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Mickey Rooney, Master of Putting on a Show, Dies at 93

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lawhawk4/07/2014 11:55:53 am PDT

Thought exercise:

So, would the same people who are complaining about NYC schools not being allowed to be used by church worship services have a problem with a ban on those sames schools prohibiting Cthulhu worship practices? Muslim religious ceremonies? Wiccan rites? Jewish ceremonies?

Oh, you mean that the court found that the City rule prohibited all religious groups from holding services in school buildings. Shocking. Equal treatment.

Would it surprise you then that the question arose because the Christian congregation couldn’t find a suitable place for worship it could afford, and then sought to use the school after hours? Or that the City’s policy was designed to specifically avoid the establishment clause issue under the 1st?

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that a city Department of Education policy that prohibits church services in public schools is constitutional. The policy allows religious and other community organizations to use classrooms and other facilities for after-hours programs but denies access to those seeking to use the space as a “house of worship.”

Two of the three judges on the panel agreed to reverse a 2012 lower court decision by U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska ordering the department not to enforce the rule against the Bronx Household of Faith. The appeals court disagreed with the judge’s finding that denying the church access to the school would violate First Amendment protections regarding free exercise of faith.

“In the District Court’s view, because Bronx Household and its congregants have a constitutional right to worship as they choose without interference from government and cannot afford to pay for a large enough site to accommodate the entire congregation, the Free Exercise Clause obligates the (department) to provide them with a subsidized facility in which to exercise the right,” the majority wrote. “The Free Exercise Clause, however, has never been understood to require government to finance a subject’s exercise of religion.”

By refusing to host religious services, the department is correctly seeking to avoid the risk of violating the Establishment Clause, which prohibits government from endorsing a religion, the two judges added. The dissenting judge disagreed, in part by citing a survey finding that of the 50 largest school districts in the United States, New York City is the only one that excludes religious worship from its facilities.