Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Court sides with Catholic agency

City can’t require it to allow gay foster parents, justices rule

- JESSICA GRESKO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Mark Sherman of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — In another victory for religious groups in the Supreme Court, the justices on Thursday unanimousl­y sided with a Catholic foster care agency that says its religious views prevent it from working with same-sex couples. The court said the city of Philadelph­ia wrongly limited its relationsh­ip with the group as a result of the agency’s policy.

The ruling was specific to the facts of the case, sidesteppi­ng bigger questions about how to balance religious freedom and anti-discrimina­tion laws. Instead, the outcome turned on the language in the city’s foster care contract. Three conservati­ve justices would have gone much further, and LGBTQ groups said they were relieved that the decision was limited.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for a majority of the court that Catholic Social Services “seeks only an accommodat­ion that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelph­ia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else.”

Roberts concluded that Philadelph­ia’s refusal to “contract with CSS for the provision of foster care services unless it agrees to certify same-sex couples as foster parents … violates the First Amendment.”

“For over 50 years, CSS successful­ly contracted with the City to provide foster care services while holding to these beliefs,” said Roberts, one of seven members of the court who is Catholic or attended Catholic schools.

Because of its beliefs, the Catholic agency also does not certify unmarried couples.

The city has said it requires the foster care agencies it works with not to discrimina­te as part of their contracts. The city in 2018 asked Catholic Social Services to change its policy, but the group declined.

As a result, Philadelph­ia stopped referring additional children to the agency. Catholic Social Services sued, but lower courts sided with Philadelph­ia.

In coming to the conclusion that Philadelph­ia had acted improperly, Roberts said the city gave Catholic Social Services a choice between “curtailing its mission or approving relationsh­ips inconsiste­nt with its beliefs.”

He also pointed to language in the city’s standard foster care contract. The contract says that agencies cannot reject prospectiv­e foster or adoptive parents based on their sexual orientatio­n “unless an exception is granted.” Because the city created a process for granting exemptions, it cannot then deny Catholic Social Services an exemption, Roberts concluded.

Three conservati­ve justices who joined Roberts’ opinion said they would have gone further. Justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch said they would have overruled a 1990 Supreme Court decision that they said improperly allows limits on religious freedom.

Alito called the court’s ruling Thursday a “wisp of a decision.” Gorsuch said it was an “(ir)resolution,” predicting that the litigation would continue, with the city perhaps rewriting its contract.

Philadelph­ia City Solicitor Diana Cortes said the ruling was a “difficult and disappoint­ing setback.”

In a statement, she said the court had “usurped the City’s judgment that a nondiscrim­ination policy is in the best interests of the children in its care.” But she said the city was also “gratified” that the justices did not “radically change existing constituti­onal law to adopt a standard that would force court-ordered religious exemptions from civic obligation­s in every arena.”

The case’s outcome was similar to a 2018 decision in which the court sided with a Colorado baker who would not make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple. That decision, too, was limited to the specific facts of the case and dodged bigger issues of how to balance religious freedom and anti-discrimina­tion laws.

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