MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff, Ira W. Madison, is an inmate under the supervision of the Virginia Department of Corrections seeking relief under the First Amendment and the Religious Land Use arid Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 (“RLUIPA”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc-l (2002), for the alleged violation of his right to free exercise of religion. In an August 23, 2002 opinion, the Court denied summary judgment on the Plaintiffs First Amendment claim, holding that there was a material factual dispute concerning the sincerity of the Plaintiffs religious beliefs. The Court also denied qualified immunity to the Defendants, finding that the constitutional standards governing the Defendants’ conduct were clearly established.
The Court took Plaintiffs RLUIPA claim under advisement until the constitutionality of the Act could be briefed and argued. The Court heard oral arguments from the parties and the United States *568 Government as intervener, and the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Plaintiffs RLUIPA claim on the basis that the Act violates the United States Constitution is ripe for resolution.
I
The facts of the present case are explained in detail in the Court’s August 23, 2002, opinion. For purposes of this motion, a short review of the facts is appropriate. The Plaintiff claims to be a member of a particular sect of the Hebrew Israelite faith, based out of the Beth El Temple in Norfolk, Virginia. The Plaintiff argues that his faith requires him to consume a kosher diet, provided by the Department of Corrections in particular prison facilities under the name “Common Fare Diet.”
The Plaintiff first requested the Common Fare Diet on July 27, 2000, while an inmate at Greenville Correctional Center. Local officials at the facility approved the request, but Central Classifications Services (“CCS”), a Richmond-based agency of the Virginia Department of Corrections which must review all such requests, overturned the approval upon the belief that Plaintiff had no compelling religious reason to participate in the diet, that he could satisfy his dietary needs from the regular food line, and that he had not shown a sincere belief in his religion. Plaintiff made a second request for the diet after his transfer to Bland Correction Center in March of 2001. Again, local officials approved the request but CCS reversed the decision and denied Plaintiff the diet. After his administrative appeals were denied within the prison system, the Plaintiff filed this suit on August 6, 2001.
II
The History of RLUIPA
On April 17, 1990, the Supreme Court of the United States decided
Employment Division, Dept. of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith,
The Court’s prediction was fulfilled, and perhaps exceeded in degree, just three years later, when Congress passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (“RFRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb (2002). The stated purpose of the Act is to “restore the compelling interest test as set forth in Sherbert v. Verner and Wisconsin v. Yoder and to guarantee its application in all cases where free exercise of religion is *569 substantially burdened.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb(b)(1). The Act consequently forbids the government from substantially burdening a person’s exercise of religion, even in the case of generally applicable laws, unless the government can demonstrate that the burden is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest and is the least restrictive means of furthering that interest. Id. § 2000bb-1(b).
The back-and-forth between Congress and the Supreme Court on the applicability of the
Sherbert
strict scrutiny test to laws of general applicability continued in 1997 when a challenge to the constitutionality of RFRA reached the Supreme Court in
City of Boerne v. Flores,
The Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 represents Congress’s attempt to reestablish RFRA’s strict scrutiny standard while avoiding the constitutional infirmities that led to the invalidation of RFRA. Congress narrowed the reach of the strict scrutiny test in RLUIPA to zoning ordinances and institutionalized persons and avoided § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment as the source of its authority to act, opting instead to use the Spending Power and the Commerce Clause. 42 U.S.C. § 2000ce-1(b)(1) & (2). At the same time, Congress made no changes to RFRA’s strict scrutiny test, merely adopting the test in RLUIPA. Section 2000ce-l(a) of the Act, the section covering the claims of prison inmates, reads as follows:
No government shall impose a substantial burden on the religious exercise of a person residing in or confined to an institution, as defined in section 1997 of this title, even if the burden results from a rule of general applicability, unless the government demonstrates that imposition of the burden on that person-
(1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and
(2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.
