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US Supreme Court blocks public funding for Oklahoma religious charter schools
US Supreme Court blocks public funding for Oklahoma religious charter schools

BBC News

time22-05-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

US Supreme Court blocks public funding for Oklahoma religious charter schools

The state of Oklahoma may not direct public state funding to what was set to be the nation's first religious charter school after the US Supreme Court deadlocked over the case. The justices were evenly split, voting 4-4 in a ruling on Thursday. The tie affirms a lower ruling from the Oklahoma State Supreme Court, which found the effort to establish the school violates the US Oklahoma school board had approved the founding of a charter school run by the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa that would have received roughly $23.3m (£18.7m) in state funding over five years.A charter school is funded by taxpayers but independently managed. The US Supreme Court's ruling is not considered a country-wide precedent and the justices could accept future cases related to the court does not reveal how the justices voted, though they appeared split along ideological lines during an April hearing. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who was appointed by US President Donald Trump as one of the court's conservative justices, recused herself from the case. She did not provide a reason. The announcement also did not come with a formal opinion - only a single page that read: "The judgment is affirmed by an equally divided Court."Court watchers viewed the case as a test of the US Constitution's religious 1st Amendment prohibits the government from taking any action to establish a dominant religion. Taxpayer funds, such as those earmarked for public schools, have long been considered off limits to religious two sides of the case presented dueling views of religious Attorney General Gentner Drummond, a Republican, had sued the board to force it to rescind the school's charter. He welcomed the court's decision in a statement on Thursday. He had long criticised the school as illegal and said it opened the state to having to fund other kinds of religious schools. "The Supreme Court's decision represents a resounding victory for religious liberty and for the foundational principles that have guided our nation since its founding," he said. "This ruling ensures that Oklahoma taxpayers will not be forced to fund radical Islamic schools, while protecting the religious rights of families to choose any school they wish for their children."The school, however, had argued that denying it charter funding as a Christian institution amounted to discrimination on basis of religion. The BBC has contacted the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City for comment. St Isidore of Seville Virtual Catholic Charter School aimed to provide online instruction that incorporated religious teachings for about 500 students from kindergarten through high school. The Oklahoma State Virtual Charter School Board's 2023 decision to approve the school's application for charter status was met with almost immediate Governor Kevin Stitt, a Republican, welcomed the approval, but Mr Drummond, the attorney general, condemned it and ultimately filed a lawsuit. Charter schools make up a small fraction of the US school system. They have gained prominence in recent years as rallying point for some conservatives, who advocate for expanding charter schools as a means of giving parents more control over their children's pick for education secretary, Linda McMahon, has sought to reduce federal support for public schools and expand support for charter and private ones.

New pope Robert Prevost has ties to Oklahoma
New pope Robert Prevost has ties to Oklahoma

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

New pope Robert Prevost has ties to Oklahoma

OKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) — For the first time in history, the pope is from the United States, and he has a direct connection to College of Cardinals elected American Cardinal Robert Prevost as pope on Thursday in Vatican City. Prevost chose to name himself Pope Leo XIV. In a social media post on Thursday, the Diocese of Tulsa said Pope Leo XIV served on the board of directors for Cascia Hall, a private Catholic preparatory school in Tulsa. Robert Prevost elected the first American pope in history, will take the name Leo XIV Prevost joined the school's board about 25 years ago when he was a priest and spent several years in the role. The Archdiocese of Tulsa said Pope Leo XIV visited the school multiple times while on the board and built connections with numerous students. Originally from Chicago, Pope Leo XIV has taken on many roles within the Catholic Church over the years, including assignments in St. Louis, Chicago, Peru, and most recently, Thursday, Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City said the moment is both historic and meaningful for American Catholics.'I would add not only it is a great joy but a great surprise, the fact that for the first time in 2,000 years we have an American pope reigning over the church throughout the world,' Coakley said. 'I honestly didn't expect to see that in my lifetime,' Coakley said. 'He understands the American experience, the American perspective, the American culture slants, and blank spots even. So I hope that that will help in ways we can't even appreciate yet.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

