
ORTHODOX UNION APPLAUDS FEDERAL COURT RULING AGAINST
RELIGIOUS
DISCRIMINATION IN EDUCATIONAL AIDE ASSISTANCE
September 17, 1998 -- Today, the Union of Orthodox
Jewish Congregations of America, through its Institute for Public Affairs, welcomed a
ruling by the United States Court
of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit which held unconstitutional a Minnesota school
districts refusal to provide state funded classroom assistants to disabled students
who attend parochial schools. The appellate courts ruling in Peter v. Wedl was
issued on Tuesday.
The case arises from a lawsuit brought by the parents of twelve-year-old Aaron Westendorp,
a disabled student who requires an in-class paraprofessional assistant to function in a
classroom. Aarons parents choose to send him to Calvin Christian School in
Edina, Minnesota. While the local school district provides classroom assistants to
disabled
students who attend public schools and private secular schools, they refused to provide
the same service to Aaron due to his enrollment at a parochial school. Aarons
parents filed suit against the local school district and Minnesota state officials in
1996, contending that this practice violated their constitutional rights. In March,
1997, the District Court ruled against the Westendorps. Earlier this week, the Court
of Appeals reversed that lower court decision.
In ruling in favor of the Westendorps, the Eighth
Circuit chastised the defendants and stated that "the evidence in this case strongly
suggests that [the school districts] policy is a mere pretext for religious
discrimination," and that assertions to the contrary "ring hollow in light of
[the districts] actual practice of providing services to disabled
children at private nonreligious preschools and at home schools." Citing the
U.S. Supreme Courts 1997 ruling in Agostini v. Felton (holding that public school
districts may provide secular teaching services in private religious schools), the Eighth
Circuit held that the school districts practice violated the Free Exercise, Free
Speech and Equal Protection Clauses of the U.S. Constitution.
Nathan Diament, director of the Institute for Public
Affairs, stated that "this decision by the Court of Appeals is significant, important
and correct. It unequivocally affirms a principle we have long believed and fought
for that religious individuals are entitled to equal participation in and
benefit from state programs and may not be excluded from such in the name of the
Constitution. Its a good day for religious freedom in America."
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