Tuesday, April 06, 2021

Suit Claims Enforcement of Deed Restriction Against Synagogue Violates Religious Exercise Rights

Suit was filed late last month in a Texas federal district court against the City of Houston seeking to block it from enforcing a deed restriction against a small Orthodox synagogue that meets in a house zoned only for residential use.  The complaint (full text) in TORCH (Torah Outreach Resource Center of Houston) v. City of Houston, Texas, (SD TX, filed 3/25/2021), alleges that the city's selective enforcement of the deed restriction violates RLUIPA, the Texas Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and the federal Fair Housing Act. First Liberty Institute issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit.

UPDATE: An April 20 announcement by First Liberty indicates that the case has been settled, with the City of Houston agreeing not to enforce deed restrictions against the synagogue and to dismiss citations it has already issued.

Christian Student Group Wins Suit Seeking To Limit Its Leadership To Believers

In Intervarsity Christian Fellowship/USA v. Board of Governors of Wayne State University, (ED MI, April 5, 2021), a Michigan federal district court held that Wayne State University violated the free exercise, free speech, association and assembly rights of a Christian student organization (IVCF) when the University suspended the group's status as a Recognized Student Organization.  The University took this action because IVCF violated the school's non-discrimination policy by insisting that its leaders agree with IVCF's  “Doctrine and Purpose Statements,” “exemplify Christ-like character, conduct and leadership,” and describe their Christian beliefs. In an 83-page opinion, the court said in part:

The First Amendment provides religious organizations the right to select their own ministers, and, under the First Amendment and §1983, organizations can sue the government for violating that right....

Plaintiffs also provide uncontradicted evidence that student leaders, called “Christian leaders,” qualify as ministers under the First Amendment....  In essence, Plaintiffs’ student leaders participate in proselytizing efforts and are Plaintiffs’ chosen spiritual resource for students at Wayne State....

No religious group can constitutionally be made an outsider, excluded from equal access to public or university life, simply because it insists on religious leaders who believe in its cause...

Defendants have barred Plaintiffs from selecting leaders that share its Christian views while allowing other groups to engage in similar form of leadership selection. This divergent treatment cannot withstand constitutional scrutiny....

The court awarded an injunction and nominal damages. Detroit News reports on the decision.

Monday, April 05, 2021

Supreme Court Denies Review In Cases Seeking To Overturn Hardison's Interpretation Of Title VII

The U.S. Supreme Court today denied review in two Title VII religious discrimination cases. (Order List). In both, petitioners were asking the Supreme Court to overturn its 1977 decision in Trans World Airlines v. Hardison which, interpreting the statutory term "undue hardship", allows an employer to refuse to accommodate an employee's religious requirements if doing so would impose  anything more than a de minimis cost. In Dalberiste v. GLE Associates, Inc. (Docket No. 19-1461, certiorari denied 4/5/2021), a Seventh Day Adventist sought a religious accommodation for his Sabbath observance. (SCOTUSblog case page.)  In Small v. Memphis Gas, Light & Water, (Docket No. 19-1388, certiorari denied      4/5/2021), a Jehovah's Witness employee sought scheduling accommodations that would allow him to attend church services. (SCOTUSblog case page). 

Justice Gorsuch, joined by Justice Alito, dissented from the denial of certiorari in the Small case, saying that the statutory interpretation involved there is out of step with subsequently adopted federal civil rights laws in other areas. Their opinion contends in part:

... Title VII’s right to religious exercise has become the odd man out. Alone among comparable statutorily protected civil rights, an employer may dispense with it nearly at whim. As this case illustrates, even subpar employees may wind up receiving more favorable treatment than highly performing employees who seek only to attend church.

Reuters reports on the Court's actions.

Churches' Challenge to Minnesota COVID Orders Moves Ahead

In Northland Baptist Church of St. Paul, Minnesota v. Walz, (D MN, March 30, 2021), a Minnesota federal district court refused to dismiss at the pleading stage complaints by two churches and a pastor that Minnesota's COVID-19 orders treat religious services less favorably than comparable secular activities. The decision also dealt extensively with several procedural and jurisdictional issues, as well as with other challenges by business plaintiffs.

