A law requiring the Ten Commandments to be posted in all classrooms has been passed by the Texas Senate and could be on its way to becoming law. Republican Lt Governor Dan Patrick has said he sees this move as a way to help students become better Texans. Others see…
Supreme Court weighs ‘home equity theft’ dispute
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday weighs a 94-year-old woman’s claim that a Minnesota county violated the Constitution by retaining a $25,000 profit when it sold her home in a tax foreclosure sale. Geraldine Tyler’s home in a Hennepin County, which includes the city of Minneapolis, was seized because…
Religious liberty group defends Bible after Utah parent calls it ‘porn,’ demands removal from school
A nonprofit religious liberty law firm fired off a letter to the Sensitive Materials Review Committee of a school district in Utah arguing that keeping the Bible in its libraries is both reasonable and legal after a parent complained that the book is pornographic. Attorneys with the First Liberty Institute…
ND Law’s Religious Liberty Clinic files amicus brief in the Colombian Constitutional Court
The Notre Dame Law School Religious Liberty Clinic filed an amicus brief in the Constitutional Court of Colombia earlier this month to defend university students’ rights to establish and participate in faith-based organizations. The case, which involves student members of a faith-based group at the National University of Colombia, highlights…
Booker, Scott, Cohen, Raskin, Scanlon Reintroduce Bicameral Bill to Strengthen Protections, Restore Intent of Federal Religious Freedom Law
Do No Harm Act would address increasing use of religious freedom law to undermine civil rights protections WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and U.S. Representative Robert C. “Bobby” Scott (D-VA-03), along with U.S. Representatives Steve Cohen (TN-09), Jamie Raskin (MD-08), and Mary Gay Scanlon (PA-05), reintroduced…
Supreme Court hears arguments over Christians’ right not to work on Sunday
The U.S. Supreme Court is seen in Washington March 27, 2023. The court heard arguments in a case April 18 that could have broad implications for employees seeking religious accommodations from their employers. (OSV News photo/Evelyn Hockstein, Reuters) The U.S. Supreme Court heard April 18 arguments in a case that…
Supreme Court conservatives seem divided in major religion case
The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments Tuesday in a case testing how far employers must go to accommodate the religious views of their employees. Federal civil rights law requires employers to reasonably accommodate the religious beliefs of workers as long as that accommodation does not impose an "undue hardship" on…
Supreme Court conservatives seem divided in major religion case
The U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments Tuesday in a case testing how far employers must go to accommodate the religious views of their employees. Federal civil rights law requires employers to reasonably accommodate the religious beliefs of workers as long as that accommodation does not impose an "undue hardship" on…
Oklahoma still considering religious charter school despite blocking latest application
Members of the Oklahoma Statewide Virtual Charter School Board discuss St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School’s application. Oklahoma will still consider approving a religious charter school despite a February opinion from new state Attorney General Gentner Drummond saying that doing so ”misuses the concept of religious liberty by employing…
Supreme Court hears appeal of postal worker who didn’t work Sundays in dispute over religious accommodations
CNN — The Supreme Court on Tuesday will take on a major religious liberty dispute that could ultimately clarify how far employers must go to accommodate their employees’ religious beliefs. Gerald Groff, who lives in Pennsylvania, served in 2012 as a rural carrier associate at the United States Postal Service,…
Supreme Court to hear arguments on workplace religious protections
Republicans urge justices to interpret a law to better accommodate employees’ religious observance The Supreme Court building is seen at dusk in Washington in 2021. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call) The Supreme Court will hear arguments Tuesday in a case that could expand religious protections for workers under a law changed…
Court protects church that shielded abuser, who’s protecting children?
The LDS church protected a sexual abuser for a decade in Cochise County. When sued, the church attempted to escape responsibility by scurrying behind robes. A Cochise County judge ordered that the bishops and the clerk had to testify, so the church filed a special action, then Division 2 issued…
Decision will impact religion in workplace
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court is preparing to decide whether it should bolster workplace accommodations for the free exercise of religion. The justices was to hear oral arguments April 18 regarding a U.S. Postal Service employee’s contention his belief in observing Sunday as the Sabbath was not properly accommodated.…
When can we stop punishing those who keep the Sabbath?
