The Decatur Daily Democrat

19 AGs back Missouri college’s religious liberty case against Biden administra­tion

-

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Supreme Court hasn’t agreed to hear a case involving a private Missouri college’s challenge to a Biden administra­tion ruling, but Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey and 18 other attorneys general filed a brief supporting the school.

College of the Ozarks sued the Biden administra­tion in 2021 after an executive order banned housing discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity. The institutio­n and the Alliance Defending Freedom filed suit on the grounds the order forced religious schools to violate their views by prohibitin­g same-sex dormitorie­s, including rules allowing a transgende­r person who identifies as female to live in a female residence hall.

Bailey’s brief urges the court to take the case and contends the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t unlawfully declared the Fair Housing Act prohibits schools from having dormitorie­s limited to a single biological sex.

Bailey said he opposes the federal government’s ability to push rules “that run roughshod over religious liberty.”

“It is absolutely ridiculous that unelected federal bureaucrat­s are attempting to subvert the law and force religious universiti­es to house male and female students together,” Bailey said in a statement. “This is just yet another attempt by woke leftists to push their social agenda onto students.”

In May 2021, a federal judge rejected the college’s lawsuit and last year the U.S. Court of Appeals upheld the Biden administra­tion’s order. In an 18-page ruling, the judges stated the college’s “alleged injury” was too speculativ­e.

“The College has not shown that there exists a credible threat that the defendants will enforce the Fair Housing Act against the institutio­n based on its religiousl­y-based housing policies,” the judges wrote. “The Memorandum does not make the College’s housing policies unlawful without regard to legal protection­s for religious liberty. HUD has never filed charges of housing discrimina­tion against a college that is exempt from prohibitio­ns on sex discrimina­tion in housing under Title IX. And HUD has never enforced the Fair Housing Act’s sex-discrimina­tion prohibitio­n against the College, even though the agency interprete­d the Fair Housing Act to prohibit discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity between 2012 and 2020.”

John Bursch, senior counsel and vice president of appellate advocacy with the ADF, said he expects the Supreme Court to make a decision on accepting the case in June.

“Any time you have about 20 state attorneys general filing a brief, I would say that’s pretty significan­t,” Bursch said in an interview with The Center Square.

Bailey’s 26-page brief states the federal directive evades judicial review and imposes a new liability for gender identity and sexual orientatio­n discrimina­tion without evaluating the burden on religious freedoms.

“The College’s pre-enforcemen­t suit raises serious challenges to expansive and careless executive action that tramples religious liberties,” the brief states. “The courts have failed to recognize that HUD’s Directive is a legislativ­e rule.”

Joining Missouri are Alaska, Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Montana, Nebraska, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and West Virginia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States