Supreme Court will weigh approval for US’ 1st publicly funded religious
charter school, in Oklahoma
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[January 25, 2025]
By MARK SHERMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court agreed Friday to take on a new
culture war dispute: whether the nation’s first publicly funded
religious charter school should be allowed to open in Oklahoma.
The justices said they would review an Oklahoma Supreme Court decision
that invalidated a state board's approval of an application by the
Catholic Church in Oklahoma to open a charter school.
The conservative-dominated high court has issued several decisions in
recent years signaling a willingness to allow public funds to flow to
religious entities. At the same time, conservative-led states have
sought to insert religion into public schools, including Louisiana's
requirement that the Ten Commandments be posted in classrooms.
The case probably will be argued in late April and decided by early
summer. Justice Amy Coney Barrett is not taking part in the case, but
did not explain why.
Last June, Oklahoma’s top court held by a 7-1 vote that a
taxpayer-funded religious charter school would violate the part of the
First Amendment that prohibits government from making any law
“respecting an establishment of religion.”
The decision followed a 3-2 vote in 2023 by the Statewide Virtual
Charter School Board to approve an application by the archdiocese for
the St. Isidore of Seville Virtual Charter School. The K-12 online
school had planned to start classes for its first 200 enrollees last
fall, with part of its mission to evangelize its students in the
Catholic faith.
A group of Oklahoma parents, faith leaders and a public education
nonprofit sued to block the school.
“Under Oklahoma law, a charter school is a public school,” Justice James
Winchester, an appointee of former Republican Gov. Frank Keating, wrote
in the court’s majority opinion. “As such, a charter school must be
nonsectarian.
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The Supreme Court in Washington, June 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Susan
Walsh, File)
“However, St. Isidore will evangelize the Catholic school curriculum
while sponsored by the state.”
In dissent, Justice Dana Kuehn wrote that excluding St. Isidore from
operating a charter school based solely on its religious affiliation
would violate a different part of the First Amendment that protects
religious freedom.
The high court's decision to intervene was warmly received by
Alliance Defending Freedom, the Christian legal advocacy group
representing the state board. "There’s great irony in state
officials who claim to be in favor of religious liberty
discriminating against St. Isidore because of its Catholic beliefs,”
the group's chief legal counsel, Jim Campbell, said in a statement.
Opponents of the Oklahoma charter school called on the justices to
uphold the state court ruling. “The law is clear: Charter schools
are public schools and must be secular and open to all students,”
the American Civil Liberties Union and other legal groups said in a
statement. They are representing the school’s opponents in a
separate lawsuit.
The case puts Oklahoma's Republican governor, Kevin Stitt, and its
Republican attorney general, Gentner Drummond, on opposing sides.
Stitt favors the school. Drummond reversed the advice given to the
charter school board by his Republican predecessor, warning that the
Catholic charter school would in his view violate the Constitution.
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