The Supreme Court The narrow U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia contributes further to the perceived legal entitlement of faith-based organizations to discriminate while utilizing taxpayer’s money, argues Sruti Swaminathan, staff attorney for Lambda Legal. She contends the recent string of SCOTUS religious liberty holdings shows…
Family at center of Maine school choice case hopes for U.S. Supreme Court victory
David and Amy Carson of Maine, pictured here with their daughter, Olivia, are challenging a 41-year-old policy that that limits to secular schools a state program offering financial assistance to families seeking education choice for their children. David and Amy Carson both graduated from Bangor Christian School s, housed in…
WATCH VIDEO | Gallitzin historical marker spotlights 1894 court case on religious expression
A new historical marker unveiled June 23, 2021, at Tunnels Park in Gallitzin commemorates an 1893 court case that gave Catholic nuns the right to wear religious clothing while teaching in public schools. Sister Mary Parks addresses the crowd at dedication ceremonies for new historical marker unveiled June 23, 2021,…
High Court Needs To Restore Rights for the Religious
Americans need to live and let live. Let the LGBTQ activists practice their preferences, and let Christians live the Gospel. On Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 9-0 that a Catholic Social Services adoption agency in Philadelphia could continue to place children only with heterosexual couples, consistent with the Gospel’s…
High Court Needs To Restore Rights for the Religious
Americans need to live and let live. Let the LGBTQ activists practice their preferences, and let Christians live the Gospel. On Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 9-0 that a Catholic Social Services adoption agency in Philadelphia could continue to place children only with heterosexual couples, consistent with the Gospel’s…
A narrow SCOTUS ruling with serious implications for religious liberty
On Thursday, the Supreme Court issued a much-anticipated ruling in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia. In 2018, the city of Philadelphia barred Catholic Social Services (CSS) from placing foster children, as it had been doing for over 200 years, unless it changed its policy on same-sex households. Rather than compromise…
Supreme Court issues a win for religious liberty, but just barely
The Supreme Court this week took one small step for religious freedom. Unfortunately, it failed to take the giant leap needed to fully protect religious practice. In Fulton v. City of Philadelphia , the court considered the plight of the Catholic church, which has served Philadelphia’s needy children in various…
Protecting free exercise under Smith and after Smith
This article is part of a symposium on the court’s decision in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia . Thomas C. Berg is the James L. Oberstar professor of law and public policy at the University of St. Thomas (Minnesota). Douglas Laycock is the Robert E. Scott distinguished professor of law…
Religious freedom remains a ticking time bomb
The 2015 Supreme Court decision extending the right to marry to same-sex adult couples contained a ticking time bomb. Six years later, the noise is getting loud. The explosive material has to do with religious freedom. While polls clearly show that a growing majority of Americans support marriage equality, a…
The woke crusade against Christian baker Jack Phillips continues
The woke crusade against Christian baker Jack Phillips continues. The religious owner of the Colorado-based Masterpiece Cakeshop rose to national prominence after he, in 2012, declined to make a custom wedding cake for a same-sex wedding. Phillips cited his First Amendment right to not promote ideas contrary to his cherished…
Opinion: We’re still on a collision course over Masterpiece Cakeshop
The 2015 Supreme Court decision extending the right to marry to same-sex adult couples contained a ticking time bomb. Six years later, the noise is getting loud. The explosive material has to do with religious freedom. While polls clearly show that a growing majority of Americans support marriage equality, a…
Supreme Court: Philadelphia Ordinance Unconstitutionally Burdened Religious Exercise
Jackson Lewis Law Firm Logo The U.S. Supreme Court has found that Philadelphia’s ordinance requiring a private foster care agency to certify same-sex couples as foster parents burdened the agency’s religious exercise in violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment. Fulton et al. v. City of Philadelphia,…
Supreme Court Rules For A Catholic Group In A Case Involving Gay Rights, Foster Care
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday sided with Catholic Social Services in a battle that pitted religious freedom against anti-discrimination laws in Philadelphia and across the country. The court declared that the private Catholic agency was entitled to renewal of its contract with the city for screening foster parents, even…
