Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Showing posts with label New Jersey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Jersey. Show all posts
Friday, February 17, 2017
Jewish School's Challenge To Zoning Decision Is Ripe For Litigation
In Congregation Kollel, Inc. v. Township of Howell, N.J., (D NJ, Feb. 16, 2017), a New Jersey federal district court rejected a township's lack of ripeness defense in a suit by an Orthodox Jewish organization that is attempting to construct a classroom building, dormitory and faculty housing for a Talmudic academy. The township rejected the academy's permit application and instead insisted that it apply for a zoning variance. Plaintiffs, believing that the land use decision was based on religious animus towards the Orthodox Jewish faith, sued claiming violations of RLUIPA, the Fair Housing Act, the 1st and 14th Amendments and state law. The township argued that the suit should not be decided until plaintiffs had applied for a zoning variance. The court held, however, that a variance application would not result in development of any additional factual record and that (except for one state law claim) plaintiffs can move ahead with their suit.
Labels:
Jewish,
New Jersey,
RLUIPA
Friday, January 27, 2017
3rd Circuit Hears Appeal In Convictions For Coercing Jewish Divorce Documents
The U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday heard oral arguments in United States v. Stimler. (Audio of full oral arguments.) In the case, a New Jersey federal district court convicted three defendants on charges growing out of arrangements to abduct, beat and torture recalcitrant Jewish husbands who refused to give their civilly divorced wives a religious divorce document (get). (See prior posting.) According to AP's report on Wednesday's oral arguments, defendants' attorneys argued, among other things, that the trial judge erred in not admitting evidence into trial that explained the defendants' religious beliefs. (See prior related posting.) Attorneys also argued lack of search warrants to obtain cellphone records.
Labels:
Jewish divorce,
New Jersey
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Court Upholds Refusal To Accommodate Correctional Officer's Khimar
In Tisby v. Camden County Correctional Facility, (NJ App., Jan. 18, 2017), a New Jersey state appeals court upheld the refusal by the warden of a state correctional facility to grant a religious accommodation to a female Muslim corrections officer who sought to wear a khimar (a tight fitting head covering without a veil) at work. The appeals court agreed that the requested accommodation would impose an undue hardship in light of the safety risks involved and the ability to hide contraband in head coverings. NJ.com reporting on the decision says that plaintiff will appeal to the state Supreme Court.
Labels:
Hijab,
New Jersey,
Reasonable accommodation
Saturday, January 14, 2017
NJ Court Upholds Historic Preservation Funds To Churches In State Constitutional Challenge
In Freedom From Religion Foundation v. Morris County Board of Chosen Freeholders, (NJ Super., Jan 9, 2017), a New Jersey trial court upheld a county's allowing churches to be among those receiving grants from the county's Historic Preservation Trust Fund. Even though Art. 1, Par. 3 of the New Jersey Constitution prohibits the use of tax funds to build or repair any church or place of worship, the court said that the constitutional provision "is not meant to be read literally" but must be read "in conjunction with the State's longstanding tradition of neutrality in church-state relations...." The Daily Record reports on the decision.
Friday, January 06, 2017
Catholic Hospital Sued Over Refusal Of Sex Reassignment Surgery
Lambda Legal announced yesterday that it has filed a lawsuit in New Jersey federal district court against a Catholic hospital that refused, on religious grounds, to allow a surgeon to perform a hysterectomy on a transgender man as part of his gender reassignment. The complaint (full text) in Conforti v. St. Joseph's Healthcare System, (D NJ, file 1/5/2017), contends that the refusal discriminates on the basis of sex and gender identity in violation of the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination, and that it constitutes discrimination on the basis of sex in violation of Sec. 1557 of the Affordable Care Act. According to AP, the hospital says it makes decisions in conformance with ethical and religious guidelines of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Labels:
Catholic,
New Jersey,
Transgender
Monday, January 02, 2017
New Jersey Mosque Wins Zoning Challenge
In Islamic Society of Basking Ridge v. Township of Bernards, (D NJ, Dec. 31, 2016), a New Jersey federal district court granted partial summary judgment to plaintiffs claiming religious discrimination by a township against an Islamic organization. The court summarized its 57-page decision as follows:
This case requires the Court to examine a township planning board’s denial of a Muslim congregation’s site plan application to build a mosque.... Plaintiffs challenge the Planning Board’s decision on two bases: (1) Defendants’ disparate application of an off-street parking requirement between Christian churches and Muslim mosques, pursuant to the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act...; and (2) the purported unconstitutional vagueness of a parking ordinance... under the Federal and New Jersey Constitutions. After careful consideration, the Court determines that Plaintiffs are entitled to judgment on the pleadings with regard to both issues.NJ Advance Media reports on the decision.
