In 2013, the Kansas Board of Education (the “Board”) adopted curriculum standards establishing performance expectations for science instruction in kindergarten through twelfth grade. Appellants— Citizens for Objective Public Education, Kansas parents, and school children (collectively, “COPE”) — contend that although the standards purport to further science education, their concealed aim is to teach students to answer questions about the cause and nature of life with only nonreligious explanations. COPE thus claims injury under the Establishment Clause because: (1) the Board’s adoption of the Standards has communicated a religious symbol or message' and breached plaintiff parents’ trust; and (2) Kansas schools’ implementation of the Standards is imminent and will result in anti-religious instruction.
We conclude all three theories of injury fail. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.
I
In 2011, the National Research Council
As the Standards themselves, state, they are “not intended to define .course structure.” Instead, Kansas law provides that they are guideposts for school districts, which retain control to shape and adopt their own curricula. Kan. Stat. § 72-6479(b) (curriculum standards “shall [not] be construed in any manner so as to impinge -upon any district’s authority to determine-its own curriculum”). Thus, the Standards simply' establish performance expectations for what students should “know and" be able to do” at each grade level.
COPE is an organization formed to promote the religious rights of parents, students, and taxpayers. Its members include individuals whose children are, or expect to be, enrolled in Kansas public schools. COPE alleges that the Standards violate the Establishment Clause, U.S. Const, amend. I, by seeking to establish a non-religious worldview in the guise of science education,
II
The district court held that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over this suit because COPE lacks standing. We review the district court’s determination regarding subject matter jurisdiction- de novo. Niemi v. Lasshofer,
In the Establishment Clause context, “standing .is clearly conferred by [injury to] non-economic religious values” but litigants must “identify, a.personal injury suffered by them as a consequence of the alleged constitutional error, other than the psychological consequence presumably produced by observation of conduct with which one disagrees.” Awad v. Ziriax,
COPE argues it, suffered three injuries sufficient to support standing. It contends first that the adoption of the standards created an actual injury both by adopting.a religious symbol and by breaching parents’ trust in the Kansas school system. It also argues that future injury is imminent because the standards compel Kansas schools to teach objectionable material. Finally, it alleges that two appellants have standing as taxpayers who object to their tax dollars being used for religious (or anti-religious) purposes. Each of COPE’s arguments fails. ' .
A
COPE alleges that the Board’s act of adopting the Standards, without more, created concrete injury-in-fact. COPE argues the Standards are a symbol of a nonreligious worldview, adoption of which violates the “right to be free from government that favors one religious view over another.” To support this claimed injury, COPE relies on Awad,
In Awad, we held that .the adoption of a statute that singled out an individual religion for disfavored legal treatment is sufficient to cause injury to a member of that religion' for standing purposes under the Establishment Clause.
COPE also contends that the adoption breached its trust by violating both the parents’ right to direct their children’s religious education, and the children’s right to public education without,religious'(and non-religious) indoctrination, contrary to Edwards v. Aguillard,
B
COPE also asserts injury because Ibcal school districts’ potential implementation of the Standards will cause science to be taught in a manner that violates religious liberties. For this potential future injury to support standing, the injury must be “certainly impending.” Clapper,
In sum, because the districts may choose not to adopt the Standards, or may alter the Standards in ways that alleviate Appellants’ concerns, potential future injury from the Standards themselves is speculative and insufficient to support standing.
C
Finally, two appellants assert standing on the theory that they object to their tax dollars being spent to support the Standards. Appellants do not raise this argument in their opening brief, and so it is waived. Adler,
Ill
The district court’s disihissal for lack of standing is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The National Research Council is the principal operating agency of the National Academy of Sciences — a non-governmental organization organized under Congressional.charter in 1863 to advise the federal government on scientific and engineering issues.
. The parties cite Kan. Stat. § 72-6439. Kansas repealed § 72-6439 effective July 1, 2015. 2015 Kansas Session Laws Ch. 4 § 81. But the legislature enacted a new statute that contains all of the provisions previously in § 72-6439. 2015 Kan. Sess. Laws Ch. 4 § 20; Kan. Stat. § 72-6479. For ease, we cite the new statute.
. For example,' the “Biological Evolution" section of the Standards states that by the end of grade two students should know that “[s]ome kinds .of plants and animals that once lived on Earth (e.g., dinosaurs) are no longer found anywhere”; “[l]iving things can only survive where their needs are met”; and “there are many different kinds of living things in any area, and they exist in different places on land and in water.”
.COPE’s complaint also alleges that the Standards violate the First Amendment’s Free Exercise and Free Speech Clauses and the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. COPE makes only passing references to these claims on appeal. In particular, COPE does not* identify or apply the test for determining whether a cognizable injury exists for-these claims. See Ward v. Utah,
. Edwards and other cases COPE relies on do not discuss standing, and so do not stand for the proposition that a standing defect did not exist on the facts of those cases. Arizona Christian Sch. Tuition Org. v. Winn,
. Although we do not reach the merits, we note that COPE asks the court to implement a requirement identical to the one imposed by the statute in Edwards. COPE frames the materialism of evolutionary theory as a religious belief competing with COPE’s own teleological religion, and demands that if evolution is taught, ’’teleological origins theories must also be taught. The Edwards Court expressly held such a requirement unconstitutional.
. COPE argues that implementing the Standards is effectively or practically required— and thus certainly impending — because: (1) ‘ Kansas law requires that districts meet or exceed minimum requirements, and the adopted Standards can be viewed as the baseline for these requirements; (2) the Standards are intended to, and do, guide local revisions to curricula; (3) the Board controls accreditation and financing for teacher training, and may use these .tools to guide curriculum development; (4) the districts have implemented similar standards in the past; (5) some districts are in the process of implementing the Standards; and (6) the Standards are detailed and comprehensive, so even though districts may change them, it is easier for them to simply adopt the Standards as-is. However, COPE did not raise any of these arguments below, and they are waived. Wilburn v. Mid-S. Health Dev., Inc.,
. COPE argues that districts will likely implement the Standards without change. It is difficult to grasp'how districts would do so, given the Standards’ statements that they are not curricula, and their plea that districts reach beyond the Standards to ensure students’ needs are met. Nevertheless, COPE asserts that implementation-without-change is an option, 'and we have assumed that assertion is accurate for purposes of our analysis.
. Relatedly, COPE argues that it will be onerous or impossible for objecting parents to opt-out of the Standards, which will permeate all aspects of school curricula. But until school districts implement the Standards in an objectionable way, there is nothing to opt-out of.
. Regardless, COPE has not shown that these alleged future injuries are fairly traceable to the challenged action. Id. COPE acknowledges that evolution is the dominant origins theory in American culture, which suggests COPE would fear objectionable teaching of origins sciences even without the Standards’ recommendations. This suggestion is supported by COPE’s assertion below that the previous version of the Standards incorporated the same methods COPE finds objectionable in the new version. Thus, the alleged absence of Objective curricula is not fairly traceable to the Standards.
.COPE’s alleged injuries are also not re-dressable by a favorable ruling. Id. COPE asks us to issue a declaratory judgment and to enjoin the Standards either entirely or as applied to elementary and middle school students, and to require objective teaching of Origins science in high school. But none of these remedies would redress the alleged threat of a biased, subjective version of evolu- • tion. Again, schools may incorporate the Standards or other curricula regardless of whether the Board, has officially adopted them. And even with a favorable ruling from this court, schools could teach evolution in a manner COPE finds objectionable. Implementation therefore turns on the decisions of ■third-parties that are not before us. Allen v. Wright,
