|
|
|
KY Supreme Court rejects state funding for Baptist college |
|
|
|
Friday, April 23, 2010, 10:11 am |
|
Reprinted from the Courier-Journal
By: Deborah Yetter April 22, 2010
The Kentucky Supreme Court ruled unanimously Thursday that the legislature violated the state constitution’s ban on public funding for religious education when it allocated $10 million to build a pharmacy school at a Baptist college in southeastern Kentucky.
By a 5-2 vote, the court also struck down as unconstitutional a provision that allocated $1 million for scholarships to the proposed pharmacy school at the University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg.
The last-minute addition of the construction and scholarship money to the 2006-08 state budget was engineered by Senate President David Williams, a Burkesville Republican whose district includes the university.
The state had not released any funds while the legal challenge was pending.
The court’s opinion, written by Justice Lisabeth Hughes Abramson of Louisville, said the appropriation was a clear constitutional violation.
“If Kentucky needs to expand the opportunities for pharmacy school education within the commonwealth, the Kentucky General Assembly may most certainly address that pressing public need, but not by appropriating public funds to an educational institution that is religiously affiliated,” Abramson wrote.
Louisville lawyer David Tachau, who represented the plaintiffs in the
lawsuit challenging the appropriation, said the ruling is an important
reminder of the meaning of Section 189 of the Kentucky Constitution,
which prohibits spending public money for education at religious
institutions.
“This constitutional provision is crystal clear. It has been upheld in a
series of cases from 1917 through 1983,” said Tachau, who handled the
case for free. “The only surprise was that there was ever a need to
bring this lawsuit in the first place.”
Tachau said the ruling, which upheld a 2008 decision by Franklin Circuit
Judge Roger Crittenden, also is important because it clarifies that the
ban on public funding for religious schools includes colleges and
universities under the section of the constitution dating to 1891 that
refers simply to “common schools.”
The Kentucky Supreme Court
ruled unanimously Abramson’s opinion said that provision “included not
only primary and secondary education but most assuredly post-secondary
education.”
University President Jim Taylor was not available for comment but said
in a statement released by his office that plans for the pharmacy school
have been dropped.
“We understand that the decision has been rendered,” Taylor’s statement
said. “As a result of the decision, we will not begin a pharmacy
school.”
Daphne Baird, spokeswoman for the university, said “other pharmacy
schools are being created and others expanded since the critical need
was brought to the attention of the public as a result of this case.
Thus, in our view, we have accomplished our purpose.”
Williams, who added the funding during closed-door budget negotiations
in 2006, did not respond to a request for comment.
Sen. Vernie McGaha, a Russell Springs Republican and one of 13 lawmakers
who filed a brief supporting the funding, could not be reached
Thursday.
In a brief statement, Gov. Steve Beshear said the state will “carry out
the court’s mandate.”
The lawmakers’ decision to add money for the pharmacy school came just a
few weeks after the University of the Cumberlands said it was expelling
a gay student. Having sex outside marriage is grounds for dismissal
from the liberal arts college of about 1,700 students, which is
affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention.
The plaintiffs in the suit included the Fairness Alliance, a gay-rights
organization; the Jefferson County Teachers Association; and two
citizens, the Rev. Albert Pennybacker of Lexington and the Rev. Paul
Simmons, a Baptist minister and ethics professor at the University of
Louisville.
The Fairness Alliance, which harshly criticized the university in 2006
for expelling the gay student, said Thursday that it was pleased by the
Supreme Court ruling.
“Obviously, we disagree with their policies regarding gay students,”
said Jody Cofer, a Fairness Alliance Board member from Murray. “They
have the right to do that but not at the same time they are taking
taxpayer money.”
Cofer said the expulsion of the gay student was a factor, though
not the main one, in the Fairness Alliance’s decision to challenge the
funding.
“It drew our attention to it,” he said.
In arguments last year before the Supreme Court, lawyers for the
university — in an effort to avoid the constitutional question — argued
that the primary purpose of the pharmacy school was not educational.
Rather, they said, it was to improve public health by helping to ease
what they described as a shortage of pharmacists in the state. That
argument got short shrift from the Supreme Court.
“A pharmacy school is unquestionably educational,” the opinion said.
Though the judges were unanimous on that point, Justices Will T. Scott
and Daniel Venters disagreed on the question of whether the
legislature’s decision to create the scholarship fund for pharmacy
students at the school violated the constitutional ban on special
legislation.
The majority concluded that the language establishing the fund was
clearly written to apply only to students at the University of the
Cumberlands and thus amounted to special legislation.
But a dissent by Scott contended that the provision could have been
interpreted more broadly to apply to other schools as well.
Tachau said he hopes Thursday’s ruling brings the matter to an end.
“Absolutely,” he said. “I hope this is the final word.”
Reporter Deborah Yetter can be reached at (502) 582-4228. The Associated
Press contributed to this story.
|
|
Archive
-
April, 2012
-
March, 2012
-
December, 2011
-
September, 2011
-
August, 2011
-
April, 2011
-
March, 2011
-
February, 2011
-
January, 2011
-
November, 2010
-
September, 2010
-
August, 2010
-
June, 2010
-
April, 2010
-
March, 2010
-
February, 2010
-
January, 2010
-
December, 2009
-
October, 2009
-
September, 2009
-
August, 2009
-
June, 2009
-
May, 2009
-
April, 2009
-
March, 2009
-
January, 2009
-
November, 2008
-
October, 2008
-
July, 2008
-
June, 2008
|