Labels:
Mosques,
New Jersey,
RLUIPA,
Zoning
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
Justice Department Sues Under RLUIPA Challenging Mosque Zoning Denial
Yesterday the Justice Department filed a civil lawsuit under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act against Bernards Township, New Jersey over the town's refusal to grant zoning approval for construction of a mosque. (DOJ press release). The complaint (full text) in United States v. Township of Bernards, New Jersey, (D NJ, filed 11/22/2016), contends that:
The mosque proposal met with vociferous public opposition. Flyers, social media, and websites denounced the mosque and were filled with anti-Muslim bigotry and references to terrorism and the 9/11 attacks....
The Planning Board ultimately held thirty-nine public hearings over three and a half years. The Planning Board had never held such a large number of hearings for any previous site plan application.... Since at least 1994, this was the first time that the Planning Board had denied a site plan application for a house of worship.
Labels:
Justice Department,
New Jersey,
RLUIPA
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Chabad Files RLUIPA Lawsuit In New Jersey Town
North Jersey.com reports on a RLUIPA lawsuit filed Nov. 1 by an Orthodox Jewish Chabad group against the mayor, property maintenance officer and Zoning Board of Adjustment of Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey. The suit challenges denials of variances and waivers by the zoning board which Chabad sought in order to build a house of worship on its property. According to the report:
The lawsuit ... allege[s] that the congregation has been the victim of a "targeted effort" to block them from developing a house of worship in Woodcliff Lake - something that the congregation alleges has caused "unjustified fear" and "prejudice" of Orthodox Jews. Chabad also alleges that Mayor Carlos Rendo made various statements that Chabad was attempting to "turn the borough into a little Jerusalem" and that the "town will be littered with black hats walking the town on Saturdays," (a reference to Hassidic Orthodox Jews.)
Labels:
Jewish,
New Jersey,
RLUIPA
Thursday, October 20, 2016
Apartment Owner Sued Over Rental Discrimination Against Muslims
The New Jersey Division on Civil Rights yesterday announced the filing of a lawsuit in state court charging the owner of an apartment building with discriminatory refusal to rent to Muslims. The complaint (full text) in Porrino v. Greda, (NJ Super., filed 10/19/2016), details the Division's use of testers after receiving a complaint from a Muslim woman.
Labels:
Housing discrimination,
Muslim,
New Jersey
Thursday, October 06, 2016
Favoring Religious Over Non-Religious Objections Is Not Religious Discrimination
In Brown v. Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center, Inc., (NJ App., Oct. 3, 2016), a New Jersey state appellate court held that a community health educator who was fired for refusing to comply with a medical center's compulsory flu vaccination policy could not establish a prima facie case of religious discrimination under New Jersey's Law Against Discrimination. Plaintiff argued that by permitting exemptions for those with religious objections, but not for those opposed to vaccination for other reasons, her employer had discriminated by favoring religious over non-religious grounds. According to the court:
[Plaintiff] did not allege that the adverse employment action taken against her was because of her membership in a protected class. Without any allegation that she was a member of a protected class based upon her race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, plaintiff's LAD discrimination claim was futile.New Jersey Law Journal reports on the decision.
Labels:
New Jersey,
Religious discrimination,
Vaccination
Saturday, October 01, 2016
Suit Challenges Veterans' Memorial Featuring Cross
A suit was filed yesterday in a New Jersey federal district court challenging on Establishment Clause grounds a war memorial erected outside the Veterans Memorial public library in Roselle Park, New Jersey. As pictured and described in a report on the lawsuit by NJ Advance Media, the memorial depicts a soldier kneeling over a grave marked by a cross. The complaint (full text) in American Humanist Association v. Borough of Roselle Park, (D NJ, filed 9/30/2016) alleges in part:
UPDATE: NJ Advance Media reports that on Oct. 6, in light of the litigation, the Roselle Park Borough Council voted unanimously to dismantle the statue outside the library.