Trump's Anti-Muslim Statements Did Not Taint Passport Revocations

In Abuhajeb v. Pompeo, (D MA, March 31, 2021), a Massachusetts federal district court dismissed Establishment Clause and Equal Protection challenges, among others, to the 2019 revocation of the U.S. passports of five siblings who were born in Jordan and whose father is a U.S. citizen. Claiming that the passports were initially issued erroneously, the revocations took place 14 years after the passports were initially issued.  According to the court:

The Siblings argue that President Trump’s statements during his 2016 campaign and administration, the series of executive orders barring immigrants from mostly Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States, and the State Department’s corresponding actions revoking their passports in August 2019 demonstrate that they were the targets of a new “deliberate revocation policy” based on their race and religion.

Rejecting this argument, the court said in part:

Even if the Siblings have alleged circumstantial evidence of President Trump’s discriminatory intent, they have not alleged how that intent motivated the State Department’s decision to revoke their passports. The 2017 Travel Ban and extreme vetting for immigrant visa applicants program allege discriminatory intent against Muslim and non-white immigrants, but not U.S. passport holders in the Siblings’ positions. The Department of Justice’s increase in denaturalization cases may implicate the Siblings, but the government has not moved to strip their citizenship in the past year since revoking their passports.

Recent Articles of Interest

 From SSRN:

Sunday, April 04, 2021

Biden Issues Holocaust Remembrance Proclamation

Today President Biden issued a Proclamation (full text) designating April 4 through April 11 as Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust.  The Proclamation reads in part:

On Yom HaShoah — Holocaust Remembrance Day — we stand in solidarity with the Jewish people in America, Israel, and around the world to remember and reflect on the horrors of the Holocaust. An estimated six million Jews perished alongside millions of other innocent victims — Roma and Sinti, Slavs, disabled persons, LGBTQ+ individuals, and others — systematically murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators in one of the cruelest and most heinous campaigns in human history....

I remember learning about the horrors of the Holocaust from my father when I was growing up, and I have sought to impart that history to my own children and grandchildren in turn. I have taken them on separate visits to Dachau, so that they could see for themselves what happened there, and to impress on them the urgency to speak out whenever they witness anti-Semitism or any form of ethnic and religious hatred, racism, homophobia, or xenophobia. The legacy of the Holocaust must always remind us that silence in the face of such bigotry is complicity — remembering, as Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel wrote, that there are moments when “indifference to evil is worse than evil itself.”

Friday, April 02, 2021

Survey On Anti-Semitism In U.S. Released

The Anti-Defamation League this week released its 2021 Survey on Jewish Americans’ Experiences with Antisemitism. It found:

Well over half (63 percent) of Jews in America have either experienced or witnessed some form of antisemitism in the last five years.

USCIRF Focuses On Financial Regulation of Religious Organizations

Earlier this week, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom issued a Fact Sheet titled Controlling Civil Society's Pursestrings. The Fact Sheet focuses on the impact of financial regulation on religious organizations and religious freedom. It concludes:  

Around the globe, governments rely on excessive financial restrictions to hamper civil society actors.... Efforts to restrict foreign funding, or label civil society organizations as “foreign agents,” often reflect broader xenophobic policies under which religious minorities are targeted as dangerous foreign influences or potential fifth columns.

Financial harassment can take many forms, from attempts to delegitimize the work of foreign-funded civil society by enacting requirements to register as “foreign agents,” to imposing excessive and intrusive reporting requirements, as well as exorbitant fees and fines for religious activity, to seizing assets or religious property.... [T]he ability to solicit and receive financial contributions is an integral component of the freedom of religion or belief....

Biden Declaration of March 31 As "Transgender Day of Visibility"

Earlier this week, President Biden signed a Presidential Proclamation (full text) declaring March 31 as "Transgender Day of Visibility". The Proclamation reads in part:

Transgender Day of Visibility recognizes the generations of struggle, activism, and courage that have brought our country closer to full equality for transgender and gender non-binary people in the United States and around the world.  Their trailblazing work has given countless transgender individuals the bravery to live openly and authentically.  This hard-fought progress is also shaping an increasingly accepting world in which peers at school, teammates and coaches on the playing field, colleagues at work, and allies in every corner of society are standing in support and solidarity with the transgender community.

