Orlando Sentinel

Justices signal a ruling for church in public-funds case

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday appeared ready to break down at least part of the long-standing church-state barrier that has prevented religious schools from receiving public funds.

The justices gave a skeptical hearing to a Missouri lawyer who was defending the state’s decision to reject a grant request from a Lutheran preschool seeking to participat­e in a state program that provides money to schools to rubberize the surface of their playground­s.

Missouri’s constituti­on, like those in at least 36 other states, bars sending tax money to churches and church schools.

But most of the justices signaled they will rule for the church on the grounds that the refusal to fund the playground amounts to unconstitu­tional discrimina­tion based on religion.

The justices did not sound sharply split along the usual conservati­ve and liberal lines. Seven of them — all but Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg — spoke in favor of the church’s position.

Justice Stephen Breyer said cities routinely provide police protection for churches, send firefighte­rs if a religious building catches fire and dispatch crossing guards at busy corners near a church school. If so, he said, why can Missouri “deny money for helping children not fall in the playground, cut their knees, get tetanus (or) break a leg.” If the money is spent for “health and safety,” church schools should be allowed to seek their share, he added.

Justice Elena Kagan said she was troubled by what she saw as the state’s discrimina­tion against religion. “Essentiall­y this is a program open to everyone,” yet the preschool was rejected for the playground funds just because it was run by a church. She said that appears to violate “a pretty strong principle in our constituti­onal law” against discrimina­tion based on religion.

New Justice Neil Gorsuch, whose recent arrival restored the court’s conservati­ve majority, was quiet through most of the hour, except to agree with the others that the state’s decision was “discrimina­tion on the basis of status of religion…. We know that’s happened in this case, right?” he told James Layton, the state’s lawyer.

What was unclear was whether the justices would rule broadly in favor of church schools, or focus on the playground because it had nothing to do with worshiping or teaching religion. The church’s lawyer, David Cortman of the Alliance Defending Freedom, said the court in the past has prohibited using government money to pay for “religious activities,” and he said he was not challengin­g those limits.

The justices wondered whether church schools could seek public money for computers and textbooks. Justice Anthony Kennedy asked whether religious schools and colleges in California could see state funds on an equal basis to make their buildings “earthquake proof.”

In the 1970s, the justices decided a series of cases that blocked states from giving tax money to parochial schools for textbooks, maps and other educationa­l materials.

Now the court seems ready to tell a state it must provide at least some public money to church schools.

Sotomayor said she did not see how the state’s refusal to fund a playground violates the 1st Amendment and its protection for the “free exercise” of religion. “No one is asking the church to change its beliefs,” she said. If the issue is discrimina­tion based on religion, she wondered, what about the benefits that go to churches? “There’s plenty of people who would think the tax exemption goes too far,” she said, adding she was not one of them.

 ?? ANNALIESE NURNBERG/MISSOURIAN 2016 ?? This Lutheran preschool seeks to participat­e in a Missouri funding program to rubberize its playground surface.
ANNALIESE NURNBERG/MISSOURIAN 2016 This Lutheran preschool seeks to participat­e in a Missouri funding program to rubberize its playground surface.

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