When the government displays an iconic religious symbol – the symbol of Christianity – on its property, it sends a strong message of endorsement and exclusion. This message of religious favoritism is even more problematic because the cross display purports to be a government memorial honoring war dead. No such monument should honor just one religious group, but the cross at issue here does exactly that: it exalts Christian veterans and excludes everyone else.
UPDATE: NJ Advance Media reports that on Oct. 6, in light of the litigation, the Roselle Park Borough Council voted unanimously to dismantle the statue outside the library.
Labels:
Cross,
Establishment Clause,
New Jersey
Friday, September 30, 2016
Muslim Palestinian Teacher's Discrimination Claims Survive Motion To Dismiss
In Hashem v. Hunterdon County, (D NJ, Sept. 20, 2016), a New Jersey federal district court refused to dismiss certain claims by a New Jersey high school history teacher that her school and her supervisors discriminated and retaliated against her on the basis of religion, race and national origin. The teacher, Sireen Hashem, a Muslim Arab of Palestinian descent, was reprimanded for showing a video, at the suggestion of another teacher who had also shown it, featuring the young Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani girl's education advocate. Subsequently Hashem's contract was not renewed. According to the court:
Hashem alleges that she was instructed not to "teach current events in the same manner as her non-Arab, non-Palestinian and non-Muslim colleagues." ...On a separate occasion, Hashem was allegedly told "not [to] mention Islam or the Middle East in her class, and that she "should not bring her culture, life experience or background into the classroom."While dismissing a number of her claims, the court allowed the teacher to move ahead with claims for employment discrimination, disparate treatment, retaliation and discriminatory discharge.
Labels:
Employment discrimination,
Muslim,
New Jersey
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
Full Text of Complaint In 2011 Discrimination Suit By Family of Alleged NY/NJ Bomber
As reported today by CNN, the family of Ahmad Khan Rahami-- the alleged New York/ New Jersey bomber-- filed a federal lawsuit in 2011 claiming religious, racial and national origin discrimination by Elizabeth, New Jersey and its police department. At issue was the city's repeated attempts to apply a 10:00 pm closing ordinance to the Rahami's chicken restaurant, while the family contended that the restaurant came within one of the exemptions in the ordinance. Here is the full text of the complaint filed by the family in Rahami v. City of Elizabeth,(D NJ, filed 4/6/2011). Alleged bomber Ahmad Rahami was not one of the named plaintiffs in the case.
Labels:
New Jersey,
Religious discrimination
Friday, August 26, 2016
Denial of Zoning Variance To Yeshiva Violates RLUIPA
In Yeshiva Gedolah Na'os Yaakov v. Township of Ocean NJ, (D NJ, Aug. 25, 2016), a New Jersey federal district court held that that Ocean, New Jersey's Zoning Board of Adjustment violated RLUIPA when it denied a use variance to allow plaintiffs to operate a Jewish post-high school yeshiva. Making findings about the school's code of conduct for its students, the court ordered the township to grant approval of use of the building for a school of up to 80 students (less than the 96 the school wanted), subject to a detailed list of improvements and changes to the property. Reporting on the decision, Asbury Park Press quoted plaintiffs' attorney who said in a prepared statement:
Zoning regulation should never be used as a tool to accommodate the unreasonable fears and prejudice of small-minded individuals desperate to keep a certain population out of their neighborhoods.
Labels:
New Jersey,
RLUIPA
Thursday, August 18, 2016
Settlement Reached Permitting "8THEIST" License Plate In New Jersey
Last week, a New Jersey federal district court approved the parties' settlement agreement (full text) in Morgan v. Martinez. In the case, an atheist sued New Jersey's Motor Vehicle Commission challenging provisions in state regulations barring issuance of personalized license plates with letters or numbers "that may carry connotations offensive to good taste and decency." Authorities had refused to issue Shannon Morgan a plate with the characters "8THEIST". Under the settlement, the Commission will issue Morgan the requested plate. The settlement also stipulates that a number of other specific alphanumeric combinations reflecting humanism, feminism and LGBT concerns are consistent with the Commission's regulations. The Commission also agreed to pay $75,000 in damages. Americans United issued a press release discussing the settlement.
