Supreme Court to consider bid for first religious charter school
Hat tip, Joe.My.God.
CASE PREVIEW
Supreme Court to consider bid for first religious charter school
By Amy Howe
on Apr 28, 2025

The Supreme Court
In the past eight years, the justices have sided with parents and religious institutions in three cases challenging state policies that barred them from receiving education funds that were available for secular recipients. (Katie Barlow)
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on Wednesday in a Catholic virtual charter schools bid to become the nations first religious charter school. The Oklahoma charter school board that approved the Catholic schools application tells the justices that a state supreme court ruling invalidating its contract with the school violates the Constitution and harms lower-income families. But the states attorney general counters that a ruling in favor of the Catholic school could upend the charter-school system nationwide.
The Oklahoma law governing charter schools requires them to be non-religious in their programs, admissions policies, and other operations. The dispute now before the court began when the archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the diocese of Tulsa applied to the states charter school board to establish a virtual Catholic charter school, St. Isidore of Seville. The purpose of the school which was named after the patron saint of the internet and projected to have an initial enrollment of 500 students, approximately half of whom would come from lower-income families is explicitly religious: It fully embraces the Catholic Churchs teachings, fully incorporates them into every aspect of the school, and intends to participate in the evangelizing mission of the church.
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