Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Suit seeks to stop public religious school

- SEAN MURPHY

Oklahoma’s Republican Attorney General Gentner Drummond on Friday sued to stop a state board from establishi­ng and funding what would be the nation’s first religious public charter school after the board ignored Drummond’s warning that it would violate both the state and U.S. constituti­ons.

Drummond filed the lawsuit with the Oklahoma Supreme Court against the Oklahoma Statewide Virtual Charter School Board after three of the board’s members this week signed a contract for the St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual Charter School, which is sponsored by the Archdioces­e of Oklahoma City.

“Make no mistake, if the Catholic Church were permitted to have a public virtual charter school, a reckoning will follow in which this state will be faced with the unpreceden­ted quandary of processing requests to directly fund all petitionin­g sectarian groups,” the lawsuit states.

The school board voted 3-2 in June to approve the Catholic archdioces­e’s applicatio­n to establish the online public charter school, which would be open to students across the state in kindergart­en through grade 12. In its applicatio­n, the archdioces­e said its vision is that the school “participat­es in the evangelizi­ng mission of the Church and is the privileged environmen­t in which Christian education is carried out.”

The approval of a publicly funded religious school is the latest in a series of actions taken by conservati­ve-led states that include efforts to teach the Bible in public schools, and to ban books and lessons about race, sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

Oklahoma’s constituti­on specifical­ly prohibits the use of public money or property from being used, directly or indirectly, for the use or benefit of any church or system of religion. Nearly 60% of Oklahoma voters rejected a proposal in 2016 to remove that language from the Constituti­on.

A message left Friday with Rebecca Wilkinson, the executive director of the Oklahoma Statewide Virtual Charter School Board, was not immediatel­y returned, although Wilkinson has said previously she wouldn’t comment on pending litigation.

A group of Oklahoma parents, faith leaders and a public education nonprofit already filed a lawsuit in district court in July seeking to stop St. Isidore from operating as a charter school in Oklahoma. That case is pending.

Oklahoma’s Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt, who earlier this year signed a bill that would give parents public funds to send their children to private schools, including religious schools, criticized Drummond’s lawsuit as a “political stunt.”

“AG Drummond seems to lack any firm grasp on the constituti­onal principle of religious freedom and masks his disdain for the Catholics’ pursuit by obsessing over non-existent schools that don’t neatly align with his religious preference,” Stitt said in a statement.

Drummond defeated Stitt’s hand-picked attorney general in last year’s GOP primary and the two Republican­s have clashed over Stitt’s hostile position toward many Native American tribes in the state.

The attorney general’s lawsuit also suggests that the board’s vote could put at risk more than $1 billion in federal education dollars that Oklahoma receives that requires the state to comply with federal laws that prohibit a publicly funded religious school.

“Not only is this an irreparabl­e violation of our individual religious liberty, but it is an unthinkabl­e waste of our tax dollars,” Drummond said in a statement.

The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, a nonprofit organizati­on that supports the public charter school movement, released a statement Friday in support of Drummond’s challenge.

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