Religion Clause blog reports:
1st Circuit Upholds Maine's Exclusion of Sectarian Schools From Tuition Reimbursement
In Carson v. Makin, (1st Cir., Oct. 29, 2020), the U.S. 1st Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Maine's statutory provisions that pay tuition to out-of-district public or private high schools for students whose districts do not operate a high school. However, to qualify to receive tuition assistance payments, a private school must be non-sectarian. Plaintiffs challenge this, particularly in light of the U.S. Supreme Court's Trinity Lutheran and Espinoza decisions. The court distinguished Supreme Court precedent as follows:
Accordingly, we proceed on the understanding that this restriction, unlike the one at issue in Espinoza, does not bar schools from receiving funding simply based on their religious identity -- a status that in and of itself does not determine how a school would use the funds that it receives to provide educational instruction.... Instead, we understand this restriction to bar BCS and TA from receiving the funding based on the religious use that they would make of it in instructing children in the tuition assistance program....
The difficulty Maine confronts is that many of its localities cannot feasibly provide the benefits of that free public education directly to their residents. Thus, Maine has had to adapt to that reality. In doing so, it has chosen to provide -- while still ensuring that any parent in Maine may send their child to a religious school at their own expense -- tuition assistance for those children who live in localities that operate no public secondary school of their own to attend a private school that will provide a substitute for what they cannot get from the government.
In conditioning the availability of that assistance on the requirement that recipients use it for educational instruction that is as nonsectarian in content as the free public education that is not directly available to them, Maine transgresses neither the Free Exercise Clause nor the Establishment Clause, nor any of the other provisions of the federal Constitution that the plaintiffs invoke.
Courthouse News Service reports on the decision.
SCOTUS granted cert. Here is a link to SCOTUSblog coverage:
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