Federal judge rules CRS must pay health benefits for spouse of gay employee

Federal judge rules CRS must pay health benefits for spouse of gay employee

A gavel and block are seen in this illustration photo. (CNS photo/Andrew Kelly, Reuters) BALTIMORE (CNS) — A U.S. District Court judge in Maryland has ruled that Catholic Relief Services, the U.S. bishops’ overseas relief and development agency, must offer health care coverage to the spouses of gay employees as…

State backs Christian school in pre-game prayer fight

State backs Christian school in pre-game prayer fight

In this week’s brief, attorneys for the Department of Education wrote that the association “completely disregarded core First Amendment principles when it refused to allow Cambridge Christian School to pray over the loudspeaker at its 2015 championship game solely because of the religious message of the prayer, even though secular,…

Post-Dobbs Employment Considerations

Post-Dobbs Employment Considerations

In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization the United States Supreme Court overturned years of precedent started by Roe v. Wade and conferred the right to regulate abortions to individual states. This marked change has obvious implications in social, political, and medical circles. But why does it matter for employers?…

Think the Supreme Court solved school prayer conflict? Think again

Think the Supreme Court solved school prayer conflict? Think again

Students at Loyola Academy, a Catholic school in Illinois, pray together after winning the 8A high school championship in 2015. Six weeks after the Supreme Court ruled in favor of a praying football coach and clarified its stance on school prayer , a separate but related case came one step…

Federal appeals court affirms dismissal of student’s lawsuit against Arizona community college over quiz questions about Islamic terrorism

Federal appeals court affirms dismissal of student’s lawsuit against Arizona community college over quiz questions about Islamic terrorism

Professor Nicholas Damask worked with FIRE to defend his academic freedom rights after Scottsdale Community College tried to force him to apologize for quiz questions about Islamic terrorism. (Photo courtesy of Damask) The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district court’s dismissal of a lawsuit…

Misrepresenting Seattle Pacific’s Reasons for Suing Its State

Misrepresenting Seattle Pacific’s Reasons for Suing Its State

To the Editor; The 8/1/22 Inside Higher Ed article, “Seattle Pacific Sues Washington AG,” contains several errors of fact that need to be corrected and additional editorial decisions that demonstrate bias in both terminology and perspective. In the initial news sub-headline, author Josh Moody incorrectly described the reason Seattle Pacific…

Judge rules Catholic nonprofit must cover health insurance for same-sex spouses

Judge rules Catholic nonprofit must cover health insurance for same-sex spouses

Catholic Relief Services is a Baltimore-based nonprofit organization that provides humanitarian relief worldwide. A federal judge has ruled that Catholic Relief Services, an international humanitarian aid organization based in Baltimore, has been discriminating against a gay employee by denying his husband health insurance. When the employee, known in court records…

Faith-based groups sue to overturn Florida’s 15-week abortion ban

Faith-based groups sue to overturn Florida’s 15-week abortion ban

This lawsuit follows one filed in Leon County Circuit Court June by a South Florida Jewish congregation that also argues the new law, which provides no exceptions for rape and incest, violates rights to privacy and religion. | Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo By Matt Dixon 08/02/2022 01:22 PM EDT TALLAHASSEE, Fla.…

Tom Waddell: Ruling on religious school funding puts Maine in a bind

Tom Waddell: Ruling on religious school funding puts Maine in a bind

What happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object? Maine will find out in the coming school year. A lot has changed since I wrote about state-funded Christian education in January. The Supreme Court’s decision in Casey v. Makin has all but forced Maine to pay for Christian education,…

Florida clergy lawsuits say abortion ban violates religious freedom

Florida clergy lawsuits say abortion ban violates religious freedom

Clergy members of five religions sued the state of Florida on Monday over a new law criminalizing most abortions in the state after 15 weeks of pregnancy, saying the ban violates their religious freedom rights. The five separate lawsuits, filed in Miami-Dade County, claim the state’s ban curtails the clergy…

Why Supreme Court’s judgment on hijab heightens religious fault lines

Why Supreme Court’s judgment on hijab heightens religious fault lines

Ogboji In a majority decision of five in favour and two dissenting, the Supreme Court of Nigeria on Friday, June 17, in Abuja, affirmed the rights of female Muslim Students in Lagos state public primary and secondary schools to wear hijab. The seven-member panel of the Supreme Court affirmed the…

The quiet demise of the church-state wall

The quiet demise of the church-state wall

In its late-June flurry, the Supreme Court ballooned the Second Amendment, crippled the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to address climate change, and scrapped the constitutional right to abortion. These rulings — especially the chaos-inducing overruling of Roe v. Wade — have dominated the headlines. Meanwhile another seismic change to American…

Michigan high court bars discrimination on sexual orientation

Michigan high court bars discrimination on sexual orientation

Lansing — The Michigan Supreme Court on Thursday ruled Michigan’s current laws against discrimination based on sex includes a ban on discrimination based on sexual orientation, a ruling that effectively stops businesses from denying services, housing or employment opportunities to the gay community. The ruling also left intact a lower…

United States: Religious Institutions Update: July 2022

United States: Religious Institutions Update: July 2022

KEY CASES Establishment Clause Maine Scholarship Program Excluding Sectarian Schools Unconstitutional In Carson v. Makin , 142 S.Ct. 1987 (2022), the U.S. Supreme Court struck a tuition assistance program that requires school districts to transmit payment to the secondary school — public or private, in-state or out-of-state — that parents…

FIRST 5: Court sets new rules for funding religious schools

Freedom Forum The Supreme Court, in striking down a unique tuition assistance program in Maine, could foreshadow the future of religious freedom under the First Amendment. THE CASE The very rural state of Maine is not able to provide a local public secondary school in every school district. To fill…