Oroville Mercury-Register

Trump eases rules for religious social service providers

- By Collin Binkley

The Trump administra­tion has moved to loosen Obama- era restrictio­ns on religious organizati­ons that receive federal money to provide social services.

In new rules coordinate­d across nine federal agencies, the administra­tion said it was clearing barriers that make it difficult for religious groups to participat­e in federal programs.

Chief among the changes is the eliminatio­n of a rule requiring faithbased groups to tell clients about their religious affiliatio­n and to refer clients to a different program upon request.

It also removes a rule telling religious groups to give clients written notice about their rights, including that they can’t be forced to participat­e in religious activities.

Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie said the changes will “remove unfair obstacles” standing before groups that seek to contract with the agency to help veterans.

“VA partners with hundreds of groups across the country that are looking to support our Veterans,” Wilkie said. “Making it harder for faith-based groups to deliver this support never made sense.”

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said the policy ensures that faithbased groups “do not give up their First Amendment rights as a condition of participat­ing in taxpayer programs.”

The new policy applies to funding from nine agencies including the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Education Department and the Department of Health and Human Services. Together, the agencies award billions of dollars a year in grants and contracts.

Proposed last January, the policy follows through on an executive order President Donald Trump signed in 2018 aiming to put religious groups on equal footing when they compete for federal grants and contracts.

The executive order was one of several overtures Trump made to his evangelica­l Christian base around the presidenti­al campaign.

Trump also vowed to protect prayer in public schools and bolster the rights of religious groups on college campuses.

Civil rights group blasted the new changes, saying the previous rules were meant to protect LGBTQ people, religious minorities and others who may face discrimina­tion from religious groups. If they don’t know they have the option to get help elsewhere, advocates say, they might choose to forgo services they need, including medical care or housing assistance.

Advocates raised concerns about substance abuse programs that include religious counseling, for example, and faithbased homeless shelters that refuse to house transgende­r women with other women.

“Some faith-based agencies provide services in a way that is discrimina­tory,” said Jennifer Pizer, law and policy director for Lambda Legal, an LGBTQ rights group. “They think being an LGBTQ person is not legitimate, so they include religious proselytin­g or provide services in a way that doesn’t respect people’s identity. And that drives people away.”

Pizer sees the policy as a last- ditch effort to remove civil protection­s before Trump leaves office. The policy will take effect Jan. 16, days before Presidente­lect Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on.

“They are doing their best to lift as many nondiscrim­ination rules as they can before the new administra­tion comes in,” she said.

The American Civil Liberties Union called on the incoming Biden administra­tion to reverse the rule as soon as possible.

“This rule will harm the very people that government­funded social services are supposed to help — marginaliz­ed individual­s and communitie­s,” said Heather Weaver, senior staff attorney with the ACLU Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief.

Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., chairman of the House education and labor committee, condemned the policy and said it could wrongly lead people to think they have to participat­e in religious activities to receive benefits of federally funded programs.

SHE SNORES MORE THAN I DO, BUT I STILL LOVE MY HUMAN.

— BANDIT

adopted 11-26-09

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