Appealing from an adverse judgment of the district court, the parents of Andrew S., a disabled child who is attending a Catholic elementary school, assert that the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), 20 U.S.C. §§ 1400-87, is unconstitutional as applied to their son. While he, like other disabled children who go to private schools, receives some educational services under federal and state law, he is not entitled by law to the panoply of services available to disabled public school students under the rubric of free and appropriate public education (FAPE), nor to the due process hearing provided to public school students alone. Appellants argue that the difference in treatment of their disabled son, who is attending a religious school, from other disabled students, who are attending public schools, violates the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment to the federal constitution, the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the federal constitution, and the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act (“RFRA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000bb-l to -4.
The district court considered these contentions upon cross motions for summary judgment. Rejecting appellants’ claims, it granted the appellee Manchester School District’s motion for summary judgment and denied summary judgment to appellants.
Gary S. v. Manchester Sch. Dist.,
On appeal, appellants reiterate their contentions. After carefully considering them, we find ourselves in agreement with the district court. In disposing of this appeal, we are also in substantial accord with much of the reasoning contained in its published Memorandum and Order. Id. at 117-123. We see, therefore, no need to go over yet again all of the groundwork covered there. Nor need we restate the background facts already described in detail in the district court’s opinion. Id. at 113-17. We add, however, at some length, our own analysis of several of the key issues.
I.
Appellants’ lead argument on appeal is that the district court erred in determining that the federal law did not violate Andrew’s and his parents’ free exercise rights under the First Amendment. They reject the district court’s assertion that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Employment Div. Dep’t of Human Res. of Oregon v. Smith,
*18 [A] Jaw ordinarily need not be justified by a compelling interest if it is “neutral” in that it is not targeted at religiously motivated conduct and “generally applicable” in that it does not selectively burden religious conduct. See Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah,508 U.S. 520 , 532-35, 542-43,113 S.Ct. 2217 ,124 L.Ed.2d 472 (1993).
Gary S.,
IDEA and its regulations, the district court says, do not target religiously motivated conduct and is “generally applicable” in that it does not selectively burden religious conduct. For these reasons, and because appellants’ First Amendment claim is not “hybrid,” ie. is not linked to a separate constitutional claim, the district court found no violation of free exercise rights. Id. We do not disagree.
Appellants reject the district court’s analysis. They ask us to read
Smith
as limited to instances of socially harmful or criminal conduct. They point out that
Smith
did not purport to overrule the Supreme Court’s holdings in the cases of
Hobbie v. Unemployment Appeals Comm’n,
It is not always easy to predict what analytical framework the Supreme Court will apply to the various, factually dissimilar free exercise cases that arise.
Smith
rejected a free exercise claim involving the religiously-based use of peyote, an illegal substance. Writing for five of the Justices, Justice Scalia endorsed the constitutionality of neutral, generally applicable laws even when they impinged incidentally upon individual religious practices.
Smith,
We also agree, for the reasons the district court stated, that this case is not a “hybrid” one. Hence, we conclude that the district court analyzed the case under the correct standard.
Gary S.,
While we could perhaps leave the free exercise analysis there, an even more fundamental reason causes us to reject appellants’ First Amendment arguments. We cannot accept appellants’ contention that providing to all disabled attendees at private schools, both sectarian and secular, fewer benefits than those granted to public school attendees is truly analogous to denying unemployment benefits to persons fired because of their religiously-inspired insistence upon celebrating the Sabbath or not producing weapons.
The state unemployment benefits denied in
Hobbie, Thomas, Sherbert
were public benefits, available to all. Plaintiffs would have received them had their religiously-motivated refusal to work on a certain day or at a certain job not been erroneously viewed by local authorities as misconduct. While appellants say their son’s attendance at a Catholic school is likewise a religiously-motivated act, there is a basic difference. He and they are not being deprived of a
generally available
public benefit. Rather, the benefits to which appellants lay claim under the First Amendment are benefits the federal government has earmarked solely for students enrolled in the nation’s public schools — benefits still available for Andrew were he sent to a public school, though not otherwise. Since the early days of public education in this country, public financial aid has commonly been limited to public rather than independent schools. While the parents of private school attendees pay the same taxes as public school parents, the former’s tax money normally supports their own children’s education only if they transfer them to a public school. To be sure, parents have a protected right to send their children to private schools if they so desire.
Pierce v. Soc’y of Sisters,
Given the traditional pattern that has so far prevailed of financing public education via the public schools, it would be unreasonable and inconsistent to premise a free exercise violation upon Congress’s mere failure to provide to disabled children attending private religious schools the identical financial and other benefits it confers upon those attending public schools. Unlike unemployment benefits that are equally available to all, private school parents can have no legitimate expectancy that they or their children’s schools will receive the same federal or state financial benefits provided to public schools. Thus, the non-receipt of equal funding and programmatic benefits cannot be said to impose any cognizable “burden” upon the religion of those choosing to attend such schools. 2 Persons opting to attend private schools, religious or otherwise, must accept the. disadvantages as well as any benefits offered by those schools. They cannot insist, as a matter of constitutional right, that the disadvantages be cured by the provision of public funding. It follows that denying the benefits here, to which appellants have no cognizable entitlement, do not burden their free exercise rights.
