| Thursday, February 6, 2003 | Print This | Email This |
|
Faith-based initiatives quietly lunge forward
By Linda Feldmann
WASHINGTON
- When the Senate failed last year to act on President Bush's
signature
"faith-based initiative," the White House did not give up.
Bit by bit, through executive orders and changes in agency
regulations, the administration has been carrying out the initiative
anyway.
Its goal is to allow religious groups to compete more easily for
federal
funds to address under-served social needs, such as helping the
homeless and
the drug-addicted. Seven government departments now have faith-based
offices, which steer religious groups toward billions of dollars in
grant
money.
Yesterday, the Senate Finance Committee was set to approve
legislation that would allow people who do not itemize on their taxes
to
deduct a portion of their charitable giving, a move that would benefit
religious organizations. But among the president's faith-based plans,
this
item isn't especially controversial.
The most controversial proposal to date has come out of the
Department of Housing and Urban Development: HUD has proposed a change
in
its rules to allow taxpayer money to be used for the construction,
acquisition, or rehabilitation of houses of worship. Under the plan,
the
government would subsidize those portions of a building that would be
used
for social services, such as food pantries, counseling, or homeless
shelters.
Until now, HUD has been the only federal agency that explicitly
forbade grants to religious groups. If the new rule is approved, after
the
public comment period ends in mid-March, that restriction would no
longer
apply.
Civil liberties groups have promised legal action if the plan
goes
into effect, arguing that it violates the constitutional principle of
separation of church and state. Even some supporters of the
administration's
overall faith-based initiative believe the HUD plan goes too
far.
"It's as close to the church-state line as I think the
administration
has gotten," says Joe Loconte, a religion fellow at the Heritage
Foundation.
"When government money goes directly to houses of worship, it will
invite
unnecessary government intrusion. My concern is for the health and
independence of religious institutions."
He and others support an alternative: the use of vouchers. A
homeless
person could receive a voucher at a government-run shelter and use it
at a
religious one. That would remove the government from the construction
of
religious buildings and insulate HUD from issues of church-state
separation.
Already, Bush in his State of the Union address proposed a $600 million
voucher program that would allow drug addicts to choose between
religious
and secular programs. By receiving federal funds through vouchers,
faith-based drug-addiction programs could retain religious
content.
Jim Towey, director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and
Community Initiatives, says the voucher concept would be hard to apply
to
building and renovation. He asks: "How does improving a building get
done
through vouchers?"
Advocates of the faith-based initiative point to the Supreme
Court's
decision last June allowing Cleveland to use vouchers to help pay for
children's education at parochial or nonreligious schools. The key is
that
the children have a choice between religious and secular options. It's
a far
cry from the late 1940s, when the court ruled that no government
assistance
could go to any religious institution, period.
The Cleveland case, and other recent rulings, have laid out a
principle of equal treatment for religious and secular groups. The
administration, fueled by Bush's own religious convictions, is trying
to
"level the playing field" for religious groups providing social
services.
"The president feels strongly that this initiative is about the poor,
not
about process," says Mr. Towey.
"Charitable choice" is not new. Under the welfare reform of
1996,
faith-based organizations can compete for federal grants. In 2001, the
House
of Representatives passed faith-based legislation with new
charitable-choice
provisions that would have allowed faith groups to apply for federal
grants
without playing down their religious messages. The measure stalled in
the
Senate over an amendment that would have required religious
organizations
receiving federal funds not to discriminate in hiring on the basis of
religion.
Now that Republicans control the Senate again, the lead sponsors
of
the "charitable choice" legislation - Rick Santorum (R) of Pennsylvania
and
Joe Lieberman (D) of Connecticut - will try again to pass their bill
without
the hiring provision.
Looking down the road, though, the Supreme Court can expect more
cases addressing the constitutionality of the faith-based
initiative.
The group Americans United for Separation of Church and State is
looking especially closely at the proposals on building construction
and on
the use of vouchers for drug treatment. Both will take time to work
their
way through the courts. But if the proposal on construction comes to
pass,
"that effort is doomed," says Barry Lynn, head of Americans
United.
The Christian Science Monitor, csmonitor.com and other related marks used on this site are trademarks owned by The Christian Science Publishing Society. Materials may not be modified, distributed, retransmitted, or used, in whole or in part, in derivative works. All other uses, including reprinting, republishing, broadcast, or any further distribution require written permission from The Christian Science Publishing Society. |