Friday, November 19, 2021

HHS Rescinds Trump Era Religious Exemptions For Child Welfare Agencies In Three States

Yesterday, the Department of Health and Human Services announced that it is rescinding waivers of non-discrimination requirements issued during the Trump Administration to South Carolina, Texas and Michigan, along with certain child welfare agencies in those states. The waivers allowed faith-based foster care placement agencies to receive federal funds even though they select foster parents on the basis of religion. (See prior posting.) In its release yesterday, HHS summarized the background for its action:

Through these waivers, States and child welfare agencies – including States and organizations that did not make such requests - were granted exemptions from program nondiscrimination requirements in a rule that was not in effect. In taking today's actions, HHS is reestablishing its long-standing Department practice of evaluation of religious exemptions and modifications of program requirements on a case-by-case basis, as needed, and as is required by law—which was unprecedently changed in 2017 by the previous Administration. Today, HHS reaffirms its important commitment to core American values:  HHS will not condone the blanket use of religious exemptions against any person or blank checks to allow discrimination against any persons, importantly including LGBTQ+ persons in taxpayer-funded programs.

Settlement Agreement Reached In Arleen's Flowers LGBT Discrimination Case

ADF announced yesterday that a settlement agreement (full text) has been reached in the long-running Arleen's Flowers litigation. In the case, the Washington state Supreme Court held that a florist shop's refusal to provide flowers for a same-sex wedding constitutes sexual orientation discrimination under the Washington Law Against Discrimination, and that enforcement of the law does not violate the constitutional rights of the floral shop owner. In July, the U.S. Supreme Court denied review (see prior posting). According to ADF:

A settlement agreement ... ends a lawsuit brought against floral artist Barronelle Stutzman nearly a decade ago without forcing her to act against her religious beliefs or to pay potentially ruinous attorneys’ fees.... Stutzman has chosen to retire so her beloved employees can run her business, Arlene’s Flowers. She will withdraw a pending petition for rehearing at the U.S. Supreme Court and make a payment of only $5,000 to the two men who sued her.

Stutzman, 77 and a great-grandmother, explained that she is at peace because the settlement allows her to finally retire with her conscience intact, and she knows that the legal effort to protect the artistic freedoms of creative professionals will continue in cases like 303 Creative v. Elenis, which the U.S. Supreme Court could decide to hear soon.

Tri-City Herald reports on the settlement.

9th Circuit Hears Oral Arguments In Ministerial Exception Case

On Tuesday, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments (audio of full oral arguments) in Orr v. Christian Brothers High School. As reported by Law & Crime, at issue in the case is  "whether a California Catholic school can use the “ministerial exception” to shield itself from claims of racial discrimination by its former principal."

8th Circuit: Buddhist Inmate Not Entitled To Separate Soto Zen Services

In Erdahl v. Pirc, (8th Cir., Nov. 18, 2021), the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals held that a Buddhist inmate's religious exercise was not substantially burdened by denying him separate Soto Zen religious services. He already can attend existing Buddhist services conducted by the minister he wanted for his separate services. The court concluded:

In the end, the prison only has to provide “a reasonable opportunity” for Erdahl to practice his faith.

Imam Lacks Standing To Challenge Alabama Execution Exclusion

In Maisonet v. Dunn, (SD AL, Nov. 17, 2021), an Alabama federal magistrate judge recommended dismissing for lack of standing a suit by an imam who has previously ministered to inmates on Alabama's death row. Plaintiff challenges Alabama's new execution protocol which bars all religious advisors from the execution chamber. The magistrate judge said in part:

The allegation that "ADOC will continue to enforce a policy of excluding religious advisors—including Imam Maisonet—from the execution chamber" ... is insufficient because the Court has already held that Maisonet does not have a constitutionally protected right to be present in the execution chamber and because there is no allegation, for example, that Maisonet plans to attend a specific execution or that any inmate desires to have Maisonet attend an execution. Although Maisonet alleges that he "remains committed to providing religious support and guidance to the Muslims on Alabama's death row" ..., a commitment to religious support and guidance does not establish a certainly impending injury....

[T]he third-party inmates on Alabama's death row could assert their own rights and, in fact, have done so in appeals all the way to the United States Supreme Court. "It is the inmates, not [Maisonet], who have standing to pursue the primary claim he articulated."

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Native American Parents Can Move Ahead With Suit Challenging School's Cutting of Children's Hair

In Johnson v. Cody-Kilgore Unified School District,(D NE, Nov. 10, 2021), a Nebraska federal district court allowed Native American parents (members of the Rosebud Sioux tribe) who practice traditional Lakota religious traditions to move ahead with several of their claims growing out of the school's cutting of their children's hair as part of a lice check. The school's cutting and disposing of the hair violates Lakota tradition. Plaintiffs claim that the school had an unwritten policy of cutting hair during lice checks that only applied to Native American students. The court allowed plaintiffs to proceed with their free exercise and Title VI racial discrimination claims. The court however dismissed plaintiffs' 14th Amendment parental rights claim. The Reader reports on the decision.

