Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Thu 06/13/2024 View Wed 06/12/2024 View Tue 06/11/2024 View Mon 06/10/2024 View Sun 06/09/2024 View Sat 06/08/2024 View Fri 06/07/2024
2021-12-08 -Land of the Free
Supreme Court Justices are expected to authorize vouchers at religious schools
[Free Beacon] The Biden administration plans to push the Supreme Court to dismiss a school-voucher case on a technicality, fearing that a ruling that allows state funds to go toward religious uses will throw open public coffers to religious schools.

The Biden Justice Department during oral arguments on Wednesday will press the Court to dismiss the case. The plaintiffs have a leg up heading into the argument because the Court said in decisions from 2017 and 2020 that religious groups can't be excluded from public benefits because of their religious identity.

The case, ​​Carson v. Makin, involves two sets of parents from Maine who are seeking a wider distribution of state tuition assistance for religious schools. The Biden administration's stance is a sign the Justice Department anticipates losing the case, which would be a blow to Democrats and their union allies.

Continued from Page 3



Democrats and left-wing education groups oppose vouchers on the grounds that they siphon taxpayer dollars away from public schools and dilute the political power of teachers' unions—a powerful Democratic constituency—which rely on public education budgets and healthy membership rolls for influence. The nation's largest teachers' unions have filed briefs in Wednesday's case and are counting on the administration to head off defeat.

The case marks another point of intersection between Biden's Justice Department and the National School Boards Association, which filed a brief backing the government. The Washington Free Beacon was first to report that the NSBA coordinated with the White House before it sent a letter to the FBI that requested an investigation of parents who protest curriculum changes involving racial and sexual topics.

Maine offers tuition assistance for students who want to attend private high schools because public education is difficult to provide in the state's sparsely populated western and northern regions. Eligible private schools must be nonsectarian and cannot offer religious instruction, according to state law. The plaintiffs are two families that want to use state tuition assistance to send their children to evangelical schools.

The administration's chief argument is that the case should be dismissed because the plaintiffs don't have standing. It's unclear whether the two Christian schools implicated in the case, Temple Academy in Waterville and Bangor Christian Academy, will take tuition assistance from the state. Doing so could obligate them to comply with non-discrimination laws contrary to their beliefs, including a prohibition on discriminating against gays and lesbians in hiring.

Temple and Bangor Christian Academy both indicated they do not hire LGBT people for teaching positions, according to court filings.

Plaintiffs don't have standing to bring a lawsuit unless they can show their injury will be rectified by a favorable court order. If the religious schools simply will not take taxpayer dollars, the plaintiffs' injury can't be redressed by a judge. Therefore, the argument goes, they don't have standing and the case should be dismissed.

The administration's wonkish approach to the case is reflected in the advocate it is sending to the Court. Malcolm Stewart, a career Justice Department lawyer rather than a political appointee, will argue Wednesday's case for the administration.

The Court has said public benefits can't be withheld from religious groups simply because of their status. But it hasn't said whether benefits can be withheld because the recipients will put it toward religious uses, such as teaching their faith. That's the issue at the heart of the Carson case. Some of the conservative justices have said in past cases that they see the status-use line as a distinction without a difference.

While Biden's Justice Department is working the inside lane by pressing the standing argument, Maine authorities and national education groups are urging the Court to strengthen the barrier between church and state.

Lawyers for Maine are relying on straightforward constitutional arguments. The states, they say, can structure their education systems to be completely neutral on religion. Maine's policy simply reflects its interest in a secular school setting, their lawyers say.

The National Education Association, the American Federation of Teachers, and the National School Boards Association have filed legal briefs supporting Maine's law in the High Court. The NEA and the AFT are the nation's largest teachers' unions and have long opposed any public aid to religious institutions. The NSBA likewise said Maine's law is important for protecting students from pernicious influences.

"By including a tuition program in its public school offerings, the state is not giving up authority to ensure students who use the program experience an education free from discrimination and indoctrination," the NSBA's brief reads.

A decision in the Carson case is expected by summer 2022.
Posted by Besoeker 2021-12-08 00:00|| || Front Page|| [30 views ]  Top

#1 Tax paying parents should see their tax money go to the school they send their kids to if it is not a public school. With pron in text books and crt pushed in public schools, they don't deserve every parent's tax dollar.
Posted by Blackbeard Barnsmell6454 2021-12-08 03:53||   2021-12-08 03:53|| Front Page Top

#2 
Too many PUBLIC Schools have became Liberal, Socialist, Social Norm Busting Indoctrination centers.

Some going so far as to attempt to hide what is being immorally taught to K-1+ students from the parents.

So since Parent(s), are already paying School Taxes, but not having a say in the material. Some even BRANDING parents as Domestic Terrorists, just for demanding morally properly taught education materials be used.

YES !!! They should be allowed to transfer their Tax educational funds to private schools that will adhere to their family norms and views.

Thus offsetting the additional expenses they are willing to incur for an education that is applicable in the real world.
Posted by NN2N1 2021-12-08 10:30||   2021-12-08 10:30|| Front Page Top

#3 It would be a mistake to presume private schools are not pushing this because the teachers programs are programming the teachers for it, for years. There are no good resources for parents to distinguish between virtue signaling and actual indoc unless the private school says it outright. In public schools this stuff is overt and easy to spot. While you will get the better education, in private schools it is much more subtle and harder to detect until you are financially invested.
Posted by jefe101 2021-12-08 13:43||   2021-12-08 13:43|| Front Page Top

#4 Madrases?
Posted by Procopius2k 2021-12-08 19:12||   2021-12-08 19:12|| Front Page Top

#5 Homeschooling. Tutors + pods.

The private schools are almost as Woke as the public schools.

General civilizational decline, due to Wokesters' commie-influenced Long March through the institutions.
Posted by Merrick Ferret 2021-12-08 19:44||   2021-12-08 19:44|| Front Page Top

07:22 Skidmark
07:04 Skidmark
06:50 MikeKozlowski
06:48 Grom the Reflective
06:44 Mullah Richard
06:40 Mullah Richard
06:37 M. Murcek
06:31 Skidmark
06:29 NN2N1
06:14 Skidmark
06:12 Skidmark
05:55 Besoeker
05:54 Besoeker
05:52 Skidmark
05:50 Skidmark
05:30 Skidmark
05:25 Whiskey Mike
05:23 Grom the Reflective
04:50 Grom the Reflective
04:21 Ululating Platypus
04:00 Frank G
03:27 Ululating Platypus
03:24 Ululating Platypus
03:20 Pancho Poodle8452









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com