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California Parents Appeal to the U.S. Ninth Circuit Challenging Religious Discrimination in California School Funding

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October 24, 2024

News Release
 For Immediate Release: 10.24.24
Contact: John Manning, media@firstliberty.org
Direct: 972-941-4453

California Parents Appeal to the U.S. Ninth Circuit Challenging Religious Discrimination in California School Funding

Lower court dismissed the case stating there was no infringement of First Amendment rights when public funds were denied for homeschool families. 

San Francisco, CA—First Liberty Institute and the law firm King & Spalding LLP filed their opening brief in an appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit challenging California school policies that discriminate against families who choose faith-based curricula in charter schools’ parent-directed homeschool programs.

You can read the brief here.

“Our nation has a long tradition of respecting religion, not burying it,” said Ethan Davis, Partner at King & Spalding, pro bono counsel to the families challenging the discriminatory policies. “As the Supreme Court made clear in Carson v. Makin, when the government provides a benefit, like parent-directed educational funding, it cannot exclude families just because they choose to use that benefit for a religious education.”

“The U.S. Department of Education has long recognized the constitutional principle that public schools cannot reject a student’s work just because that student speaks from a religious viewpoint,” said Camille Varone, Associate Counsel for First Liberty. “These families love the opportunities that these charter schools provide to educate their own children in their own homes in a way that fits the families’ needs.”

The State of California authorizes the creation of tuition-free charter schools under the jurisdiction of local school districts. Some of these charter schools offer “independent study” programs that families may elect to use as an alternative to traditional classroom-based instruction. Families receive access to state funds to choose curricula, other instructional materials, and extracurricular activities for their children. The parents select the curriculum and teach their children at home, while the charter school provides support and confirms attendance records.

Citing state laws, however, the charter schools refuse to allow parents to use those funds to purchase curricula or school materials if they are religious. Additionally, the schools refuse to issue credit for coursework that originates from a religious curriculum, a religious publisher, or reflects a religious perspective.

The plaintiffs in this case—parents John and Breanna Woolard, Hector and Diana Gonzales, and Carrie Dodson—are devout Christians who are raising school-age children and whose Christian faith is central to their identity and worldview.  Educating their children in accordance with their faith, using curricula that comply with state educational standards, is of the highest importance to them.  Each family enrolled their children in a charter school’s independent study program.  But each faced anti-religious discrimination, including being denied the right to use high-quality curricula that comport with California state standards, simply because they reflect a faith-based worldview.  The Dodson family was even expelled from its charter school because the family chose a religious curriculum.

The families filed a federal lawsuit in October 2023. A district court judge dismissed the lawsuit in June.

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About First Liberty Institute

First Liberty Institute is a non-profit public interest law firm and the largest legal organization in the nation dedicated exclusively to defending religious freedom for all Americans.

To arrange an interview, contact John Manning at media@firstliberty.org.

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