New Poll On American's Attitudes Toward Religious Freedom Released

Becket yesterday released its third annual Religious Freedom Index (full text) along with a one-page summary of the full 122-page report. Becket's press release describes the report, in part:

... Religious Freedom Index [is] the only annual poll that tracks trends across the full spectrum of opinions on American religious freedom. This year’s Index reached a new high as Americans bounced back from a uniquely divisive year with revitalized support for religious liberty. In addition to the Index’s standardized annual questions, this year Becket also asked about Americans’ opinions on faith-based organizations, free speech, and the pandemic.

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

New Orleans Archdiocese Settles False Claims Act Lawsuit

The Department of Justice announced this week that in a settlement of a False Claims Act lawsuit that was originally brought by a whistleblower, the Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans has agreed to pay the federal government more than $1 million in damages. (Full text of Settlement Agreement).  The whistleblower will receive nearly $200,000. The lawsuit alleges that the Archdiocese knowingly submitted false claims to FEMA for repair or replacement of facilities damaged by Hurricane Katrina. This included damage to a nonexistent central air conditioning unit and misstatement of the sized of a facility. The settlement was approved last month by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court handling the Archdiocese's bankruptcy reorganization. National Catholic Register reports on the settlement.

9th Circuit Hears Arguments On Destruction of Native American Sacred Site

Yesterday, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments (video of full arguments) in Slockish v. U.S. Department of Transportation. The facts of the case involving land near Mount Hood in Oregon are described in appellants' opening brief (full text) in part as follows:

Plaintiffs are members of federally-recognized tribes who long practiced their faith at a small sacred site called Ana Kwna Nchi Nchi Patat, or the “Place of Big Big Trees.”.... In the 1980s, when the Government proposed widening a nearby highway, one of Plaintiffs’ leaders informed the Government of the site’s historic and religious significance, including the graves and stone altar. In response, the Government modified its project to protect the site. But in 2008, the Government widened the highway again to add a center turn lane. This time, it protected a nearby wetlands, but completely destroyed the sacred site—cutting down the old-growth trees, bulldozing the burial ground and stone altar, and covering the area under a massive earthen berm.

Becket Law issued a press release on the case. (See prior related posting.)

U.S. House Committee Hears From Faith Leaders On Economic Issues

On Monday, the U.S. House Committee on Economic Disparity & Fairness In Growth held a Bipartisan Economic Roundtable with National Faith Leaders (video of Roundtable). The hearing was designed to explore the economic needs of religious communities, as well as faith-based initiatives and neighborhood partnerships centered around economic justice and development. A list of faith leaders who were involved in the roundtable is available at the Committee's website.

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Religious Pre-Schools Seek Exemption From Non-Discrimination Laws To Participate In "Build Back Better" Funding

New York Times yesterday reported that Catholic and Orthodox Jewish groups are lobbying hard for changes in President Biden's proposed Build Back Better Act. They seek to have drafters remove language which would apply nondiscrimination provisions to religiously affiliated prekindergarten and child care facilities. The bill as now drafted treats facilities that would accept child care vouchers issued to families as direct recipients of federal funding:

[Present provisions] could bar federal funds from going to programs that refused to hire a gay employee, gave preference to applicants of their faith or failed to renovate their facilities to accommodate disabled students....

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Orthodox Union ... have made the case to members of Congress that they could not accept money to run preschool or child care programs unless the bill expressly exempts them from anti-discrimination laws, such as Title IX, which protects against discrimination by sex, and the Americans With Disabilities Act, which they argue could require costly upgrades to old buildings, including houses of worship.

Monday, November 15, 2021

Cert. Denied In Challenge To Oregon's Limits On Parochial Schools

The U.S, Supreme Court today denied review in Horizon Christian School v. Brown, (Docket No. 21-567, certiorari denied 11/15/2021). (Order List).  In the case, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in an Aug. 2 opinion (full text) affirmed the denial of a preliminary injunction against Oregon's previous COVID-19 restrictions on in-person schooling. The suit was brought by parents of students who attend religious schools. (See prior related posting.)

Recent Articles of Interest

From SSRN:

From SmartCILP and elsewhere:

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Conditions Of Special Use Permit For Church Upheld

In Alive Church of the Nazarene, Inc. v. Prince William County, Virginia, (ED VA, Nov. 10, 2021), a Virginia federal district court dismissed a suit brought by a church that sought to use its property for religious gatherings even though it could not yet afford to comply with conditions of its special use permit. The church was presently using space elsewhere in a farm winery/ brewery for religious services. It attempted to circumvent the special use permit requirements by obtaining approval to grow fruit trees and make non-alcoholic apple cider on its own property. However zoning authorities said that structures not associated with that agricultural use were not permitted, and that use of present structures for events such as wedding receptions would be allowed only if the church obtained a liquor license-- which the church refused to do because of its opposition to alcohol. The court rejected the church's RLUIPA, Free Exercise, Freedom of Assembly and Equal Protection challenges.