Labels:
Atheism,
License plates,
New Jersey
Tuesday, August 16, 2016
Deed Restrictions Upheld To Prevent Construction of Synagogue
In Welch v. Chai Center For Living Judaism, Inc., (NJ App., Aug. 15, 2016), a New Jersey appeals court upheld the enforcement of a deed restriction that prevents an Orthodox Jewish group from constructing a synagogue with classrooms, social hall and playrooms on property it owns. The restrictions limit property use to a single-family residence. The court said in part:
We are unpersuaded by defendants' suggestion the Center must be permitted to conduct prayer groups and social gatherings as a free exercise of religion. We reject the suggestion the deed restriction unconstitutionally prohibits private religious observances within the confines of one's own home.
Labels:
New Jersey,
Zoning
Monday, August 15, 2016
New Jersey Appeals Court OKs Religiously Discriminatory Disinheritance
In In re the Estate of Kenneth E. Jameson, (NJ App., Aug. 12, 2016), a New Jersey appeals court
held that New Jersey law does not bar an individual from disinheriting his or her child for religiously discriminatory reasons. At issue was a will challenge by Stacy Wolin whose parents' wills were drafted when she was in college and in a romantic relationship with Marc Wolin, a Jewish man who she later married. Her Catholic parents objected strenuously to her dating Marc because of his Jewish faith. The court rejected a series of challenges to the father's will, including ones charging religious discrimination, saying that neither the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination nor New Jersey public policy bars disinheriting a child based on religion or religious affiliation. AP reports on the decision. [Thanks to Tom Rutledge for the lead.]
held that New Jersey law does not bar an individual from disinheriting his or her child for religiously discriminatory reasons. At issue was a will challenge by Stacy Wolin whose parents' wills were drafted when she was in college and in a romantic relationship with Marc Wolin, a Jewish man who she later married. Her Catholic parents objected strenuously to her dating Marc because of his Jewish faith. The court rejected a series of challenges to the father's will, including ones charging religious discrimination, saying that neither the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination nor New Jersey public policy bars disinheriting a child based on religion or religious affiliation. AP reports on the decision. [Thanks to Tom Rutledge for the lead.]
Labels:
New Jersey,
Religious discrimination
Sunday, August 14, 2016
Trenton Curfew Arrangement With Churches Is Questioned
AP reports today on the church-state questions that are being raised by the juvenile curfew enforcement policies of the Trenton, New Jersey police department. Last month Trenton police began enforcing a midnight to 6 a.m. curfew for juveniles under 18. If police pick up a violator, they first call the juvenile's parents. However if the parents do not answer, or refuse to pick up their child, police under arrangements with a number of faith-based groups drop the juvenile off at a local church. Police say that the churches may not discuss religion with the drop offs, and they are usually held in a community room rather than in the sanctuary. The juvenile is given the option of instead being dropped off at a police building. The ACLU says that police should provide a number of non-religious drop-off alternatives, though the group has broader objections to the curfew as well.
Labels:
Curfews,
New Jersey
Friday, May 27, 2016
New Jersey Court Invalidates Capital Grants To 2 Religious Colleges
In American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey v. Hendricks, (NJ App., May 26. 2016), a New Jersey state appellate court held that grants to two religious colleges for capital improvements violate the provision in the New Jersey Constitution, Art. I, Sec. 3, that bars taxation "for building or repairing any church or churches, place or places of worship, or for the maintenance of any minister or ministry...." The Department of Higher Education had awarded two grants totaling over $10 million to a Jewish school, Beth Medrash Govoha, and three grants totaling $645,323 to Princeton Theological Seminary. The court said that a 1978 New Jersey Supreme Court ruling interpreting Art. I, Sec. 8 compelled it to conclude that these grants of public funds were invalid. NJ.com reports on the decision.
Labels:
New Jersey,
Religious colleges,
School aid
Tuesday, May 03, 2016
Court Allows Challenges To NJ Law On Sale of Headstones To Proceed
In Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark v. Christie, (D NJ, April 29, 2016), a New Jersey federal district court refused to dismiss some of the challenges by the Catholic Archdiocese to a New Jersey statute making it illegal for religious groups that operate cemeteries to also sell monuments or private mausoleums. The court held that, even though the statute is subject only to rational-basis review, it is premature to dismiss claims that the law violates the equal protection and due process clauses of the U.S. Constitution. The court did however dismiss plaintiffs' contracts clause and privileges or immunities clause challenges. The statute was enacted last year (see prior posting) after the Archdiocese went into competition with for-profit monument makers. New Jersey Law Journal reports on the decision. [Thanks to Steven H. Sholk for the lead.]
Labels:
Catholic,
New Jersey
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