Las Vegas Review-Journal

Churches sue FEMA over relief policy

- By Jonathan Stempel Reuters

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has been sued by three Texas churches damaged in Hurricane Harvey, over what they called its policy of refusing to provide relief to houses of worship because of their religious status.

In a complaint filed on Monday in federal court in Houston, the churchessa­idtheywoul­dliketoapp­lyfor aid, but FEMA’S public assistance program “categorica­lly” excludes their claims, violating their constituti­onal right to freely exercise their religion.

They said FEMA’S ban on providing relief where at least half a building’s space is used for religious purposes, a policy also enforced after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and Hurricane Sandy in 2012, contradict­s a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision making it easier for religious groups to get public aid.

That June 26 decision, Trinity Lutheranch­urchofcolu­mbiainc.v.comer, said U.S. states must sometimes provide such aid even if their constituti­ons explicitly ban such funding.

Becket, a nonprofit that advocates for religious freedoms and represents the churches, said the same principle should apply to federal FEMA relief for Harvey victims.

“States and the federal government arediffere­nt,butthefirs­tamendment applies the same to both,” Daniel Blomberg, a lawyer for Becket, said in a phone interview. “The principle is that government­s can’t discrimina­te on the basis of religious status, and that is unapologet­ically what FEMA is doing here.”

The three churches, he added, “need emergency repair, now.”

A FEMA spokeswoma­n said in an email it would be inappropri­ate to discuss pending litigation.

The Texas churches that sued are the Rockport First Assembly of God, which lost its roof and steeple and suffered other damage, and the Harvest Family Church in Cypress and Hi-way Tabernacle in Cleveland, which were flooded.

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