ADF
attorneys represent mother prevented by the state from adopting because of her
faith
PENDLETON, Ore. – On behalf of a single mother of five wishing to adopt siblings from foster care, Alliance Defending Freedom attorneys filed a federal lawsuit Monday against Oregon state officials for denying her application because of her religious beliefs.
Jessica Bates |
“Oregon’s
policy amounts to an ideological litmus test: people who hold secular or
‘progressive’ views on sexual orientation and gender identity are eligible to
participate in child welfare programs, while people of faith with religiously
informed views are disqualified because they don’t agree with the state’s
orthodoxy,” said ADF Senior Counsel Jonathan Scruggs, director of the ADF
Center for Conscience Initiatives. “The government can’t exclude certain
communities of faith from foster care and adoption services because the state
doesn’t like their particular religious beliefs.”
During her
application process, Bates alerted ODHS that she will happily love and accept
any child, but she cannot say or do something that goes against her Christian faith.
ODHS’s policy, however, excludes her and others who hold traditional religious
beliefs about human nature and sexuality by requiring parents to use a child’s
preferred pronouns, take a child to affirming events like Pride parades, or
facilitate a child’s access to dangerous pharmaceutical interventions like
puberty blockers and hormone shots if the child so requests. As such, ODHS’s
policy penalizes Bates for her religious views, compels her to speak words that
violate her beliefs, and deprives her of equal protection of the law because of
her faith.
“Oregon’s
policy makes a sweeping claim that all persons who hold certain religious
beliefs—beliefs held by millions of Americans from diverse religious faiths—are
categorically unfit to care for children,” said ADF Legal Counsel Johannes
Widmalm-Delphonse. “That’s simply not true. Oregon is putting its political
agenda above the needs of countless children who would be happy to grow up in a
loving, Christian home like Jessica’s. We urge the court to remind the state of
its constitutional and moral obligations and reaffirm Jessica’s First Amendment
right to live out her faith without being penalized by the government.”
Bates, who
lost her husband in a car collision six years ago, is a mother of five children,
ages 10 to 17. Inspired by the story of a man who adopted a child from foster
care, Bates felt a calling to follow the biblical teaching to care for orphans.
She seeks to adopt a sibling pair, who are generally harder to place. State
officials, however, rejected her application for failing to “meet the adoption
home standards” and excluded her from accessing any child welfare service
because she refused to abandon her religious beliefs.
ADF
attorneys filed the lawsuit, Bates v. Pakseresht, in the U.S. District
Court for the District of Oregon, Pendleton Division
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