Supreme Court Rules Catholic Group Doesn’t Have To Consider LGBTQ Foster Parents
With six conservative justices, the U.S. Supreme Court sided with a Catholic group in its dispute with the city of Philadelphia over LGBTQ couples and foster care. Image: Erin Schaff/AP The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday sided with Catholic Social Services in a battle that pitted religious freedom against anti-discrimination…
The Daily Brew: SCOTUS update: 46 opinions issued this term, 18 cases remain
Welcome to the Wednesday, June 16, Brew. Here’s what’s in store for you as you start your day: SCOTUS update: 46 opinions issued this term, 18 cases remain Local Roundup Federal Register update SCOTUS update: 46 opinions issued this term, 18 cases remain The U.S. Supreme Court is winding down…
Guest Commentary: Let’s talk discovery, religion and logo
Anticipating the Santa Maria Joint Union High School District’s pending assessment of its Columbus ship logo, I respond to recent commentary that asserted the logo is “fully fitting” for the district. The commentary is informative for evaluating the logo’s appropriateness, but not in the way its author intended. Consider two…
Federal appeals court rules Vermont cannot exclude religious education from private school tuition program
Vermont tuition program Vermont’s Town Tuition Program (“TTP”) requires school districts that lack a public high school to provide for its residents’ high school education by paying private school tuition. Because Vermont’s constitution guarantees that “no person shall be compelled to support a place of worship,” the Vermont Supreme Court,…
David Adler: The mystery of the Ninth Amendment
David Adler Likely the most mysterious provision of the Bill of Rights, the question of the meaning of the Ninth Amendment has generated numerous interpretations and theories. Though not invoked by the Supreme Court until 1965, it has come to play an important role in advancing the rights and liberties…
A Supreme Court decision involving Philadelphia and religious rights is coming. Here’s what you need to know.
The Supreme Court will decide a case involving Philadelphia’s refusal to contract with Catholic Social Services over the group’s refusal to place foster children with same-sex couples. The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to issue its opinion within the month on a closely watched case that grapples with religious rights…
Religious freedom case over Roy church discipline matter is revived by Utah Supreme Court
The Scott M. Matheson Courthouse in Salt Lake City is shown in this undated photo. The building houses the Utah Supreme Court and the Utah Court of Appeals. ROY — The Utah Supreme Court has revived a religious freedom dispute, instructing an Ogden court to take another look at a…
California churches celebrate win for religious liberty as state agrees to pay $2.1M over lockdown battles
Churches in California are celebrating their victory for religious freedom after a religious freedom legal group secured settlements requiring the state to pay $2.1 million in attorneys’ fees to a Pentecostal church and a Catholic priest and to never again impose discriminatory restrictions on houses of worship. In an injunction…
Trump Judges Rule that State Must Pay Tuition at Religious High School: Confirmed Judges, Confirmed Fears
People For the American Way “ Confirmed Judges, Confirmed Fears ” is a blog series documenting the harmful impact of President Trump’s judges on Americans’ rights and liberties. Cases in the series can be found by issue and by judge at this link Second Circuit Trump judge Steven Menashi wrote…
Federal court: Vermont can’t exclude religious schools from tuition program
Members of the Mount St. Joseph Academy Esports team Destiny Jurado, Jeremy Gillespie and Keith Dishaw Sinclair are pictured at the school in Rutland., Vt., Feb. 25, 2020. (CNS photo/Cori Fugere Urban, Vermont Catholic) A federal appeals court on Wednesday ruled that the state of Vermont cannot refuse to fund…
Court asks Ezra Zaid, Jais to negotiate compensation for wrongful Shariah prosecution over book
Ezra Zaid speaks to reporters at the Petaling Shariah Subordinate Court in Shah Alam December 17, 2020. — Picture by Miera Zulyana KUALA LUMPUR, June 3 ― The High Court today asked both Mohd Ezra Mohd Zaid and the Selangor Islamic Religious Department (Jais) to attempt to settle on the…
Federal court: Vermont can’t exclude religious schools from tuition program
Stephen Kiers/Shutterstock A federal appeals court on Wednesday ruled that the state of Vermont cannot refuse to fund tuition for religious institutions that would otherwise qualify for the funding. The June 2 ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit changes a state no-aid policy that dates…