Synagogues Lose Suit Over Repealed Zoning Law

In Orthodox Jewish Coalition of Chestnut Ridge v. Village of Chestnut Ridge, New York, (SD NY, March 31, 2021), a New York federal district court dismissed a suit by Orthodox Jewish synagogues contending that the village's former zoning law violated RLUIPA, the free exercise clause and the New York constitution. The court held RLUIPA's safe harbor provision protects municipalities that correct their laws from damage suits under RLUIPA. It also dismissed plaintiffs' equal protection claim because they failed to show that the old zoning law was enacted with discriminatory intent. The court found that claims for prospective relief were moot and that certain other claims were not ripe.

Court Upholds NY Law Barring Discrimination Against Employees Because Of Reproductive Health Decisions

In Slattery v. Cuomo, (ND NY, March 31, 2021), a New York federal district court dismissed free exercise, free speech, freedom of association and vagueness challenges to a New York Labor Law §203-e  which prohibits employers from discriminating or taking retaliatory action against an employee because of the person's reproductive health decision making. The law was challenged by a pro-life crisis pregnancy center which required its employees to agree with, adhere to and convey the Catholic view on abortion and sexual relations outside of marriage. The court concluded that the law does not target the Catholic religion in violation of the free exercise clause. Rejecting plaintiffs' free speech challenge, the court said in part:

Section 203-e does not serve to limit any of Plaintiffs’ advocacy against abortion, promotion of certain religious views, and public arguments for particular versions of sexual morality. The statute does not prevent the Plaintiffs, who provide medical information to pregnant women, from telling those women that they should not get abortions, urging them not to use contraception, or telling them about Plaintiffs’ religious beliefs. The statute simply prohibits employers from taking employment action based on the reproductive health decisions of an employee or potential employee. Hiring, firing, or refusing to hire an employee is conduct, not speech, and the law does not implicate Plaintiffs’ First-Amendment rights in that.

Minister Sues To Hold Good Friday Vigil On U.S. Capitol Grounds

On Tuesday, a complaint was filed in D.C. federal district court by a Presbyterian minister who wants to host a prayer vigil on theWestern Terrace of the U.S. Capitol for Good Friday, as he did in 2020.  He was refused a permit because the Capitol grounds have been fenced off since the January 6 attack on the Capitol.  Plaintiff alleges that the denial of a permit violates his free speech, freedom of assembly, free exercise and other rights.  The complaint (full text) in Mahoney v. Pelosi, (D DC, filed 3/30/2021), alleges in part:

In closing the sidewalks and public areas around the Capitol, including the Lower Western Terrace Plaintiff seeks to utilize, Defendants have effectively created a no-speech zone around the nations Capitol. Defendants prevent any First Amendment activities on/in these areas, even though no specific threat to the Capitol has been identified in justification....

Defendants’ restrictions have specifically and explicitly targeted Plaintiff’s religious and “faith based” service and are thus not neutral on their face. Defendants have prohibited Plaintiff’s religious gathering while exempting a laundry list of other activities that occur at the Capitol, including media events, non-religious public gatherings, and various political and other events.

Fox News reports on the lawsuit. [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]

Thursday, April 01, 2021

North Dakota Enacts Law To Limit Restrictions On Religious Exercise During Health Emergencies

On March 29, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum signed into law Senate Bill 2181 (full text) which limits the authority of the State Health Officer and the governor to issue disease control or other emergency orders that restrict the free exercise of religion.  Under the new law, an order may not:

(1) Substantially burden a person's exercise of religion unless the order is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest and is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest;

(2) Treat religious conduct more restrictively than any secular conduct of reasonably comparable risk, unless the government demonstrates through clear and convincing scientific evidence that a particular religious activity poses an extraordinary health risk; or

(3) Treat religious conduct more restrictively than comparable secular conduct because of alleged economic need or benefit.

Williston Herald reported on the legislature's passage of the bill.

