Imperial Valley Press

Barrett was trustee at private school with anti-gay policies

- By MICHELLE R. SMITH and MICHAEL BIESECKER

Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett served for nearly three years on the board of private Christian schools that effectivel­y barred admission to children of same-sex parents and made it plain that openly gay and lesbian teachers weren’t welcome in the classroom.

The policies that discrimina­ted against LGBTQ people and their children were in place for years at Trinity Schools Inc., both before Barrett joined the board in 2015 and during the time she served.

The three schools, in Indiana, Minnesota and Virginia, are affiliated with People of Praise, an insular community rooted in its own interpreta­tion of the Bible, of which Barrett and her husband have been longtime members. At least three of the couple’s seven children have attended the Trinity School at Greenlawn, in South Bend, Indiana.

The AP spoke with more than two dozen people who attended or worked at Trinity Schools, or former members of People of Praise. They said the community’s teachings have been consistent for decades: Homosexual­ity is an abominatio­n against God, sex should occur only within marriage and marriage should only be between a man and a woman.

Interviewe­es told the AP that Trinity’s leadership communicat­ed anti- LGBTQ policies and positions in meetings, one-on-one conversati­ons, enrollment agreements, employment agreements, handbooks and written policies — including those in place when Barrett was an active member of the board.

“Trinity Schools does not unlawfully discrimina­te with respect to race, color, gender, national origin, age, disability, or other legally protected classifica­tions under applicable law, with respect to the administra­tion of its programs,” said Jon Balsbaugh, president of Trinity

Schools Inc., which runs the three campuses, in an email.

The actions are probably legal, experts said. Scholars said the school’s and organizati­on’s teachings on homosexual­ity and treatment of LGBTQ people are harsher than those of the mainstream Catholic church.

Barrett’s views on whether LGBTQ people should have the same constituti­onal rights as other Americans became a focus last week in her Senate confirmati­on hearing. But her longtime membership in People of Praise and her leadership position at Trinity Schools were not discussed, even though most of the people the AP spoke with said her deep and decades-long involvemen­t in the community signals she would be hostile to gay rights if confirmed.

Suzanne B. Goldberg, a professor at Columbia Law School who studies sexuality and gender law, said private schools have wide legal latitude to set admissions criteria.

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