Sunday, March 6, 2022

Secularism or State Funds?

You live in a small, quiet town in Vermont with your spouse and two children. Due to the size of your town, there is not a public school in the area. In response, the school district dispenses funds to families in your town to use towards schools in neighboring towns. As a practicing Catholic, you decide to send your children to a Catholic school. You chose this school because it aligns with your religious values and will provide your children with a strong education. After selecting the school, you are dismayed to discover that the school board denied your request for funds because of the school’s affiliation with a religious organization. If the school is giving you funds for your personal choice, shouldn’t you be allowed to decide to send your children to a religious school? Or, is the school board constitutional in its decision to limit the distribution of funds to secular private and public schools. This is the story of the E.W. v French case: the intersection of religion and education, the rights of parents and children, and the possible religious entanglement of the Vermont government.

In Vermont, the Williams family is challenging the ruling of the government on their ability to put funds toward denominational schools. As explained above, several towns in Vermont do not have public schools because of their small population. As a result, the government in Vermont created the Town Tuition Program, which provides tuition funds to families to put towards a school of their choice for their children. Under this program, the town will give funds to parents to put towards an approved school. However, the funds are only eligible for public and private secular schools. Since the Williams family applied for funds to send their children to Rutland’s Mount St. Joseph Academy, a school run by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Vermont, their request was denied. 


Recently, in the United States, there have been several court cases challenging the right to tuition funds for any school. With tensions high and controversies looming, we must question: who has the right to choose a child’s schooling, and is it constitutional for the government to set restrictions on education funds? Specifically, is the Barstow Unified Union School District restricting the Williams family’s free exercise of religion by denying them the ability to put state funds towards a religious school of their choice?
To further our understanding of this case, it is crucial to reference past rulings to better understand precedents in religious cases. In June of 2020, the Supreme Court Ruled on a similar case, Espinoza v Montana. In Montana, a program was established that gave tax credits to those who donated to organizations that provided scholarships for private school tuition. However, because the Montana government did not allow government aid to go to schools with any religious affiliation, they created a rule prohibiting families from using the scholarship money at religious schools. The case was brought before the Supreme Court, who ruled in a 5-4 majority that it was unconstitutional to prohibit the use of funds at religious schools because it “bar[red] religious schools from public benefits solely because of the religious character of the schools” (JDSUPRA, 2020).

In class, we also referenced several similar cases, such as Carson v. Makin. This case involved a program in Maine to help with tuition for schools. However, the program was only available to parents who sent their children to public and private schools, but not religious schools. In
E.W. v. French and Carson v. Makin, it is helpful to use the “Lemon test” to determine the constitutionality of these tuition programs. The “Lemon Test” was first used in Lemon v. Kurtzman. In deciding this case, the justices established a three-pronged test to determine the constitutionality of specific cases. The three prongs are: “First, the statute must have a secular legislative purpose; second, its principal or primary effect must be one that neither advantages nor inhibits religion; finally, the statute must not foster ‘an excessive government entanglement with religion” (Munoz, 179). Based on the “Lemon Test”, the Vermont Town Tuition Program is not constitutional. Since the government is giving state funds to public and private schools, I do not believe it is neutral to deny parents the choice to send their children to religious schools. Also, if the funds are available for anyone in the town, there would be neutrality between private, public, and religious schools. Finally, it is not constitutional because the funds would only be indirectly benefitting religious schools. As with government loans for colleges and universities, it is the right of the students and parents to decide where to put their funds. It should be the personal choice of the parents to choose where to put their educational funds for their children. As a result, if the parents decided to send their children to religious schools, it would be an indirect benefit, just as it is an indirect benefit when parents decide to send their children to secular private schools. 
With the facts outlined, similar cases compared, and opinions shared, how do you feel about this case? Do you think that it is unconstitutional? Ultimately, should Vermont be allowed, under the constitution, to prohibit parents from putting public education funds towards tuition at religious schools? 

5 comments:

Chris K said...

I think it is unconstitutional to use funding from the government to go towards religious schools. Although there may not be another better option, as someone who thinks there should be strict separation between church and state, allowing public funds to go towards religious school would be a violation of this separation. I think it has the potential to create a slippery slope in which indirectly state funds may go towards more religious activity than they are supposed to. As was in a case we discussed previously, the need to surveil the schools to see how the funds are being used would violate the lemon test part about an over entanglement between church and state. Based on these reasons, I think it is unconstitutional to use state funds for religious schools.

Katie L said...

If it is a private decision made by parents to use the loans to go to a religious school, I do not believe this is unconstitutional. The government has a responsibility to be neutral towards religion, and specifically denying them in this case seems to be discriminatory. There is a substantial burden on the parents, as there is no public school and therefore no option for their children to get an education. This is an indirect religious benefit from the government, as there are government funds being given to religious schools, but because it goes through the parents first and becomes a private decision, it should be allowable.

Melissa Capano said...

This is a really well-developed argument, and I appreciate that you considered multiple perspectives and issues from both sides. I agree with you and Katie that it is not constitutional for the government to restrict education funds. To your point, funds and financial aid for colleges and universities go to the student and their parents and they make a private decision on which school to go to, including religious schools. How could it possibly be excessive entanglement with government and religion if the funds go to the parents, and not the religious school? Additionally, there is a substantial burden placed on children and parents for needing to find a school because the government does not have a public school for them to attend in their district. Due to the burden put on them, and the fact that the aid is clearly indirect and a private decision of parents, I think it's unconstitutional to restrict which schools the funds can go to.

Reid D said...

I think that it would be a violation of the families' First Amendment right if they restrict which schools the parents can send their children to. Parents receive funds based off of a general welfare program open to the public. The program has a secular purpose intended to help parents send their children to school in areas where there is no viable public option. This is a neutral policy both facially and in practice that does not foster or inhibit religion. Additionally, there is no excessive entanglement since the funds go to the families and it is not the government giving money to the schools.

Molly T. said...

I do not think this is unconstitutional because it was the private choice of these parents to use their loans for their school of choice. In this sense, the State is not DIRECTLY funding religion. They are providing support to a family who is deciding where their funds should be allocated to. Because of this indirectness, I believe that this should be allowed.