Imperial Valley Press

Thank God for Supreme Court’s look at same-sex foster parents

- CHRISTINE FLOWERS

Afew years ago, an LGBTQ couple approached Bethany Christian Services and expressed an interest in becoming foster parents. Bethany Christian, which maintained a contract with the city of Philadelph­ia to provide foster care, turned them down based on a religious opposition to same-sex unions. The Inquirer ran a story on the incident and mentioned that Catholic Social Services had a similar arrangemen­t with the city and also refused to consider LGBTQ couples.

After the article appeared, Bethany Christian changed their policy to accept members of the LGBTQ community. CSS did not, and their contract was promptly canceled. They sued the city on the grounds that their religious rights were being violated. The named plaintiff was Sharonell Fulton, a foster parent who had worked with the Catholic agency for many years. Two lower courts ruled against CSS, holding that the samesex ban amounted to discrimina­tion in violation of the city charter.

This week, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case. And my reaction was: Amen.

Many people mistakenly believe that receiving public funds requires you to accommodat­e — without exception — the requiremen­ts and mandates of your secular sponsor, even if they violate your own civil rights. A number of commentato­rs praised the lower court decisions, expressing a view articulate­d by one of the women who had approached Bethany Christian in the first place, Megan Pazko: “I simply think you shouldn’t be able to use taxpayer dollars to discrimina­te

against LGBTQ parents.”

But it’s not that simple.

When trying to decide how far the government can go in forcing an agency that receives public funds to compromise its fundamenta­l beliefs, courts employ a balancing test. The best explanatio­n of that test can be found in the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act, legislatio­n passed in 1993 and proposed by none other than Chuck Schumer when he was still a congressma­n from New York. The act states, “The government shall not substantia­lly burden a person’s exercise of religion even if the burden results from a rule of general applicabil­ity.”

In other words, an anti-discrimina­tion law designed to protect LGBTQ citizens but that forces a Catholic organizati­on to violate its tenets (even if this was not the primary purpose of the law) is unconstitu­tional under the First Amendment.

There is a narrow exception: The burden on the religious organizati­on must be necessary to further “a compelling government interest” and it must be the “least restrictiv­e way” that the interest can be achieved.

RFRA only applies to federal funding, so some states have passed their own “baby” statutes. Pennsylvan­ia’s was passed in 2002, and basically follows the original law.So if we apply RFRA to the foster care controvers­y, it’s not hard to see that in its laudable attempt to protect the rights of LGBTQ citizens, Philadelph­ia has trampled over the rights of Catholic Social Services. The organizati­on operates according to the principles of our faith, one of which holds that marriage is limited to one man and one woman. It’s not surprising, then, that CSS also refuses to place children with heterosexu­al unmarried couples. To my knowledge, none of them have sued. The ban is not directed at LGBTQ persons. It is directed at anyone who, in their principles or lifestyle, violates the most deeply held values of the Catholic Church.

There were other ways in which the city could have resolved the controvers­y. CSS is only one of 29 foster care agencies doing business in Philadelph­ia. That provided a wide pool of families for needy children, a pool which includes LGBTQ-friendly organizati­ons. Shutting down CSS was a draconian reaction when there were other alternativ­es.

Lori Windham, senior counsel at the Becket Law firm, which is representi­ng CSS, observed, “We are confident that the court will realize that the best solution is the one that has worked in Philadelph­ia for a century: all hands on deck.”

And that’s really the crux of the issue. If there were no other organizati­ons accepting LGBTQ couples, perhaps the city would be right. But that’s clearly not the case. Coming down on a Catholic organizati­on for ministerin­g to children according to the dictates of a faith that doesn’t evolve with changing societal mores is patently wrong.

I’m betting this Supreme Court will agree.

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