prospect worries groups of public school teachers and others who oppose
vouchers and other forms of public aid for private schooling.
Adding
to the intrigue is the long delay between when the Supreme Court agreed to hear
Trinity Lutheran's appeal, a month before Justice Antonin Scalia died in
February 2016, and the argument. The span of more than 15 months suggests the
justices were concerned they might divide 4-4. Indeed, the case wasn't
scheduled for argument until after President Donald Trump nominated Gorsuch for
the seat.
The
timing of the argument "heightened our concern that the court has held
this case for so long," said Alice O'Brien, general counsel of the
National Education Association, which opposes state aid to private schools.
Missouri's
new governor, Republican Eric Greitens, injected some uncertainty into the high
court case on Thursday, when he directed state agencies to allow religious
groups and schools to receive taxpayer money for playgrounds and other purposes.
The court on Friday asked both the church and the state to tell it whether the
governor's announcement affects the case.
A
lawyer for the church said in an interview with The Associated Press that the
case would be unaffected because Greitens' policy change does not resolve the
legal issue. But a top aide to state Attorney General Josh Hawley told the AP
that state lawyers were evaluating whether the new policy would affect the
case.
Should
the court decide to go forward, Gorsuch's votes and opinions in religious
liberty cases as a judge on the federal appeals court in Denver would seem to
make him more inclined to side with the church, and potentially provide the
decisive, tie-breaking vote if the rest of the court is divided between
liberals and conservatives, Bindas said.
The
case arose from an application the church submitted in 2012 to take part in
Missouri's scrap tire grant programme, which reimburses the cost of installing
a rubberized playground surface made from recycled tires. The money comes from
a fee paid by anyone who buys a new tire. The church's application to resurface
the playground for its preschool and daycare ranked fifth out of 44 applicants.
But
the state's Department of Natural Resources rejected the application, pointing
to the part of the state constitution that says "no money shall ever be
taken from the public treasury, directly or indirectly, in aid of any church,
sect or denomination of religion."
A
recycled scrap tire is not religious, the church said in its Supreme Court
brief. "It is wholly secular," the church said.
Leslie
Hiner, vice president of programmes at Ed Choice, a school voucher advocacy group
said, "It is difficult to understand that a little school could not
participate in a safety measure determined by the state because somehow safety
of children is conflated with religious purpose."
But
the question of where the dividing line should be between church and state is
complicated, said the NEA's O'Brien.
The
Supreme Court has upheld some school voucher programs and state courts have
ratified others. But "in many instances challenges to voucher programs
have succeeded based on state court views that their constitutions draw a
different line than does the federal constitution," O'Brien said.
Thirty
states and the District of Columbia have some form of school choice, including
vouchers, tax credits and education savings accounts, according to Ed Choice.
The
justices could themselves draw a line that decides the case in Missouri without
saying anything more broadly about school choice.
But
that issue already is looming at the court in appeals from a Colorado Supreme
Court ruling that blocked the nation's first county-initiated voucher programme
in Douglas County, Colorado.
The
Missouri church and some of the groups backing it have invoked what they
describe as anti-Catholic bias that motivated the adoption of the Missouri
provision and similar measures in other states in the late 1800s. They are
similar to the proposed 1875 Blaine Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that
would have prohibited the allocation of public school funds to religious
institutions.
"Both
the Colorado and Missouri Blaine Amendments share discriminatory, anti-Catholic
origins that make their contemporary use to compel religious discrimination
particularly unacceptable," lawyer Paul Clement wrote on behalf of the
Colorado county.
But 10 legal and religious historians said in a separate court filing that there is no evidence that "anti-Catholic or anti-religious animus" played a role in the adoption of the Missouri constitutional provision. And they said anti-Catholicism was a minor factor behind the Blaine Amendment. The broader debate was about the future of American education, they said.
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