KSN&C Backstory.The Kentucky Supreme Court on Thursday struck down the legislature's 2006 attempt to give $11 million in state funds to a private religious university for a pharmacy program, but it did so without restricting other kinds of state aid that flow to religious colleges.
The court's decision focused on the Baptist-affiliated University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg, which wanted $10 million to build a pharmacy school and $1 million to start a pharmacy scholarship program.
Kentucky's Constitution prohibits state money from going to a "church, sectarian or denominational school," the court said. The funding, backed by Senate President David Williams, R-Burkesville, also violated the Constitution's rule against "special legislation" because it was intended exclusively for one small category of students, it said.
"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," Justice Lisabeth Hughes Abramson wrote for the majority, upholding a 2008 circuit court ruling that blocked the funding.Williams, who previously argued that the funding was legal, declined to comment Thursday.
Having lost twice in court, the University of the Cumberlands will drop its pharmacy school plans, said its president, James Taylor....
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Friday, April 23, 2010
State Supreme Court strikes down aid to religious school
This from the Herald-Leader:
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Nothing so wonderful as a good decision from the Kentucky Supreme Court...
The University of the Cumberlands, a Baptist-affiliated school, had no right to receive public funds.
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