RLUIPA requires the inmate to bear the burden of persuasion concerning the substantial burden imposed on his religious exercise, and then, as in any strict scrutiny case, the government bears the burden of persuasion on the remaining elements of the test. Id. § 2000cc-2(b). 2
*570 The match between the judiciary and the legislature over the use of the Sherbert test continues to play out, as the question of the constitutionality of RLUIPA is presently before this Court. The answer to this question depends on the ability of Congress to cure the constitutional problems presented by RFRA in passing RLUIPA, despite the Supreme Court’s strong suggestion in City of Boeme that the strict scrutiny test imposed by RFRA and RLUIPA has constitutional problems independent of Congress’s power to enact such a statute.
Ill
The Constitutionality of RLUIPA
The Defendants claim that RLUIPA exceeds Congress’s authority under the Spending and Commerce Clauses, and violates the Tenth Amendment, Establishment Clause, and the Separation of Powers. The Defendants’ claims have been rejected by the few courts that have reviewed the constitutionality of RLUIPA.
See Mayweathers v. Newland,
The United States disagrees with the courts that have interpreted City of Boeme broadly to invalidate any application of strict scrutiny to laws of general applicability and argues that the narrower reach of RLUIPA and its passage under the Spending and Commerce Clause cured the infirmities that rendered RFRA unconstitutional. With due respect to the courts that have found RLUIPA constitutional, this Court is of the opinion that RLUIPA’s application of the Sherbert strict scrutiny standard to the free exercise claims of religious inmates is a clear violation of the Establishment Clause, having the primary effect of advancing religion above other fundamental rights and conscientious beliefs. 3
*571 A
The Establishment Clause
The First Amendment to the Constitution provides that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” This language has been interpreted by the Supreme Court to guard against laws that promote all religions equally, in addition to laws that attempt to promote one particular religion over all others.
See Bd. of Educ. of Kiryas Joel Village School Dist. v. Grumet,
However, vigilance is not synonymous with antipathy. The so-called wall that separates church and state is anything but impenetrable, as total separation has been recognized by the Supreme Court and Fourth Circuit to be a mythical, and perhaps dangerous, objective.
See Lynch v. Donnelly,
Congress is not without any guidelines to act in the area of religious belief, however, as the Supreme Court has established as a fundamental requirement of the Religion Clauses the necessity of legislative neutrality towards religious belief.
Agostini v. Felton,
Neutrality is an effective guideline for constitutional state action, because it incorporates the concept of “benevolent neutrality,” recognizing that government may provide benefits to religion with facially neutral exemptions and benefits.
See Kiryas Joel,
The answer to this question, often an unclear and ambiguous inquiry, can be sharpened somewhat by the use of the three-part inquiry established in
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
In evaluating the constitutionality of congressional action under the
Lemon
inquiry, the search for impermissible effects and excessive entanglement has often proved to be the most critical test.
See, e.g., Estate of Thornton, v. Caldor, Inc.,
B
The Principal and Primary Effect of RLUIPA is to Advance Religion by Elevating Religious Rights Above All Other Fundamental Rights
In 1987, the Supreme Court, in two landmark decisions, developed a “rational-relationship” test to govern an inmate’s claim that a prison regulation or action of a prison administrator burdens his constitutional rights.
See Turner v. Safley,
The
Turner
rational relationship test represents a balance between the need to recognize the continuing vitality of the constitutional rights of inmates, and the fact that incarceration necessarily involves a retraction of some rights.
See O’Lone,
Before RLUIPA, the deference in
O’Lone
and
Turner
to the decisions of prison administrators applied equally to all claims based on the violation of fundamental rights,
7
including, among others,
*574
free speech claims,
Amatel v. Reno,
The right to free exercise of religion did not escape the reach of
Turner.
In
O’Lone,
the Supreme Court upheld the rational relationship test as the appropriate standard for inmates’ claims under the Free Exercise Clause, despite the unquestionably burdensome effect of the challenged prison regulation on the religious exercise of Muslim inmates.
