Federal Appeals Court Urged to Uphold Discrimination Ban in Tax-Funded Public Child Welfare Programs

PHILADELPHIA - October 5, 2018 - Several organizations weighed in yesterday in the first major case related to religiously motivated discrimination since the Supreme Court refused to grant a broad license to discriminate in Masterpiece Cakeshop.

The current case is about whether the city of Philadelphia can require foster care agencies with city contracts to abide by its nondiscrimination policies. The ACLU represents the Support Center for Child Advocates, a nonprofit organization that provides legal representation and services to children in the foster care system, and Philadelphia Family Pride (PFP), a membership organization of LGBTQ parents and prospective parents. In July, a federal court in Michigan rejected the argument that government-contracted child placing agencies have a constitutional right to exclude same-sex couples or other prospective families who don't meet an agency's religious test.

Organizations filing friend-of-the-court briefs include:

Ten states currently have laws or practices that allow LGBTQ people or same-sex couples - or anyone else who doesn't satisfy an agency's religious litmus test - to be turned away from state-licensed agencies, most of which are tax-funded. Recently, an amendment was proposed to the federal Health and Human Services budget that would have allowed taxpayer-funded child welfare agencies nationwide to turn away potential adoptive or foster parents based on a provider's religious beliefs. This amendment was defeated last week. A federal court in Detroit ruled in September that a challenge by two same-sex couples who were turned away from tax-funded child welfare agencies could move forward.

Leslie Cooper, deputy director of the ACLU's LGBT and HIV Project, issued the following statement:

"In America right now, there are over 400,000 children in foster care, many of whom are placed far from their school and community, separated from siblings, or living in group homes because of the shortage of foster families to care for them. Allowing good families to be turned away because they don't meet a religious litmus test denies children families they desperately need. Prospective foster parents who want to open their hearts and homes to a child in need, should be judged on one thing: their capacity to provide love and support to a child."

Oral argument at the Third Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia has been scheduled for the week of November 5.

For links to the briefs and more information about the case, visit: https://www.aclu.org/cases/fulton-v-city-philadelphia

This release is available online here: https://www.aclu.org/news/federal-appeals-court-urged-uphold-discrimination-ban-tax-funded-public-child-welfare-programs

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