Articles last week and this week in the Poughkeepsie Journal report on efforts by a local Chabad rabbi in Poughkeepsie, New York, to again erect a 22-foot tall menorah on downtown city property as he has done each Hanukkah since 1996. In the past, city workers have helped him put it up. However this year, the city (along with four intervenors) sued claiming that the use of city workers violates the Establishment Clause.
After complaints last year, the city adopted a policy barring city workers from helping to put up any displays, but allowing anyone to place religious or secular holiday symbols on a specified city-owned vacant lot. Rabbi Yacov Borenstein wants to continue to use the traditional city site for his display, and wants a city "cherry picker" truck to lift him to the top of the menorah for the daily lighting ceremonies. Trial court Justice James D. Pagones ruled yesterday in favor of Rabbi Borenstein, in part because the city traditionally uses tax money to put up wreaths on downtown utility poles and to decorate Christmas trees on city-owned property. He wrote that excluding the menorah would have the principal effect of promoting Christianity and inhibiting Judaism in violation of the Establishment Clause.
UPDAATE: On Dec. 16, a state appellate court judge refused to stay Judge Pagones' ruling pending appeal. (Poughkeepsie Journal).