This Case About One Religious School Is a Case About the Country's Future
This Case About One Religious School Is a Case About the Country's Future

New York Times

time09-03-2025

  • Politics
  • New York Times

This Case About One Religious School Is a Case About the Country's Future

While the country holds its breath for the Supreme Court's responses to the Trump administration's serial depredations, it's hard to focus on anything else. Nonetheless, a case set for argument next month before the court merits more attention than the little it has received, given its destabilizing potential for public education. The central question is whether a state that allows charter schools as alternatives to traditional public schools, as nearly all states do, must agree to fund those that are explicitly religious. To emphasize: The court is not being asked to decide whether a state may, if it chooses, include a taxpayer-funded parochial school among its charter school offerings. That question alone would challenge the long-held understanding of the separation of church and state in the context of public education. This case goes further. It concerns what would be the first fully taxpayer-supported religious school in modern American history. The internet-based 'virtual' Catholic school that the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa seek to operate, St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School, would promote the 'evangelizing mission of the Church.' The question is whether the Constitution requires Oklahoma to permit the school to open its virtual doors as a public charter school. This is far from the first collision between the two religion clauses of the First Amendment, the protection for the 'free exercise' of religion and the prohibition against religion's official 'establishment.' But this case reaches the court at a time of rapid change in the justices' treatment of the relationship between the two clauses. Not so long ago, the Supreme Court was willing and able to manage the inherent tension between the two clauses by giving weight to each. For example, the question in a 2004 case was the constitutionality of a state's explicit exclusion of ministerial studies from eligibility for an otherwise widely available state scholarship program. A student who wanted to use the scholarship to study for the ministry argued that his inability to do so violated the Free Exercise Clause. The court rejected that argument, holding that while the Establishment Clause would have permitted the state to subsidize ministerial training if it chose, the Free Exercise Clause did not impose such a requirement. In rejecting the argument that the state had imposed a burden on the free exercise of religion, the court said the state was not penalizing or criminalizing a religious service or rite, prohibiting ministers from participating in a community's affairs or requiring students to choose between their religious beliefs and receiving a government benefit. Instead, the court said, 'the state has merely chosen not to fund a distinct category of instruction,' which it said was a legitimate interest of the state in preventing an establishment of religion. The court's goal was to maintain 'play in the joints' between the two clauses that frequently were in tension with each other, Chief Justice William Rehnquist wrote in the majority opinion in Locke v. Davey. But 'play in the joints' has fallen out of favor in the current court. In a 2022 case, Carson v. Makin, the question was whether a state could exclude religious schools from a program that permitted people who lived far from a public secondary school to send their children elsewhere at state expense. The court held that the exclusion of religious schools from eligibility violated the free exercise rights of parents who would have chosen a religious school. The 2004 decision turned out, after all, not to stand for the broad principle of maintaining a balance between the two religion clauses. Chief Justice Rehnquist's successor, John Roberts, wrote in the Carson decision that Locke v. Davey should be interpreted to apply only to its precise facts and 'cannot be read beyond its narrow focus on vocational religious degrees to generally authorize the state to exclude religious persons from the enjoyment of public benefits on the basis of their anticipated religious use of the benefits.' In a series of cases beginning in the early 2000s and culminating with that one, the court has substituted for what would have been Establishment Clause concerns a seemingly limitless nondiscrimination principle: Whatever the government does for anyone, it has to do for religion, too. Further, the court's invocation of the Free Exercise Clause in these cases has depended on the notion that when parents choose a generally available financial subsidy like a voucher or tax credit for religious use, that is a private choice in which the government plays no role. The challenge in the case involving the virtual Catholic school, Oklahoma Statewide Charter School Board v. Drummond, is whether the court can sustain the fiction of private choice when it's no longer a matter of individuals directing a state tuition subsidy to a private school that happens to be religious. St. Isidore would be, like the other charter schools that some 50,000 Oklahoma students currently attend, a taxpayer-financed public school. Or so the Oklahoma Supreme Court held last June when it declared that the state's Charter School Board's approval of St. Isidore violated the federal Establishment Clause as well as the Oklahoma Constitution and the state law governing charter schools. 