While the judiciary saw fit to treat religious rights the same as other fundamental rights under
Turner,
Congress viewed these rights differently in passing RLUIPA. RLUIPA singles out religious rights from the fundamental rights encom
*575
passed within the
Turner
test and establishes a drastically increased level of protection for such rights. Under RLUIPA, prison regulations that substantially burden religious belief, including those that are generally applicable and facially neutral, are judged under a strict scrutiny standard, requiring prison officials, rather than the inmate, to bear the burden of proof that the regulation furthers a compelling penological interest and is the least restrictive means of satisfying this interest. 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc-1. As is well known from the history of constitutional law, the change that RLUIPA imposes is revolutionary, switching from a scheme of deference to one of presumptive unconstitutionality.
See
Smith,
What makes this increased level of protection for religious rights, and religious rights only, constitutionally questionable is the fact that there is no demonstrable evidence that religious constitutional rights are at any greater risk of deprivation in the prison system than other fundamental rights. While the supporters of RLUIPA, in arguing for the passage of the Act, noted that “some institutions restrict religious liberty in egregious and unnecessary ways” as a result of either “indifference, ignorance, bigotry, or lack of resources,”
see
Statements of Senators Hatch and Kennedy, 146 Cong. Rec. S7774-01, S7775 (2000), they never made the claim that other fundamental rights held by inmates are not similarly threatened by prison administrators. Indifference, bigotry, and cost concerns have the same restrictive effect on the freedom of speech, the ability to marry, the right to privacy, and countless other freedoms that RLUIPA proponents left to a lesser level of protection under
Turner. See, e.g., Cornell v. Woods,
If the reach of RLUIPA had been limited to prison regulations that specifically targeted and discriminated against religious belief, it would be much more difficult to decide the Act’s constitutionality. However, RLUIPA extends far beyond regulations targeting religion, protecting
*576
religious inmates against even generally applicable and facially neutral prison regulations that have a substantial effect on a multitude of fundamental rights.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000cc-1(a). Such protections give religious rights a substantially greater level of protection than other fundamental rights held by inmates. Assume, for example, that a prison official confiscates white supremacist literature held by two different inmates. One inmate is a member of the Aryan Nation solely because of his fanatical belief that a secret Jewish conspiracy exists to control the world. The second inmate holds the white supremacist literature because he is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ Christian, Aryan Nation (“CJCC”). The nonreligious inmate may challenge the confiscation as a violation of his rights to free expression and free association. A court would evaluate these claims under the deferential rational relationship test in
Turner,
placing a high burden of proof on the inmate and leaving the inmate with correspondingly dim prospects of success.
See Haff v. Cooke,
The singling out of religious belief as the one fundamental right of prisoners deserving of legislative protection rejects any notion of congressional neutrality in the passage of RLUIPA. In the absence of any proof that religious rights are more at risk in prison than other fundamental rights, and with the knowledge that strict scrutiny is not required to protect the religious belief of prisoners under the Free Exercise Clause, Congress acted only to protect religious rights. Such an action, while labeled a neutral “accommodation,” is not in fact neutral at all, and the Court is not allowed to defer to the mere characterization of RLUIPA as such.
See Wallace,
While Congress could constitutionally legislate to raise the level of protection for all of the fundamental rights of prisoners, doing so only for the right to religious exercise when all fundamental rights are equally at risk in the prison system has the principal effect of raising religious rights to a position superior to that of all other rights held by prisoners. As a result, RLUIPA has the principal and primary effect of advancing religious belief.
*578 C
The Impermissible Effect of RLUIPA in Promoting Religion Has a Direct Effect on the Status of Religious and Non-religious Inmates in Prison Society
The danger in privileging religious rights over all other fundamental rights can be seen in the way in which the greater protections offered by RLUIPA place religious individuals in a position of privilege relative to non-religious individuals in prison.
As discussed previously in this opinion, only interests of the highest order may satisfy the compelling interest standard of the strict scrutiny test.
10
If “ ‘compelling interest’ really means what it says ... many laws will not meet the test.”
Smith,
Moreover, the substantial burden requirement leaves a court very little power to narrow the cases that come to court. Courts are severely limited in evaluating whether the inmate’s stated religious practice is worthy of RLUIPA protections, as the courts cannot give close scrutiny to the importance or centrality of the religious practice in question to the believer’s faith.
