- An earned path to citizenship for the 11 million people in the United States without authorization.
- The priority of family reunification in any immigration reform.
- Protecting the integrity of our borders and protecting due process for immigrants and their families.
- Improving refugee protection laws and asylum laws.
- Reviewing international economic policies to address the root causes of unauthorized immigration.
Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, February 08, 2013
Christian Churches Call For Comprehensive Immigration Reform
Christian Churches Together, an organization of over 40 Christian church groups (Catholic, Orthodox, evangelical and main-line Protestant) last week issued a press release and Statement (full text) calling for comprehensive immigration law reform. The diverse group of Christian religious leaders agreed on the following principles:
California Appeals Court Refuses To Enforce $18 M Oral Pledge To Chabad
In Chabad of California, Inc. v. Arnall, (CA App., Jan. 25, 2013), a California state appellate court, affirming a trial court decision, refused to enforce a purported oral pledge of $18 million to Chabad of California by a now-deceased donor. The court said in part:
After finding that nearly every witness in this case was lacking in credibility to one degree or another, the trial court found that Chabad had failed to prove an essential element of its case, namely, the existence of a promise to donate $18 million for the new facility. In making this finding, the trial court necessarily found that Rabbi Cunin's testimony was not credible on the fundamental question regarding the existence of an oral pledge. Because the adverse credibility determination was based on substantial evidence that Chabad does not dispute on appeal, there are no valid grounds to overturn the trial court‟s findings.Los Angeles Jewish Journal reports on the decision. [Thanks to Joel Katz (Relig. & State in Israel) for the lead.]
Mass. Governor's Income Tax Proposal Would End Parsonage Exemption; Continue No Charitable Deduction
Last week the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation published an analysis of Gov. Deval Patrick's FY 2014 tax proposal. Among the 44 personal exemptions and deductions the Governor proposes eliminating from the state income tax is the exemption for the rental value of parsonages provided to members of the clergy. It is estimated that the elimination of the parsonage allowance will increase state revenues by $2 million to $2.5 million. Also the Governor proposes eliminating the provision that would restore the personal charitable deduction if personal income tax rates reach 5%. [Thanks to Don Clark for the lead.]
Granddaughters of Founder Leave Westboro Baptist Church
Megan Phelps-Roper and her sister Grace-- daughters of Westboro Baptist Church leader Shirley Phelps-Roper, and granddaughters of Westboro's founder Fred Phelps-- have left the church, according to a report yesterday by Jeff Chu at Medium. Westboro's followers have become known for the virulent anti-gay signs they carry in picketing funerals of veterans and other venues. Megan says her doubts about church doctrine began with a conversation with Israeli web designer David Abitbol about one of the church's picket signs reading "Death Penalty for Fags."
Court Upholds Town's Zoning Denial For Bible Camp
In Eagle Cove Camp & Conference Center, Inc. v. Town of Woodboro, (WD WI, Feb. 1, 2013), a Wisconsin federal district court upheld a town's denial of a rezoning request and an application for a conditional use permit to construct a year-round Bible camp facility which, among other things, would minister to children with serious disabling medical conditions. Summarizing its holding, the court said:
The court has no reason to doubt plaintiffs, and particularly the Jaros brothers', sincere belief that they have been called to build a Bible camp on the land in issue -- and is aware of the years, talents and money spent, as well as dedication shown, in pursuit of that belief. Patently obvious is this court‟s inability to discern whether plaintiffs‟ utter lack of success to date is God's way of telling them -- through admittedly-imperfect, secular institutions -- to look elsewhere for a more acceptable location. Ultimately, only God knows if they should continue to knock at this particular door or look for an open window somewhere else. What appears substantially more certain, at least to this court, is that plaintiffs have no right to relief under RLUIPA, the United States Constitution or the Wisconsin Constitution. Indeed ... the undisputed facts demonstrate that plaintiffs do not meet their burden of establishing all the elements of proof under any of their claims.Plaintiffs have filed a Notice of Appeal to the 7th Circuit. (See prior related posting.) [Thanks to Arthur G. Jaros for the lead]
President Speaks At National Prayer Breakfast; Says Dubois Leaving As Faith-Based Office Head
As reported by the Huffington Post, yesterday President Obama spoke at the National Prayer Breakfast organized by the Fellowship Foundation and held at the Washington Hilton Hotel. In his remarks (full text), the President announced that Joshua Dubois this week is leaving his position as head of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. Huffington Post reports that DuBois will be teaching at New York University will start a new organization to facilitate partnerships with faith based organizations. In his Prayer Breakfast remarks, the President also said:
As Christians, we place our faith in the nail-scarred hands of Jesus Christ. But so many other Americans also know the close embrace of faith -- Muslims and Jews, Hindus and Sikhs. And all Americans -- whether religious or secular -- have a deep and abiding faith in this nation.
