Friday, September 30, 2005

Bush Urged To Overrule FAA On Cemetery Seizure

Two dozen religious and civil rights groups yesterday wrote President Bush urging him to respect the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and prevent federal approval for an airport expansion plan at Chicago's O'Hare which would destroy St. Johannes, an active religious cemetery. The letter read in part:

FAA stands poised to grant final approval and federal funds to an airport plan that would dig up the graves at St. Johannes, despite the availability of feasible options that would address flight delays at O’Hare and save the cemetery. Most upsetting, the FAA is about to do this despite its concession that the desecration of St. Johannes would substantially burden the religious exercise of the Church and those who have family and friends buried in St. Johannes’ sacred ground. In other words, the FAA has admitted that its actions establish a prima facie violation of the Church’s rights under RFRA, but insists that reducing flight delays justifies this burden.

The Becket Fund which represents the cemetery and the church that operates it issued a release yesterday on the controversy. The Illinois legislature has already enacted the O'Hare Modernization Act, excluding the cemetery from state law that protects other cemeteries from seizure.