The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Supreme Court rules for church in playground case

- By Mark Sherman and Sam Hananel

WASHINGTON » The Supreme Court ruled Monday that churches have the same right as other charitable groups to seek state money for new playground surfaces and other non-religious needs.

By a 7-2 vote, the justices sided with Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Missouri, which had sought a grant to put a soft surface on its preschool playground. The church was denied any money even though its applicatio­n was ranked fifth out of 44 submission­s.

Chief Justice John Roberts said for the court that the state violated the First Amendment by denying a public benefit to an otherwise eligible recipient solely on account of its religious status. He called it “odious to our Constituti­on” to exclude the church from the grant program, even though the consequenc­es are only “a few extra scraped knees.”

The case arose from an applicatio­n the church submitted in 2012 to take part in Missouri’s scrap tire grant program, which reimburses the cost of installing a rubberized playground surface made from recycled tires. The money comes from a fee paid by anyone who buys a new tire. The church’s applicatio­n to resurface the playground for its preschool and daycare ranked fifth out of 44 applicants.

But the state’s Department of Natural Resources rejected the applicatio­n, pointing to the part of the state constituti­on that says “no money shall ever be taken from the public treasury, directly or indirectly, in aid of any church, sect or denominati­on of religion.”

A recycled scrap tire is not religious, the church said in its Supreme Court brief. “It is wholly secular,” the church said.

In dissent, Justice Sonya Sotomayor said the ruling weakens the nation’s longstandi­ng commitment to separation of church and state.

“This case is about nothing less than the relationsh­ip between religious institutio­ns and the civil government — that is, between church and state,” she said, joined by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. “The Court today profoundly changes that relationsh­ip by holding, for the first time, that the Constituti­on requires the government to provide public funds directly to a church.”

 ?? ANNALIESE NURNBERG — MISSOURIAN VIA AP, FILE ?? In this file photo, the empty playground at Trinity Lutheran Church in Columbia, Mo. The Supreme Court has ruled that churches have the same right as other charitable groups to seek state money for new playground surfaces and other non-religious needs....
ANNALIESE NURNBERG — MISSOURIAN VIA AP, FILE In this file photo, the empty playground at Trinity Lutheran Church in Columbia, Mo. The Supreme Court has ruled that churches have the same right as other charitable groups to seek state money for new playground surfaces and other non-religious needs....

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