The Supreme Court is poised to correct an old error that has hurt religious workers for decades by depriving them of their civil rights. More than 50 years ago, Congress protected religious employees in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. It requires employers to give their employees reasonable accommodations…
Another key test for religious liberty
Supreme Court – Separation of Church and State Religious employees should be watching the case of Groff v. DeJoy closely to see whether the Supreme Court will restore religious freedom to the workplace. It may be rare for religious employees to have conflicts between their jobs and their faith, but…
Does religious liberty protect the exercise of choice?
Yellow Dog Productions/Getty Images In the culture war battles over abortion and transgender rights, religion and religious liberty claims are often identified exclusively with one side of these disputes — those who oppose abortion and transgender rights. This is no longer the case. Several weeks ago, 1,500 synagogues observed a…
Perspectives: Tuition trend recalls two tax tussles here
Depositphotos.com image “ Taxes are what we pay for [a] civilized society .” Compania General de Tabacos de Filipinas, The Collector of Internal Revenue 275 U.S. 87 (1927) (Holmes, J., dissenting) A unique measure enacted recently in Iowa providing parents public funding to send their children to private schools, including…
Loudoun County Public Schools bans teacher from using Bible verses in email signature
The Loudoun County Public Schools sign on the county building. (7News FILE) LOUDOUN COUNTY, Va. (7News) — Loudoun County Public Schools Acting Superintendent is banning a teacher from using Bible verses in her email signature, 7News has learned. “Simply put, the general inclusion of religious quotes in communications LCPS employees…
Continue ignoring Liberty Counsel, FFRF tells Va. school district
The Freedom From Religion Foundation is complimenting a Virginia school district for doing the right thing in ignoring a recent misguiding missive from a Christian nationalist group. Liberty Counsel is objecting to Loudoun County Public Schools’ decision requiring a teacher to refrain from using a bible verse in her signature…
In Maine, Lawsuit Argues That State Must Fund Discrimination In Religious Schools
We don’t want your kind. getty Over the past few years, the Supreme Court has, step by step, broken large holes in the wall between church and state when it comes to education. Now a lawsuit in Maine proposes to shatter a few more bricks. Carson v. Makin spun from…
Religion in the workplace
Can an employee refuse diversity training because of religious beliefs? It can be difficult for companies to negotiate the line between what is for the good of the company, and what suits the individual – and one particular minefield is when the company’s values conflict with an employee’s faith. So,…
Will SCOTUS Fall for Biden DOJ’s Flim-Flam in Sabbath-Observer Case? | Opinion
The Biden administration’s Justice Department has submitted a brief to the Supreme Court that should be the subject of a false-labeling charge. An evangelical Christian postman lost his job because he would not deliver mail on Sunday. A federal appellate court ruled against his employment-discrimination claim because accommodating his religious…
Homophobic churches and liberal states make for unhappy bedfellows
Parliament should begin the process of disestablishment rather than try to fix the Church of England, argues Stephen Evans. A recent exchange in parliament revealed the incongruity of a state church in a liberal democracy. Last week, a group of respected parliamentarians brought forward a bill to allow for same…
Judge won’t halt summons in IRS probe of God’s Storehouse, run by Topeka Sen. Rick Kloos
A federal judge dismissed Friday an effort by the pastor of God’s Storehouse, who is also a state senator, to block Internal Revenue Service access the church’s bank records as part of an ongoing investigation. The probe into God’s Storehouse stretches back to June 2021 but became public last year…
How Buddhists, Catholics, Latter-days Saints, other faiths view LGBTQ rights
New PRRI poll also shows LGBTQ Americans tend to be younger and have no religion. (Patrick Semansky | AP) President Joe Biden signs the Respect for Marriage Act, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2022, on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington. A new PRRI poll shows how various religious…