9th Circuit Upholds California Limits On In-Home Bible Study Groups

In Tandon v. Newsom, (9th Cir., March 30, 2021), the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, in a 2-1 decision, refused to issue an emergency injunction pending appeal to prevent enforcement of California's COVID-19 limitations against appellants' in-home Bible study and communal worship sessions. The majority said in part:

[T]he district court concluded that the State reasonably distinguishes in-home private gatherings from the commercial activity Appellants assert is comparable. For example, the district court found that the State reasonably concluded that when people gather in social settings, their interactions are likely to be longer than they would be in a commercial setting; that participants in a social gathering are more likely to be involved in prolonged conversations; that private houses are typically smaller and less ventilated than commercial establishments; and that social distancing and mask-wearing are less likely in private settings and enforcement is more difficult.... Appellants do not dispute any of these findings. Therefore, we conclude that Appellants have not established that strict scrutiny applies to the gatherings restrictions.

Judge Bumatay dissented, saying in part:

Even if studying scripture at home risks some level of transmission of COVID-19, the exemptions for barbershops, tattoo and nail parlors, and other personal care businesses reveal that less-restrictive alternatives are available to California to mitigate that concern. If the State is truly concerned about the “proximity, length, and interaction” of private gatherings, as it claims, it could regulate those aspects of religious gatherings in a narrowly tailored way. But the one thing California cannot do is privilege tattoo parlors over Bible studies when loosening household limitations.

Biden To Nominate First Muslim Federal Judge

On Tuesday, President Biden announced eleven nominees for federal judgeships. Among the nominees is  Zahid Quraishi who is to be nominated to the New Jersey federal district court where he is currently a magistrate judge.  As reported by Fox News, if confirmed by the Senate, Quraishi would become the first Muslim American to serve as a lifetime-appointed federal judge.

State Department Releases Country Reports On Human Rights

On Tuesday, the U.S. State Department released its 2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. According to the Department:

The annual Country Reports ... cover internationally recognized individual, civil, political, and worker rights, as set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international agreements.

However for the most part the country reports cross refer to the Department's International Religious Freedom Reports for discussion of religious freedom issues. The 2020 Report on religious freedom has not yet been released.

LGBTQ+ Students Challenge Title IX Religious Institution Exemption

In a class action lawsuit filed earlier this week in an Oregon federal district court, 33 LGBTQ+ students enrolled at religious colleges that receive federal financial assistance challenge the constitutionality of the exemption in Title IX for educational institutions controlled by religious organizations.  The exemption applies if the non-discrimination provisions of Title IX would conflict with the organization's religious tenets. The complaint (full text) in Hunter v. U.S. Department of Education, (D OR, filed 3/29/2021) alleges that the Department of Education's refusal to enforce non-discrimination provisions against religious colleges:

leaves students unprotected from the harms of conversion therapy, expulsion, denial of housing and healthcare, sexual and physical abuse and harassment, as well as the less visible, but no less damaging, consequences of institutionalized shame, fear, anxiety and loneliness.

Alleging equal protection and Establishment Clause claims, plaintiffs contend:

[W]hile the statutory religious exemption to Title IX may permit, or even require, the Department to refuse assistance to sexual and gender minority students like the Plaintiffs, the Constitution forbids such inaction.

NBC News reports on the lawsuit.

UPDATE: An amended complaint (full text) was filed on June 7, 2021).

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Virginia Public School Guidance On Transgender Students Is Challenged

Suit was filed yesterday in a Virginia state trial court challenging a guidance document titled Model Policies on the Treatment of Transgender Students In Virginia's Public Schools developed by the Virginia Department of Education (DOE). The guidance document calls for safe, supportive and inclusive school environments for transgender students. The lawsuit filed by a parent and two advocacy organizations contends that during the adoption process, the Department of Education failed to respond to a number comments raising constitutional and other legal objections to the proposed guidance document. The complaint (full text) in Family Foundation v. Virginia Department of Education, (VA Cir. Ct., filed 3/30/2021) alleges that the document violates free speech, free exercise, privacy, equal protection, and parental rights. Family Foundation issued a press release announcing the filing of the lawsuit. AP reported on the lawsuit.

Challenge To Bible In Schools Program Survives Motion To Dismiss

In Freedom From Religion Foundation, Inc. v. Mercer County Board of Education, (SD WV, March 26, 2021), a West Virginia federal district court denied a motion to dismiss filed by a school principal in an Establishment Clause challenge to the county's Bible in the Schools program. The court also found that it is impossible to determine at this stage of the case whether the principal is entitled to qualified immunity.