Suit Challenges Jesus Portrait In Public Middle School
The Freedom From Religion Foundation announced that it, along with the ACLU of Ohio, filed suit yesterday on behalf of parents and a student who attends Jackson, Ohio Middle School. The federal court lawsuit seeks removal of a portrait of Jesus displayed on an entrance wall in the school. The complaint (full text) in Doe v. Jackson City School District, (SD OH, filed 2/7/2013), alleges that the display violates the federal Constitution's Establishment Clause, as well as Art. I, Sec. 7 of the Ohio Constitution. Plaintiffs sought court permission to file the lawsuit using pseudonyms (memo in Support of Motion). In response to the lawsuit, Liberty Institute (which had been engaged by the school board to make a recommendation on the matter) said that plaintiffs should have waited for its report to be completed.
Thursday, February 07, 2013
Ground Zero Mosque Leader Sued For Diverting Funds
In 2010, New York City's Iman Feisal Abdul Rauf became well known-- until he was ousted in January 2011-- as the leader of a group that planned to build a mosque and Islamic center near "Ground Zero". (See prior posting.) Now, according to reports by the New York Daily News and Reuters yesterday, Rauf is being sued by a Westchester County couple who donated $167,000 to his Cordoba Initiative and the American Society for Muslim Advancement. The suit, filed in state court in New York, claims that Rauf used these funds, as well as $3 million from the Malaysian government for vacations and gifts for a woman with whom he shared a personal relationship, as well as for real estate, entertainment, and luxury sports car for himself and his wife. The suit also claims Rauf concealed his scheme by falsifying the charitable organizations' tax returns.
Teacher's Pregnancy Discrimination Claim Against Catholic School Must Go To Jury
In Dias v. Archdiocese of Cincinnati, (SD OH, Jan.30, 2013), a former technology coordinator at two Catholic Archdiocese schools sued under Title VII claiming pregnancy discrimination after she was fired for being pregnant and unmarried, and for becoming pregnant through artificial insemination. The court held that the suit was not barred by the ministerial exception doctrine since, as a non-Catholic who was not permitted to teach Catholic doctrine, plaintiff could not be considered a minister of the Catholic faith. The Archdiocese claimed it relied on the morals clause in the teacher's contract in dismissing her. The court concluded that it is up to a jury to determine the real reason for plaintiff's dismissal. If it was a ban against premarital sex-- as opposed to a dismissal for being pregnant-- that would be permissible under Title VII, but only if the policy is enforced against men equally with women. The court, however, held that plaintiff could not sue for breach of contract because she knew she was in violations of its morals clause by hiding a long-term homosexual relationship from her employer. Courthouse News Service reports on the decision.
In China, Christian Activist Sues Local Police After Detention For Preaching In Park
According to yesterday's London Daily Telegraph, in China, Christian "house church" activist Cao Nan has filed a lawsuit against the police in the city of Shenzhen to challenge the police decision to detain him for 12 days for meeting with other Christians to preach and sing hymns in Shenzhen's Lizhi Park. Police charged Cao with "falsely using the name of Christianity to harm social order." Cao hopes to encourage others to speak out against legal persecution and to vindicate his actions through legal means.
