
ORTHODOX UNION JOINS IN COURT BRIEF
SUPPORTING SCHOOL CHOICE SUBSIDIES IN MAINE
September 14, 1998 -- The Union of Orthodox Jewish
Congregations of America, through its Institute for Public Affairs, today joined in filing
a friend of the court brief with the Supreme Court of Maine with regard to that
states education subsidy policy.
The brief was drafted by Washington, DC attorneys
Nathan
Lewin and Richard Garnett on behalf of a coalition of Orthodox Jewish groups.
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 court and upheld as constitutional.
Nathan Diament, director of the Institute for Public
Affairs, issued the following statement today:
The Orthodox Jewish community was deeply troubled by
the lower courts ruling in this case.
In effect, the trial court 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.
Our brief to the court asserts that to provide state
education subsidies to a class of parents with children in school except for those who
elect to send their children to religious schools is to unconstitutionally discriminate
against religion.
We are confident that Maines high court will rule
in our favor.
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