
Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America
Institute for Public Affairs
Main Office:
333 Seventh Ave.
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 212-613-8124
Fax: 212-564-9058
E-mail: ipa@ou.org
Washington Office:
1640 Rhode Island Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-857-2770
Fax: 202-331-9161
E-mail: ipadc@ou.org
Prof. Richard Stone
Chairman
Nathan Diament
Director
Betty Ehrenberg
Director, International Affairs & Communal Relations
|
|
May 27, 1999
ORTHODOX UNION ACCEPTS OHIO SUPREME COURT
SCHOOL VOUCHER DECISION; SAYS GOOD NEWS OUTWEIGHS BAD
Today, the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America,
through its Institute for Public Affairs, accepted a long awaited opinion by the Ohio
Supreme Court on Cleveland's school voucher program. The state's highest court ruled
that the program does not violate the U.S.
Constitution's First Amendment, but did invalidate the
program under technical provisions of the Ohio Constitution that require legislative bills
to contain only a single subject matter. The UOJCA had filed a friend of the court
brief in support of the Pilot Scholarship Program.
Writing for the majority, Ohio Supreme Court Justice
stated that "[w]hatever link between government and religion is created by the school
voucher program is indirect, depending only on the 'genuinely independent and private
choices' of individual parents, who act for themselves and their children, not for the
government." This ruling on the challenges raised against the program on the
basis of "church-state separation" arguments was 4-0, with three justices
declining to reach those issues. The ruling on the Ohio Constitution point was 5-2.
In reaction to the ruling, IPA director Nathan Diament,
stated that "the good news in this opinion far outweighs the bad. Supporters of
school choice have already developed approaches to address the technical issues raised by
the court under Ohio's constitution and the legislature and the governor can keep this
important program running.
Most significantly, the court has once again sent a clear message
that the U.S. Constitution does not bar properly structured school choice programs;
empowering parents to decide how to educate their kids - whether in public, private or
parochial schools - is not an improper establishment of religion. The Orthodox
Jewish community will continue to work with others in the education reform community to
keep the Cleveland program running and expand the opportunities for school choice around
the nation."
###
Comments?
|
|