Feds Ease Rules On Taking Religious Items Through Federal Building Security
According to a news release this week from the Becket Fund, the Department of Homeland Security last December issued Federal Protective Service Directive Number: 15.9.3.1 creating a procedure to allow religious items through screening at federal buildings, even though they would otherwise be banned. This has particularly become an issue with Sikh kirpans. The new policy was apparently not made public by the government until a few days ago. It provides in part:
All of this occurred as yesterday the 5th Circuit heard oral arguments (recording of full arguments) in Tagore v. United States, a federal lawsuit by a former Internal Revenue Service employee who was fired after she insisted on wearing her kirpan in a Houston federal office building. (See prior posting.) [Thanks to Eric Rassbach for the lead.]
Some items that are otherwise prohibited from a particular Federal facility may have some other legitimate and lawful purpose or use in a Federal facility, including as accommodations for civil rights and civil liberties under Federal laws such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act, and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.One of the attachments to the FPS Directive is a Training Document titled Accommodating Sikh Articles of Faith.
All of this occurred as yesterday the 5th Circuit heard oral arguments (recording of full arguments) in Tagore v. United States, a federal lawsuit by a former Internal Revenue Service employee who was fired after she insisted on wearing her kirpan in a Houston federal office building. (See prior posting.) [Thanks to Eric Rassbach for the lead.]
Wednesday, February 06, 2013
Court Dismisses 1 of 3 Suits Challenging Eruv In Long Island Village
The New York Times reports that a New York federal district court on Monday dismissed one of three lawsuits challenging a proposed eruv that Orthodox Jews in Westhampton Beach plan to put up. The dismissed lawsuit was brought by a group calling itself Jewish People for the Betterment of Westhampton Beach which claimed that permitting the eruv would violate the Establishment Clause. (See prior posting.) Proponents of the eruv, who see opposition as an attempt to keep Orthodox Jews out of the community, have bypassed a formal vote by the Village. Instead the East End Eruv Association entered a direct agreement with Verizon and Long Island Lighting to use their utility poles for the eruv-- a symbolic boundary that allows observant Jews to carry things outside their homes on the Sabbath.
Catholic Hospital Says Its "Fetus Is Not A Person" Defense Was Morally Wrong
As reported by the Denver Post, Colorado-based Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) released a statement (full text) Monday acknowledging that it was "morally wrong" for lawyers representing St. Thomas More Hospital in Canon City, Colorado to raise in a malpractice suit the defense that Colorado's Wrongful Death Act that does not consider a fetus to be a person. As previously reported, the defense came in a lawsuit by the husband and the daughter of a woman, pregnant with twins, who died in the hospital's emergency room, and who argued that at least a cesarean section should have been performed to save the twins. CHI said that if the Colorado Supreme Court grants review in the case, it will not cite the Wrongful Death Act which does not permit fetuses to sue.
Meanwhile, the losing plaintiff in the lawsuit, Jeremy Stodghill, has filed for bankruptcy because of the $47,000 in legal fees for the defendants awarded against him. CHI did not file a lien or pursue a claim in bankruptcy court against Stodghill, but a physician who was a co-defendant did file lien which led to the bankruptcy filing. Stodghill's attorney says, however, that CHI used the legal fee award as a negotiating tool to try to persuade Stodghill not to appeal.
Meanwhile, the losing plaintiff in the lawsuit, Jeremy Stodghill, has filed for bankruptcy because of the $47,000 in legal fees for the defendants awarded against him. CHI did not file a lien or pursue a claim in bankruptcy court against Stodghill, but a physician who was a co-defendant did file lien which led to the bankruptcy filing. Stodghill's attorney says, however, that CHI used the legal fee award as a negotiating tool to try to persuade Stodghill not to appeal.
Another Small Business Challenges Contraceptive Coverage Mandate
On Monday, another Christian-owned for-profit small business filed a challenge to the Affordable Care Act contraceptive coverage mandate. The complaint (full text) in Briscoe v. Sebelius, (D CO, filed 2/4/2013), alleges that plaintiff Stephen Briscoe, owner of affiliated corporations and LLCs that operate senior independent living, assisted living and skilled nursing facilities, believes that furnishing coverage for contraceptives that may prevent implantation of an already fertilized egg is a sin for which he will be held accountable. Briscoe discovered that his companies' self-insured plan covers these types of contraceptives as controversy over the HHS Mandate arose. The company that provides his businesses with insurance told him that without a judicial order, it cannot exclude such coverage. The suit claims that the mandate violates plaintiffs' rights under RFRA, the 1st and 5th Amendments and the Administrative Procedure Act. Alliance Defending Freedom announced the filing of the lawsuit.
