Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Religious business loan rule poses rift

- AARON GREGG

The U.S. Small Business Administra­tion has proposed new rules that would permanentl­y allow religious businesses to receive taxpayer-backed small business loans, forcing the Biden administra­tion into a politicall­y sensitive debate that raises questions about separation of church and state.

The proposed regulation, made public Tuesday afternoon on President Donald Trump’s last full day in office, would do away with restrictio­ns preventing taxpayer-backed loans from going to “businesses principall­y engaged in teaching, instructin­g, counseling or indoctrina­ting religion or religious beliefs, whether in a religious or secular setting.”

If the rule were finalized, it would open up seven Small Business Administra­tion loan programs to a range of religious-affiliated businesses such as Christian publishers and forprofit schools affiliated with religious organizati­ons. It’s unclear whether the rules would also apply to tax-exempt places of worship, such as churches, or nonprofit health-care organizati­ons such as Catholic hospitals.

Outgoing agency Administra­tor Jovita Carranza

characteri­zed the regulation as an effort to give religious businesses the same rights as other businesses.

“America’s faith-based small businesses and organizati­ons play a vital role in providing employment opportunit­ies, products, and essential educationa­l, training and youth social services that benefit both our local communitie­s and the overall national economy,” Carranza said.

The proposed rule “would ensure that these businesses and organizati­ons are not forced to choose between their faith and the SBA financial assistance that they need to continue serving the public and employing our neighbors,” she said.

The proposed rule still needs to undergo a lengthy approval process, starting with a public comment period ending Feb. 18. Even when that process concludes, it will fall to an agency headed by Biden-appointed Administra­tor Isabel Guzman, a former small business owner who was Small Business Administra­tion chief of staff in the Obama administra­tion, to decide whether and how to move forward.

Even so, the last-minute regulation effectivel­y forces the Biden administra­tion into a thorny debate that is sure to elicit strong feelings within religious communitie­s that have seen barriers to public funding as a violation of their First Amendment rights to religious expression and freedom.

Conversely, it will also stir activism among those who will see the subsidies as a threat to the First Amendment’s ban on government­establishe­d religion. The Supreme Court has said the government is banned from favoring one religious view over another or favoring religion over non religion.

The regulation mirrors a separate policy from the Department of Education, which would make religious-affiliated charter schools eligible for certain grant programs.

HIGH COURT RULINGS

Both proposals rely heavily on two recent Supreme Court decisions from 2017 and 2020, which determined that religious organizati­ons should not be excluded from government programs solely on the basis of their status as a religious group.

John Inazu, a professor of law and religion at Washington University in St. Louis, said the Supreme Court has been gradually lessening restrictio­ns on funding for religious organizati­ons over the past decade. But he added that the Trump administra­tion took an “aggressive” interpreta­tion of recent court decisions and pushed new policies favored by religious conservati­ves.

“The Trump administra­tion has been signaling these kinds of policy moves as an appeal to evangelica­ls,” Inazu said.

The new regulation would also institutio­nalize a key aspect of the Paycheck Protection Program, a huge coronaviru­s relief program that offered well over $500 billion in loans to a range of business and nonprofits.

The Treasury Department under President Donald Trump waived the religious affiliatio­n rules when it implemente­d the loan program, something that allowed not only religious-affiliated businesses but also churches to receive help.

90,000 GROUPS GOT AID

Churches, mosques and other faith-based organizati­ons benefited widely from Small Business Administra­tion loans as the Paycheck Protection Program has been implemente­d over the past year. All told, more than $7 billion went to roughly 90,000 religious groups last year through the program.

Almost 5,000 Catholic organizati­ons received a total of $828 million through the Paycheck Protection Program, much of it going to Catholic schools, according to a Washington Post analysis of data made public by the Small Business Administra­tion. Just over 10,000 Baptist organizati­ons received Paycheck Protection Program loans for a total of $735 million. Jewish and Muslim-affiliated organizati­ons received $124 million and $20 million, respective­ly.

Some megachurch­es and large Catholic organizati­ons received multimilli­on-dollar loans individual­ly. One of them is Harvest Christian Fellowship Church in Riverside, Calif., which received $2.9 million to pay several hundred employees. In a typical year, Harvest Riverside employs about 370 people, including pastors, teachers, video production staff, maintenanc­e, phone counselors and others.

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