From today's Lexington Herald Leader...
FRANKFORT, Ky. -- The Kentucky Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a Baptist university can't keep $11 million awarded by state lawmakers some four years ago to open a pharmacy school.
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Franklin County Special Circuit Judge Roger Crittenden had held in the initial ruling that the state appropriation violated a constitutional prohibition against public education money being spent on any "church, sectarian or denominational school."
The gay-rights group Kentucky Fairness Alliance filed the lawsuit in 2006 after the University of the Cumberlands expelled a gay student for posting comments about his sexual orientation and dating life on the Internet. Attorneys for the organization tried using the expulsion to bolster their arguments in the lawsuit that the school shouldn't receive funding from Kentucky taxpayers.
University of the Cumberlands argued that the state funding would help students and area residents alike by providing...
....STRAIGHT!!!.....
....pharmacists and other professionals needed in the Appalachian region, and that it was therefore a legitimate appropriation.
However, American Civil Liberties Union attorney Bill Sharp said Kentucky's constitution contains broader protections against public funding for private, church-affiliated schools than does the U.S. Constitution. Sharp said it appears some state lawmakers want to overlook those protections, which, he said, made the outcome of the lawsuit "extremely important."
I must say, I am pleasantly surprised by our Kentucky Supreme court on this. Even if their motivation wasn't the G/L/T/B community at heart, It still was a ruling that echos the separation of church and state in my opinion. What do you think?
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