El Dorado News-Times

Religious schools may face another hurdle to state tuition

- By DAVID SHARP Associated Press

AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — Religious schools got what they wanted when the Supreme Court allowed them to participat­e in a state tuition program.

But the state attorney general said the ruling will be for naught unless the schools are willing to abide by the same antidiscri­mination law as other private schools that participat­e in the program.

An attorney for the families criticized the “kneejerk” comments, and the leader of a religious group predicted further litigation.

The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that Maine can’t exclude religious schools from a program that offers tuition for private education in towns that don’t have public schools. But religious schools didn’t have long to savor their victory before learning of a new hurdle.

Attorney General Aaron Frey said both Christian schools involved in the lawsuit have policies that discrimina­te against students and staff on a basis of sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, preventing their participat­ion in the tuition program despite the hard-fought litigation.

“The education provided by the schools at issue here is inimical to a public education. They promote a single

religion to the exclusion of all others, refuse to admit gay and transgende­r children, and openly discrimina­te in hiring teachers and staff,” he said in a statement.

There was no immediate comment from two schools, Temple Academy in Waterville or Bangor Christian Schools.

Michael Bindas, senior attorney for the Institute for

Justice, said the attorney general isn’t paying close attention to the Supreme Court’s commitment to religious liberty in recent years.

“It was an erroneous opinion of the Maine attorney general that embroiled the state in five lawsuits spanning three decades and that culminated in the Supreme Court’s ruling against the state,” Bindas said Thursday in a statement. “The current attorney general seems to not have learned any lessons from that experience.”

If the state truly intends to use the state law to create another obstacle, then more litigation will be inevitable, said Carroll Conley, executive director of the Christian Civic League of Maine.

The original lawsuit by three families seeking reimbursem­ents to attend Christian schools dates to 2018, but it goes back even further.

The state always sought to maintain a solid line between church and state by reimbursin­g for private schools — but not religious schools. The goal was to give rural students without a public high school an education that’s similar to what public school students get.

In Maine, 29 private schools participat­e in the program, enrolling 4,526 students, officials said. Private schools that meet the state’s criteria can get about $12,000 in taxpayer funding per student.

The Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling could propel school choice pushes in some of the 18 states that have not directed taxpayer money to private, religious education. It was seen as an affirmatio­n for states that already have voucher programs open to religious schools.

But all schools receiving state tuition must abide by the Maine Human Right Act, which bans discrimina­ting against someone because of their race, gender, sexual orientatio­n, ethnicity or disability, Frey said.

The Legislatur­e in the last session strengthen­ed the law that clarified the scope of the Maine Human Rights Act in education. Democratic Gov. Janet Mills signed the bill into law last year.

The updated law, sponsored by Democratic Sen. Craig Hickman, the first openly gay African American to serve in both chambers of the Legislatur­e, bans discrimina­tion in education on the basis of “sex, sexual orientatio­n or gender identity,” among other things.

The American Associatio­n of Christian Schools, meanwhile, brushed aside concerns of discrimina­tion against the LGBTQ community.

“We don’t look at it as discrimina­tion at all. We have a set of principles and beliefs that we believe are conducive to prosperity, to the good life, so to speak, and we partner with parents who share that vision,” said Jamison Coppola, spokespers­on for the associatio­n.

The lead plaintiffs, Dave and Amy Carson, were students of Conley when he used to be headmaster at Bangor Christian Schools.

Conley said the attorney general “laid down the gauntlet” for religious schools, but he said legal precedent favors the schools.

Dave Carson, for his part, said his family won’t benefit from the ruling because his daughter is already a junior at Husson University. But he said he doesn’t think it’s right for the state to try to put up roadblocks.

“As long as it’s an accredited school, students should be able to go wherever they want to,” he said. “You’re teaching the basics. If you want to have a Bible class, too, then that’s a parent’s choice, not someone down in Augusta.”

Bindas said the attorney general should undertake a “sober reflection” of how best to balance the rights of parents in the litigation versus the state’s anti-discrimina­tion interests.

“It is possible to develop policies that respect the concerns of both advocates for LGBTQ rights and advocates for religious liberty, but only if elected officials are genuinely committed to that task,” he said.

 ?? (Gabor Degre/The Bangor Daily News via AP, File) ?? Bangor Christian Schools sophomore Olivia Carson, 15, of Glenburn, Maine, gets dropped off on the first day of school. The Carsons were one of three Maine families that challenged the prohibitio­n on using public money to pay tuition at religious schools.
(Gabor Degre/The Bangor Daily News via AP, File) Bangor Christian Schools sophomore Olivia Carson, 15, of Glenburn, Maine, gets dropped off on the first day of school. The Carsons were one of three Maine families that challenged the prohibitio­n on using public money to pay tuition at religious schools.

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