See
42 U.S.C. § 2000cc-5(7)(A) (“The term ‘religious exercise’ includes any exercise of religion, whether or not compelled by, or central to, a system of religious belief.”);
see also Thomas v. Review Bd. of Ind. Employment Sec. Division,
RLUIPA, in placing religious inmates in such a position of power, requires a prison to measure “the effects of ... action on an objector’s spiritual development,” effectively making a religious inmate “a law unto himself.”
See Smith,
RLUIPA is just beginning to come into use by inmates bringing religious constitutional claims against prisons. However, federal courts have already found the following generally applicable and facially neutral prison regulations to be, or to have the potential to be, unconstitutional as applied to religious inmates under the RFRA
11
strict scrutiny test: (1) Grooming policies requiring hair to be worn short and beards to be cut,
Gartrell v. Ashcroft,
Looking at the range of exceptions provided under the strict scrutiny test, it is not a logical stretch, in predicting the practical effects of RLUIPA, to imagine a prison in which religious prisoners are allowed to wear religious headgear and reli
*580
gious icons, have ungroomed hair and beards, receive extremist literature from outside the prison, refuse to submit to general medical tests and vaccinations, keep religious objects in their cells, and receive special diets. Meanwhile, non-religious inmates in the same prison must be clean shaven, wear prison issued clothing, submit to medical exams, and eat whatever is provided in the cafeteria. If the nonreligious prisoner wants the same freedoms that the religious inmate possesses, he has two choices. First, if a prison regulation, such as a limitation on the inmate’s ability to receive and keep photographs deemed obscene by prison officials, arguably burdens his First Amendment freedoms, the inmate may choose to challenge the regulation under the deferential
Turner
rational relationship test. Second, the inmate could claim religious rebirth and cloak himself in the protections of RLUIPA, a possibility that concerned courts under RFRA.
See Sasnett,
Whether or not non-religious inmates actually feel pressure under RLUIPA to conform their beliefs to coincide with the protections of the Act, prison administrators’ compliance with the Act and the various exceptions provided for religious prisoners under the Act send non-religious inmates a message that they are outsiders of a privileged community. This effect is a clear violation of the Establishment Clause.
The core notion animating the requirement that a statute possess “a secular legislative purpose” and that “its principal or primary effect ... be one that neither advances nor inhibits religion,” is not only that government may not be overtly hostile to religion but also that it may not place its prestige, coercive authority, or resources behind a single religious faith or behind religious belief in general, compelling non-adherents to support the practices or proselytizing of favored religious organizations and conveying the message that those who do not contribute gladly are less than full members of the community.
Texas Monthly,
The political community affected by RLUIPA in the present case is a unique one, as members of this community are already in a position in which conformity is a mandated norm.
See Amatel,
However, as seen by the exceptions made for prisoners under RFRA, this is not a question of small, single exceptions. RLUIPA forces prison administrators to focus specifically on the needs of religious prisoners, providing a number of exceptions to religious inmates from generally applicable prison regulations. While it is true that the exceptions religious inmates receive through RLUIPA do not provide them absolute, unqualified freedom, the level of power it provides them is not judged in a vacuum under the objective observer test. Rather, the power that a congressional act provides to a religious inmate must be analyzed in relation to the position of non-religious inmates in prison society. Under RLUIPA, whether the difference between religious and non-religious inmates exists in tangible privileges or the mere right to gain greater attention from prison administrators and the courts, religious inmates have far greater governmental support and power than non-religious inmates whose lives and rights are completely dominated by prison administrators. O’Lone and Turner give little comfort to those non-believers who must eat a common diet, undergo ordinary medical examinations, have their mail censored, and have their worldly possessions taken away from them, all the while witnessing religious inmates being exempted from the reach of these rules. An objective inmate, as opposed to an objective congressman or judge, would have no doubt that RLUIPA has established religious inmates as “favored members” of the prison community.
As all of the rights of inmates are burdened under the prison system, this is not an example of a law that an objective observer would see as merely lifting a burden imposed only on religion.
