
ORTHODOX UNION CRITICIZES COURT RULING ON SCHOOL CHOICE IN
MAINE
August 17, 1998 -- The Union of Orthodox Jewish
Congregations of America, through its Institute for Public Affairs, today criticized a
ruling by a federal judge in Maine with regard to that states education subsidy
policy.
In Maine, small towns that do not have their own public school system routinely cover the
costs for residents children to attend public or private schools in neighboring
communities. Parents who wish to send their children to private parochial schools
have been barred from receiving these subsidies. This unequal policy was recently
challenged in federal court and, just a few days ago, was ruled constitutional by Judge D.
Brock Hornby.
Nathan Diament, director of the Institute for Public Affairs, issued the following
statement in the wake of Judge Hornbys decision:
The Orthodox Jewish community is deeply troubled by the
courts ruling in this case. In effect, Judge Hornby has held that the United
States Constitution requires that a state discriminate against parents who wish to send
their children to religious schools and not to afford them a subsidy that they provide all
other parents. We believe this holding is clearly wrong for it is inconsistent with
the spirit of the Constitution, not to mention numerous decisions of the Supreme Court.
We therefore look forward to supporting the appeal of this decision to the Court of
Appeals and toward the Supreme Court explicitly addressing the issue of school choice in
the near future.
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