Justice Department backs Michigan private schools in virus challenge

Single desks are spaced out in a classroom after being delivered in view of the reopening of the school year, at the Augusto High School, in Rome, Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2020. Schools in Italy are scheduled to reopen Sept. 14 after over 5 months of closure due to the coronavirus pandemic. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini (Andrew Medichini, Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

KALAMAZOO, Mich. – The U.S. Justice Department said Friday it’s on the side of Michigan faith-based schools that are challenging the state’s ban on in-person classes in high schools.

The department's Civil Rights Division filed an argument in favor of three Catholic high schools and the Michigan Association of Non-Public Schools. A federal judge in Kalamazoo will hear arguments Monday.

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Schools and families have a constitutional right to practice their religion through in-person instruction, the government said, citing a recent U.S. Supreme Court order that barred New York from enforcing certain restrictions on religious services in areas hit hard by the coronavirus.

“The state has failed to make any provision for consideration of the religious need of plaintiffs for in-person religious education which they sincerely believe cannot be done remotely,” the Justice Department said.

A three-week ban on in-person classes at high schools and colleges was extended this week through Dec. 20. Indoor restaurant dining is also prohibited, along with high school sports, group fitness classes and trips to theaters and casinos.

The health department said the restrictions were necessary to control the spread of COVID-19, especially after Thanksgiving gatherings. The state reported 5,100 newly confirmed cases Friday and 61 deaths.

You can read the Justice Department’s statement in the document below.


Read more: Return to School


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