Friday, November 12, 2021

Lev Tahor Sect Leaders Convicted Of Kidnapping and Sexual Exploitation of Minors

The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York announced on Wednesday that a federal court jury has convicted two leaders of the fundamentalist Jewish Lev Tahor sect on kidnapping and sexual exploitation charges:

The defendants, leaders of an extremist Jewish sect called Lev Tahor, masterminded a scheme to kidnap a 14-year-old girl (“Minor-1”) and a 12-year-old boy (“Minor-2”) from their mother in Woodridge, New York.  The defendants then smuggled the children across the U.S. border to Mexico, where they reunited Minor-1 with her adult “husband” to allow him to continue his illegal sexual relationship with Minor-1.

The Forward reports on the convictions.

Transgender Students Sue Their High School For Gender Recognition

Suit was filed in an Indiana federal district court this week by two transgender male high school students against their school. The complaint (full text) in B.E. and S.E. v. Vigo County School Corp., (SD IN, filed 11/8/2021) alleges in part:

Defendants’ failure to recognize the plaintiffs as male and to allow them to use male restrooms and the male locker room and to require that they be addressed by the names and pronouns consistent with their male gender violates both the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972....

Los Angeles Blade reports on the lawsuit.

Thursday, November 11, 2021

Abu Dhabi Adopts Civil Personal Status Law For Non-Muslims

WAM News Agency reported this week that the President of the United Arab Emirates has issued a new law which will govern personal status matters for non-Muslims in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi. According to the report:

The new law applies civil principles in the regulation of family matters, explained [the Abu Dhabi Judicial Department] Under-Secretary, who also announced the establishment by the Judicial Department of the first court dedicated to non-Muslim family matters.

All the procedures of the new court will be bilingual in Arabic and English to facilitate the understanding of judicial procedures by foreigners and to improve judicial transparency.

In detail, the law consists of 20 articles divided into several chapters covering civil marriage, divorce, joint custody of children and inheritance.

Indian Express has more details on the new law's provisions. [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]

6th Circuit Grants En Banc Review Of Catholic School's Challenge To Mask Order

In Resurrection School v. Hertel, (6th Cir., Nov. 10, 2021), the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the 3-judge panel opinion and granted en banc review. The panel decision, by a 2-1 vote, upheld  Michigan's previous COVID-19 mask order for schools.  The court affirmed the denial of a preliminary injunction sought by a Catholic elementary school, concluding that the order was neutral and generally applicable. (See prior posting.) AP reports on yesterday's action by the court.

United Airlines Can Place Employees With Religious Objections To Vaccine On Unpaid Leave

In Sambrano v. United Airlines, Inc., (ND TX, Nov. 8, 2021), a Texas federal district court refused to issue a preliminary injunction to prevent United Airlines from placing on unpaid leave employees who received religious or medical exemptions from United's COVID vaccine mandate. The court said in part:

This Order does not rule on the ultimate merits of this case. Instead, this Order merely rules on Plaintiffs’ request for the extraordinary remedy of a preliminary injunction....

The Court is not insensitive to Plaintiffs’ plight. A loss of income, even temporary, can quickly ripple out to touch nearly every aspect of peoples’ lives, and the lives of their families and dependents. But the Court’s analysis must be guided by the law, not by its sympathy.

Despite the novel facts presented here, the case law is clear that hardships stemming from loss of income are remediable; axiomatically such hardships cannot be called irreparable.

The Hill reports on the decision.

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

6th Circuit: Prison Cannot Just Fail To Respond To Inmate's Religious Requests

In Byrd v. Haas, (6th Cir., Nov. 9, 2021),the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a Michigan federal district court's dismissal of RLUIPA, free exercise, equal protection and due process claims brought by an inmate who sought to worship with other inmates of the Ifa faith and to obtain certain religious items for worship. The court said in part:

Between his conversion to the Ifa faith in August 2015 and filing this lawsuit more than two years later, Byrd sent four requests for Ifa group services and nine items that he considers essential to the Ifa faith. These items include, among other things, a straw mat for prayer, herbs, and more beads. How did the Department respond to these requests? It didn’t. Not one made its way to McKee [Deputy Director of the Department of Corrections] for a final decision. And since this lawsuit began, Byrd has filed a fifth request. But the Department hasn’t fully resolved that request either....

... [A] government agency cannot simply end-run judicial review by sitting on its hands and allowing a claimant’s request to languish in a bureaucratic black hole.