Indeed, if we were to find a burden here on appellants’ right of free exercise, it would follow logically that we should find free exercise violations whenever a state, city or town refuses to fund programs of other types at religious schools, at least insofar as the absence of funding adversely affects students with parents who believe their faith requires attendance at a religious school.
3
Yet, as noted
supra,
it is
*21
clear there is no federal constitutional requirement that private schools be permitted to share with public schools in state largesse on an equal basis.
See, e.g., Norwood v. Harrison,
Accordingly, we see no basis for holding that the federal government violates appellants’ free exercise rights under the First Amendment by favoring disabled public school attendees in respect to IDEA’S programs and benefits. In so doing, the federal government does no more than state and local governments do everyday by funding public school programs while providing lesser or, more likely, no funding to private schools, religious and otherwise. This methodology leaves all parents with ultimate recourse to the public schools whenever the balance of services associated with attendance at a private school appears to them to be unsatisfactory; but the option thus available can necessitate their having to choose, as here, between alternatives each of which may seem imperfect. In any event, we cannot say that the federal government’s structuring of benefits here violates appellants’ free exercise rights.
II.
Our above-stated conclusion that no cognizable burden on religion has been caused by the federal government’s failure to provide to disabled children attending Catholic schools the same benefits as it provides to disabled public school children applies with equal force to appellants’ RFRA claim. 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb-l(a) (stating in part, “[gjovernment shall not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion even if the burden results from a rule of general applicability,.... ”).
The district court rejected appellants’ RFRA claim, finding no burden upon religion given this court’s
Strout
decision that “the Catholic faith does not require parents to educate their children in Catholic schools.”
Gary S.,
Assuming, without deciding, that appellants’ personal religious belief suffices for RFRA purposes, they still face the insur-. mountable hurdle we have discussed in the previous section, namely that the mere non-funding of private secular and religious school programs does not “burden” a person’s religion or the free exercise thereof. 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb-1(a). There *22 is no need to repeat what we have already said on this point. It suffices to say we find no cognizable “burden” being imposed here upon appellants’ exercise of their religion, hence no occasion to apply RFRA.
III.
Likewise, appellants’ equal protection claim fails, as the district court ruled. Appellants assert that IDEA has infringed upon their fundamental right to direct Andrew’s upbringing and education
4
because it deprives him of FAPE and a due process hearing while offering these benefits to students who receive special education services at public school and, therefore, should be subjected to strict scrutiny.
See Pierce,
To be sure, if a requirement imposed by a state significantly interferes with the exercise of a fundamental right, it cannot be upheld unless it is supported by sufficiently important state interests and is closely tailored to effectuate only those interests.
See, e.g., Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Dep’t of Health,
Accordingly, we apply rational basis scrutiny to the IDEA and conclude, as did the district court, that the statutory classification at issue here between public and private school students bears a rational relationship to the furtherance of a legitimate governmental purpose.
Regan,
IV.
Lastly, we agree with the district court that appellants’ substantive due process claim fails. Appellants argue that the federal law requires them to forego their religious beliefs and their right to control their child’s education in order to obtain the same right to FAPE and due process that other students who receive special education services at Manchester receive. As appellants allege that the government has attempted to condition access to a government benefit on the relinquishment of a constitutional right, the district court correctly analyzed this claim under the framework of the “unconstitutional conditions” doctrine. The court noted that both the Supreme Court and the First Circuit have “consistently refused to invalidate laws which condition a parent’s ability to obtain educational benefits on the parent’s relinquishment of her right to send her child to private school.”
See Norwood,
We AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
Notes
. To be sure, the Court has recently permitted a state legislature to provide for attendance at private schools at public expense if it so desires.
Cf. Zelman v. Simmons-Harris,
. We recognize the disability program provided to Andrew is not one furnished directly by the Catholic school, but is instead run by public authorities for children who attend private school. But we see no distinction in principle. It is, of course, also true that the federal government and state are here actually funding programs for disabled children such as Andrew, the complaint being not the total absence of a program but that Andrew's program and rights are less comprehensive than those accorded to public school students. Again, we see no difference in principle. The federal and state governments are entitled to fund programs associated with private schools if they so desire, provided they do not run afoul of the Establishment Clause. Our point is not that such funding is never allowed, but that it is not commonly expected in our society nor required.
.A further anomaly of such a holding would ' be that only persons such as appellants, with a declared religious belief in the necessity of sending their children to private schools, would be entitled under the First Amendment to the funding sought. Other students, including those in secular private schools, would lack a right to such funding.
Cf. Locke v. Davey,
. Appellants also argue that the distinctions made here deny their child the right to access an adequate education and a "basic floor of educational opportunity” and therefore should be analyzed under heightened scrutiny. They concede that the Supreme Court found there is no fundamental right to education, but argue that the Court left open the issue of whether the denial of a "minimally adequate education” would be subjected to heightened scrutiny.
See San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist.
v.
Rodriguez,