Tuesday, February 05, 2013
Churches Split On Boy Scout Proposal To End Ban On Gay Scouts and Leaders
According to yesterday's New York Times, the Boy Scouts at their national board meeting in Texas this week may vote to drop its ban on gay scouts and gay scout leaders. According to today's Atlanta Journal Constitution, the Scouts' decision implicates many churches. 70% of scout troops are sponsored by churches. The three largest religious sponsors are Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (37,000 units), the Methodist Church (11,000 units) and the Roman Catholic Church (8,000 units). Within church bodies, there are strong feelings on both sides of the issue. The most outspoken criticism of the proposed change has come from Southern Baptist churches.
UPDATE: On Feb. 6, the Boy Scouts announced that it is postponing until May a decision on whether to lift a ban on gay scouts and scout leaders. (AP).
UPDATE: On Feb. 6, the Boy Scouts announced that it is postponing until May a decision on whether to lift a ban on gay scouts and scout leaders. (AP).
Victims Argue That LA Archdiocese Document Release Is Incomplete
In accordance with a settlement in a lawsuit by clergy abuse victims, last week, the Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles released 12,000 pages of internal files on accused priests. (See prior related posting.) Now, according to yesterday's New York Times, victim advocates charge that the files released are incomplete and many documents are unaccounted for. On many pages of documents, the names of supervisors of offending priests have been redacted. Lawyers for victims also argue that there should be many more documents. In litigation in which the Archdiocese opposed going through the documents to remove prior redactions, it argued that there were 30,000 pages, not the mere 12,000 produced. The lawyer for the Archdiocese said the 30,000 number was a "wild guess."
Court Rejects Standing-Ripeness Defenses To Diocese's Contraceptive Coverage Challenge
In Roman Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth v. Sebelius, (ND TX, Jan. 31, 2013). a Texas federal district court rejected both standing and ripeness challenges to a lawsuit challenging the application of the Affordable Care Act contraceptive coverage mandate to the Fort Worth Diocese. The government argued that a temporary enforcement safe harbor for religious non-profits and the Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking proposing amendments to the Mandate make the case unripe for review and remove plaintiff's standing. The court concluded however:
The Mandate ... is a final rule with a definite effective date, and neither the ANPRM nor Defendants’ related announcements change this. And because the Mandate is “on the books,” there is nothing improper about subjecting it to the limitations of the United States Constitution and other applicable laws.The American Center for Law and Justice reports on the decision. [Thanks to Hillary Byrnes for the lead.]
Romanian Court Orders Demolition of Office Building To Protect Cathedral
The National Catholic Register reports that an appeals court in Romania has ordered the city of Bucharest to pay for the demolition of a 19-story skyscraper that threatens the physical security of an historic Catholic cathedral located just 26 feet away. The Cathedral Plaza office tower, located in an active earthquake zone, threatens the unreinforced walls of Bucharest's Cathedral of St. Joseph. The office tower was built without proper permits or authorizations and contains a number of building code violations. The court ordered that the office tower site be restored to its prior condition as a small park.
Arkansas Legislature Passes Law Giving Churches Right To Allow Concealed Carry
As reported by KATV News, yesterday the Arkansas legislature gave final passage to SB 71, the Church Protection Act of 2013. The bill eliminates the absolute ban on carrying a concealed handgun in a church or other place of worship, and allows the place of worship to decide who may carry a concealed handgun on their premises. The bill now goes to Gov. Mike Beebe who says he will sign it. Proponents of the bill say that current law infringes a church's freedom by deciding for it whether guns are permitted.
Archbishop Says Gays Should Be Protected From Discrimination
RNS reports that Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, head of the Pontifical Council for the Family, in his first press conference sine he was appointed, urged protection of gays and lesbians from discrimination in countries where homosexuality is illegal. While emphasizing the Church's continued opposition to same-sex marriage, the Archbishop at a press conference yesterday said:
In the world there are 20 or 25 countries where homosexuality is a crime. I would like the church to fight against all this.
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