Oklahoma to vote on first religious charter school in US
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[April 11, 2023]
By Brad Brooks
(Reuters) - An Oklahoma school board is set to vote on Tuesday on
whether the state will allow the first taxpayer-funded religious charter
school in the U.S. - a decision that promises to ignite a legal battle
testing the concept of separation of church and state.
The Statewide Virtual Charter School Board will vote on an application
backed by the Catholic church for the creation of St. Isidore of Seville
Catholic Virtual School, planned by its organizers to offer an online
education for kindergarten through high school initially for 500
students and eventually 1,500.
The board is a state entity that considers applications for charter
schools - publicly funded but independently run - that operate virtually
in Oklahoma. The board's three voting members all were appointed by
Republican state officials.
The school would cost Oklahoma taxpayers up to $25.7 million over its
first five years of operation, its organizers said. The idea for the
school came from the Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. The law
school at the University of Notre Dame, a Catholic institution in
Indiana, helped with the application.
Any legal fight over St. Isidore could test the scope of the U.S.
Constitution's First Amendment "establishment clause," which restricts
government officials from endorsing any particular religion, or
promoting religion over nonreligion.
Supporters and critics of the proposed school predicted a legal fight
regardless of the outcome of Tuesday's vote. Church officials have said
they hope the case will reach the U.S. Supreme Court, whose 6-3
conservative majority has taken an expansive view of religious rights
including in two rulings since 2020 concerning schools in Maine and
Montana.
Brett Farley, executive director of the Catholic Conference of Oklahoma,
said St. Isidore is intended primarily to meet the needs of rural
families who desire a Catholic education but do not live close to any
physical schools.
Farley, whose organization represents the church on public policy
issues, said the recent Supreme Court decisions made him optimistic that
the justices would eventually allow a publicly funded Catholic charter
school.
The proposal's critics have warned of the consequences of allowing
taxpayer-funded religious schools.
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The Oklahoma State Capitol is seen in
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S. on September 30, 2015. REUTERS/Jon
Herskovitz/File Photo
"Americans need to wake up to the reality that religious extremists
are coming for our public schools," said Rachel Laser, president of
the advocacy group Americans United for Separation of Church and
State.
It remains an open question how the school would balance federal and
state non-discrimination rules such as those barring discrimination
based on sexual orientation. The school's stated aim in its
application is to hire educators who live by the doctrine of the
Catholic church, which according to the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops considers homosexuality a sin.
Farley said he could not answer questions about any hypothetical
case of hiring a gay teacher or admitting a gay student, but
expressed confidence that the school could "square with state
regulations, federal regulations and operate within the protections
that precedent has given us."
"This idea of separation of church and state is not constitutional,
it's not anywhere in the Constitution's text," Farley said.
Laser disagreed and said her organization would fight the Catholic
church in any court over St. Isidore and any other publicly funded
religious school.
"There is an attack being waged on public schools in Oklahoma, and
that attack is to convert public schools into religious schools,"
Laser said.
Robert Franklin, chairman of the Statewide Virtual Charter School
Board, would not reveal how he planned to vote but said that "most
all external contacts that have reached out to me are vexed and
opposed to the request of the archdiocese's application."
Franklin said all three voting board members would have to agree for
the school's application to be approved.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Texas; Additional reporting by
John Kruzel in Washington; Editing by Will Dunham and Donna Bryson)
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