The single question in this case is whether, by its conduct in licensing 1 temporarily available school facilities to others for expressive activities, defendant is barred by the First Amendment from refusing parties who wish to engage in religious speech. Plaintiffs, Grace Bible Fellowship, Inc., a non-profit religious organization, and Peter Sheff, its founder and pastor, sue Maine School Administrative District # 5 (SAD 5), a public school district organized under Maine law, seeking a declaration and an injunction. Plaintiffs had sought to lease school facilities for the purpose of giving a free Christmas community dinner. SAD 5 had no objection to the dinner, but refused because, although there was to be no membership solicitation, or collection, the dinner was to be accompanied by an evangelical message, and defendant had a standing policy not to lease for activities “for the direct advancement of religion.” Following a day’s trial the court held that the permission defendant had extended to other activities was so broad that it had created a public forum, from which, constitutionally, it could not exclude plaintiffs. Defendant appealed. The dinner has been given, but the appeal is not mooted, as plaintiffs have a permanent injunction and are likely to request the premises again. 2
The court’s oral summary of facts, with some omissions, is as follows.
1. Grace Bible Fellowship, Inc., a nonprofit religious organization, seeks, through its pastor, Rev. Peter Sheff, to use SAD 5’s Rockland High School cafeteria on a weekend evening in December for a Christmas dinner. It was denied permission in 1988 and 1989. It seeks permission anew for 1990.
2. The dinner will be free and open to the public. There will be carol singing, a Santa Claus, gifts for each child, and Rev. Sheff will speak briefly on what he considers to be the true meaning of Christmas; and, according to the stipulation, shall, I quote, urge people to believe in Jesus Christ as their lord and saviour, close quote.
8. SAD ... policy, as intended and as applied in practice, is that any group may use the facilities, as long as they do not seek to propagate or propound a religious message....
4. The justification for the policy as applied to the exclusion of religious groups is ... specifically, to avoid an unconstitutional establishment of religion, to avoid community divisiveness, controversy, and avoid any identification of the school with religion.
9. Use of the high school by a group that would promote a religious message, as Grace Bible proposes to do, is opposed by some member[s] of the community and will therefore be controversial and divisive for them. Others do not object, and for them it will not be controversial or divisive.
The court could have added the obvious, that the exclusion itself was divisive.
Cf. Board of Education v. Mergens,
— U.S. -,
After a thoughtful review in light of the appropriate Supreme Court decisions as applied to the facts as it further spelled them out, the court reached the following conclusions.
*47 SAD 5 has created a designated public forum in off-school hours in the use of its school facilities and, in particular, the high school building and cafeteria; SAD 5 has no compelling state interest for excluding occasional use of the forum by a religious group or a group with a religious message; SAD 5, therefore, cannot exclude the proposed religious use in this case.
The guiding legal principles are simple, and undisputed. That the school is, in effect, state property does not require that it be a forum for speech.
United States v. Kokinda,
— U.S. -,
Alternatively, “a public forum may be created for a limited purpose, such as use by certain groups,”
id.
at 46 n. 7,
We start with defendant’s actions, as actual practice speaks louder than words. 3 Even a partial list of recent users, and the purposes for which they used the school facilities, is revealing. The American Association of Retired People sought members, as did Up With People. Kitchen and Meeting Room People held suppers to benefit a community kitchen (stipulated by defendant to be “expressive activity”). Other charities, such as Pen Bay Hospital, and Hospitality House, conducted various fund-raising enterprises. United Parcel Service held a meeting to solicit employees. 4 As against this broad permission, far beyond educational, or student, interest, defendant is unable to cite an example within memory of a refusal to any group other than to religious organizations. The reply to our remark during oral argument that anyone could be promoted except Jesus, that all religions were excluded, did not mean that a broad access forum was legally limited.
Defendant is in no different position under the terms of its published Policy Considerations, properly read. That provides as follows,
(1) The facilities of the School District should continue not to be open forums available for indiscriminate use by the general public. Rather, access to school facilities should be limited to uses reasonably compatible with the mission and function of the school district in the community.
(2) Activities directly connected to the educational mission of the school should continue to receive priority over all other uses.
(3) School facilities are community assets, and their utility should be maximized to the extent consistent with the mission and function of the schools.
(4) The School District plays an important role as a positive social force in promoting community cohesiveness and stability, and policies governing facilities use should reflect that role.
*48 (5) Because the School District serves equally children of all racial and ethnic groups, and from families of all religious affiliations, the School District should maintain a stance of strict neutrality on matters such as religion.
The pronouncement in the first sentence of section (1) denying indiscriminate use is incipiently weakened by the sentence following. It is contradicted by sections (3) and (4). Defendant’s contention that its forum is limited, like
Perry’s,
neglects to read that opinion fully, particularly a significant quote. “[U]se by the Girl Scouts, the local boys’ club, and other organizations that engage in activities of interest and educational relevance to students ... would not as a consequence ... [be] open.”
Perry,
A policy, however well meant, to give access to whatever is good for the community, unless, in the judgment of the school board, it is injurious to the school, is not in any legal or practical sense limited, but is selection, and, if based on word content, censorship.
5
In fact some might think that excluding religion while permitting all else “would demonstrate not neutrality but hostility towards religion.”
See Board of Education v. Mergens,
— U.S. -,
The question, however, is not presented. If its establishing a public forum solely advanced school interests, there could be a First Amendment conflict to be resolved. Compare
Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense and Educ. Fund, Inc.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The exact legal term is not important, but there is a writing, a charge is made, and conditions are specified.
. The injunction forbids defendant's denying use to plaintiffs "for religious expression so long as MSAD #5 maintains its public forum.”
. Defendant’s brief speaks often of its expressed intent. Manifestly, if there is a conflict, it is to be judged by what it does, not by what it says.
See Concerned Women for America v. Lafayette County,
. In disagreement with the district court, we do not consider use by political parties, organizations, or individuals, since this is a use imposed on defendant by statute. Me.Rev.Stat. 20-A, § 1001(4) (1990). By placing this special obligation on defendant the legislature did not create a public forum. By the same token, it would be unfair to penalize, or charge defendant with this use if it were otherwise conducting a limited forum.
. It is, of course, of no consequence that defendant does not discriminate on the basis of the particular religious viewpoint, but only on the subject.
Carey v. Brown,
. Defendant, properly, does not contend that opening the forum to religious expression would violate the establishment clause.
Widmar v. Vincent,
