By Deacon Mike Manno
(The
Wanderer) – It’s getting more and more difficult trying to follow
all the legal cases involving religious liberty as time goes on. Unfortunately,
for most of us, attention is directed to key cases at the Supreme Court, with
hopes that the new conservative balance there will help protect the rights of
believers.
So to sort through some of the cases that haven’t reached
the Supreme Court, but could, I thought I’d give you an advance look at three
of the cases that have not arrived at the Supreme Court — yet.
The first is a new case, filed just days ago as I write
this: Catholic Healthcare International
v. Genoa Charter Township (Eastern District of Michigan). The suit centers
around a proposal by Catholic Healthcare to create a prayer campus on a 40-acre
property which was to have a modest 95-seat chapel with parking for 39 cars.
The plans for the chapel — St. Pio Chapel — would put it about 600 feet off the
nearest public road. The rest of the property is to be preserved for trails to
“allow people to find peace in the natural surroundings.”
In addition to the chapel, which would host Eucharistic
adoration, there is incorporated into the plan movable Stations of the Cross,
which have already been placed on the property. All in all, the building plans
only call for the use of approximately five of the forty acres, which will
maintain the rural character of the property.
While the planning for the property is consistent with
similar uses in the area, and the property is zoned for such use, the property
owner still needs approval by the township. Catholic Healthcare’s application
for a permit was approved by the township’s planning commission by a 4-3 vote,
but was rejected by the township 5-2 without legal justification, based “upon
amorphous, subjective considerations that were contrary to the facts and which
permit an anti-religious/anti-Catholic animus to drive the township’s
decision,” according to the lawsuit.
In addition to the denial, the township has told Catholic
Healthcare that it now must remove the Stations of the Cross that are currently
on the property as well as an image of Santa Maria delle Grazie (Our Lady of
Grace), and one of St. Padre Pio, in other words, according to the suit,
“Defendants demand that plaintiffs cleanse the property of anything religious.”
Interestingly, on Faith On Trial, our radio program, Robert
Muise, co-founder and senior counsel for the American Freedom Law Center which
is representing Catholic Healthcare, said that “there was quite bit of
anti-Catholic sentiment that was expressed at the township meetings and on
social media.”
In a written statement, he also said, “The Township’s
rejection of our clients’ right to religious worship on CHI’s private property
is not in keeping with our proud tradition of accommodating people of faith,
and, in fact, it violates our clients’ fundamental rights protected by the
United States and Michigan Constitutions and federal statutory law.”
The second case is School
of the Ozarks, Inc., d/b/a College of the Ozarks v. Joseph R. Biden, Jr. et al.
(Western District of Missouri). Shortly after taking office, Mr. Biden issued
an executive order that requires religious colleges to place biological males
into female dormitories and to assign them as female roommates. In response the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development “hastily issued” — without
notice or ability to comment — a directive prohibiting the college from
discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity in
dormitories. It also prohibited the college from making any statements to the
contrary concerning the dormitories.
The college immediately filed a pre-enforcement suit
seeking protection from the new directive, claiming: “The Directive imposes an
immediate and binding legislative rule under the Fair Housing Act, prohibiting
all regulated entities, including the College, from discriminating on the basis
of sexual orientation or gender identity both in occupancy of their dwellings
and in policies governing those dwellings.”
In late May a federal judge, Roseann Ketchmark, an Obama
appointee, ruled against the Christian college, thus requiring it to allow
shared dorm rooms and shower facilities with students of the opposite
biological sex. The judge’s ruling was based on what she termed the college’s
lack of standing.
But on our radio program, Ryan Bangert, vice president of
legal strategy for the Alliance Defending Freedom who is representing the
college, challenged that claim. He said that pre-enforcement claims, such as
the school was pursuing, are specifically authorized by federal law.
Additionally Bangert pointed out that President Biden’s
order to the federal agencies directed it to interpret the word “sex” to
include “gender identity and sexual orientation”; however, the Federal Fair
Housing Act does not include that language. And HUD, as it proceeded to adopt
the president’s interpretation, failed to follow the mandate of the federal
Administrative Procedures Act, which requires public notice of a proposed
change and an ability for the public to comment. Had it done so, the sweeping
problems with it would have been presented to the agency to at least consider,
he said.
“The Fair Housing Act hasn’t changed. What has changed is HUD,” Bangert told
our audience.
Said the school’s president, Dr. Jerry Davis: “Religious
freedom is under attack in America, and we won’t stand on the sidelines and
watch. To threaten religious freedom is to threaten America itself. College of
the Ozarks will not allow politicians to erode the essential American right or
the ideals that shaped America’s founding.”
If the school fails to comply it could face fines of up to six figures.
The third case is from the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, People v. Griepp. The case began after
former New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman filed an injunction against
a pro-life group from Brooklyn for “sidewalk counseling” outside abortion
clinics. The state has a Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances law which
prohibits intentional interference with access to a clinic by force, threats of
force or physical obstruction. Specifically protected by the law are peaceful
pro-life activities.
The state brought action against the group, Church@The
Rock, and its pastor, Rev. Kenneth Griepp, back in 2017. The attorney general’s
motion for an injunction against Pastor Griepp and his church was for their
activities outside an abortion facility in Queens. Attorneys for the Thomas
More Society argued that the case was without merit and it was an assault on
the First Amendment rights of pro-life sidewalk counselors.
In the initial court ruling, the lower court, in a 103-page
opinion denied the state’s request for an injunction and allowed the sidewalk
counselors to continue their ministry outside the clinic. The Second Circuit
Court of Appeals then overturned the lower court’s decision which had protected
the sidewalk counselors.
The Thomas More Society, on behalf of the pro-life group
then petitioned the circuit court for a rehearing. At the end of May the appeals court, in a 119-page opinion,
took the extraordinary step to vacate its earlier opinion. Statistics for the Second Circuit indicate it only grants about 0.0003 percent
of petitions seeking a rehearing en banc — that is, approximately three out of
every 10,000 petitions.
Stephen Crampton, Thomas More Society senior counsel, said,
“It appears that even the judges in the majority on the panel found their
original opinion indefensible. We are pleased that the fundamental First
Amendment rights of our clients have been restored and look forward to
returning to the district court and finishing the case once and for all.”
We’ll keep watching and see what happens.
(You can reach Mike at: DeaconMike@q.com and listen to him every Thursday on Faith On Trial at 10 a.m. Central on IowaCatholicRadio.com.)
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