'Under the Act,' the state court wrote, referring to the Oklahoma Charter Schools Act, 'a charter school is a public school.' The court noted that while charter schools are free from some state regulations, they have to adhere to numerous other rules that apply to ordinary public schools. Their teachers are eligible for the same state retirement benefits as other public school teachers, the court observed. 'St. Isidore will be acting as a surrogate of the state in providing free public education as any other state-sponsored charter school,' the court said. 'What St. Isidore requests from this court is beyond the fair treatment of a private religious institution in receiving a generally available benefit, implicating the Free Exercise Clause. It is about the state's creation and funding of a new religious institution violating the Establishment Clause.' As the state court emphasized, the characterization of St. Isidore as a public school matters because only in that case is it a 'state actor' to which the federal Constitution applies. The Charter School Board and St. Isidore itself, both of which are appealing the Oklahoma court's decision, are arguing vigorously to the justices that the school is, in fact, private and that the nondiscrimination principle should resolve its case. 'St. Isidore is not an arm of the Oklahoma government,' the school said in its petition seeking Supreme Court review, 'and Oklahoma has plainly violated its Free Exercise rights by cutting it off from the benefits created by the Charter Schools Act' solely because it is religious. The school is represented in its Supreme Court appeal by lawyers including Notre Dame Law School's Religious Liberty Clinic. That is probably the reason that Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who spent 15 years as a law professor at Notre Dame and has taught classes there while on the bench, has recused herself from the case. The Charter School Board is represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, the prominent Christian litigating group that has scored a series of recent victories at the Supreme Court. The case is deeply entangled in Oklahoma politics. It was the state's attorney general, Gentner Drummond, who sued the Charter School Board to keep the school from opening. The state's governor, J. Kevin Stitt, strongly supports the school and filed his own brief, which opposes the brief that Attorney General Drummond filed. Both officials are Republicans. Before the board approved St. Isidore's charter, Mr. Drummond had warned against creating a 'slippery slope' that would compel approval of charter school applications by any and all religious groups, 'even those most Oklahomans would consider reprehensible and unworthy of public funding.' The warning was valid as far as it went, but it should have gone further. Yes, an occasional Muslim madrasa seeking to incorporate as a charter school would be likely to cause controversy, but the problem is much broader. It is easy to imagine a scramble for public resources among mainstream faith groups, each with a curriculum in mind. As of 2021, some 3.7 million students were enrolled in public charter schools across the country. How many millions more might be drawn to a safely siloed religious education if it is available at taxpayer expense? And who will be left in the secular public schools? A quarter-century ago, Justice David Souter, a devout Episcopalian and a strict separationist, dissented from a decision that expanded the eligibility of religious schools for various types of equipment and other public resources. 'The establishment prohibition of government religious funding serves more than one end,' the now-retired justice wrote in his dissenting opinion in Mitchell v. Helms. 'It is meant to guarantee the right of individual conscience against compulsion, to protect the integrity of religion against the corrosion of secular support, and to preserve the unity of political society against the implied exclusion of the less favored and the antagonism of controversy over public support for religious causes.' At a time of surging Christian nationalism in response to the country's evolving demography, that warning is even more timely now than it was then. This case puts the Supreme Court to a choice. If St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School is a public school, the court can uphold it only by further erasure of the Establishment Clause. If the justices deem it sufficiently private to evade the Constitution's reach, they will have invited further fragmentation of public education, one of the few experiences that most Americans share. At this fraught moment for the court and the country, it may not be too much to suggest that the future of an increasingly fragile civil society is at stake as well.

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