See Amos,
*582 Conclusion
It is often difficult to determine the lines of demarcation between free exercise and establishment, and accommodation and promotion, but RLUIPA does not appear to be a close case. The Act, as it relates to the constitutional claims of religious inmates, raises the level of protection of religious rights only, leaving other, equally fundamental rights languishing under the pressure of judicial deference to the decisions of prison officials. When applied to prison inmates, to whom privileges and exceptions to prison regulations are few, the different standards of review have the effect of establishing two tiers of inmates in the prison system: the favored believer and the disadvantaged non-believer. It is this precise result that the Lemon test and the Supreme Court’s Establishment Clause jurisprudence seek to prevent, and it is therefore the obligation of this Court to declare the section of RLUIPA that pertains to prison inmates, section 2000cc-1, UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
The Court recognizes that the issues addressed in this decision regarding the constitutionality of section 2000cc-l of RLUIPA involve a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion, and that an immediate appeal from the Court’s decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) (2002), may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation. Accordingly, the Court certifies the issue of the constitutionality of section 2000cc-l of RLUIPA for interlocutory appeal to the Fourth Circuit.
ORDER
This matter is before the Court on the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Plaintiffs claim under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 (“RLUIPA”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc-1 (2002), on the basis that the Act violates the United States Constitution. The Court heard oral arguments from the parties and the United States Government as intervener on November 26, 2002. As explained more fully in the accompanying memorandum opinion, it is hereby
ADJUDGED AND ORDERED
(1) that section 2000cc-l of RLUIPA, the section of the Act governing the claims of prison inmates, is UNCONSTITUTIONAL as a violation of the Establishment Clause;
(2) that the Plaintiffs RLUIPA claim is hereby DISMISSED; and
(3) that the issue of the constitutionality of section 2000cc-l is CERTIFIED for interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
Notes
. The Court was concerned about the dangerous effect that the application of strict scrutiny would have in invalidating generally applicable laws, as the power that the test would grant to a religious individual would allow the believer “to become a law unto himself,'' in contradiction of "both constitutional tradition and common sense.”
Smith,
. The Plaintiff meets the substantial burden threshold under RLUIPA. The Plaintiff claims that a Kosher diet is mandated by his religion. In its August 23 opinion, the Court *570 reserved for trial the issue of Plaintiff's sincerity of belief. Assuming that the Plaintiff’s belief is sincere, prohibiting him from receiving the diet places a substantial burden on his religious exercise. As the Court’s August 23 opinion explains, the Defendants have failed to prove as a matter of law that there is a rational reason for denying the diet, let alone a compelling one.
. In this opinion, the Court addresses 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc-l, the section of RLUIPA pertaining to institutionalized persons and not the portions of RLUIPA dealing with zoning laws.
. The search for a secular purpose is not a particularly strict inquiry, as the secular purpose prong can be satisfied even if legislation is motivated in part by a religious purpose.
See Wallace,
.The Fourth Circuit has recognized the possibility that the Supreme Court's decision in
Employment Division, Dept. of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith
established a different standard of review for the constitutionality of generally applicable prison regulations.
See Hines v. South Carolina Dept. of Corrections,
. While the absence of ready alternatives is evidence of reasonableness, this factor does not establish a least restrictive means requirement. The Court explained that “prison officials do not have to set up and then shoot down every conceivable alternative method of accommodating the claimant’s constitutional complaint.” Id.
. The reach of
Turner
does not stop at the First Amendment, as the Supreme Court has made it clear that the
Turner
"rational relationship” standard applies to all cases in which "a prisoner asserts that a prison regulation violates the Constitution” and “all circumstances in which the needs of prison administration implicate constitutional rights.”
Washington v. Harper,
. The Haff court eventually found the actions of prison officials not to be a violation of RFRA, but only because the court felt constrained by the Establishment Clause to equate the strict scrutiny test under RFRA with the rational relationship test of Turner. This is not the normal approach followed by courts under RFRA and RLUIPA.
. The courts that have upheld the constitutionality of RLUIPA have relied heavily on the Supreme Court's decision in
Amos,
arguing
*577
that RLUIPA is merely another example of benevolent governmental neutrality. However,
Amos
dealt with the lifting of an affirmative burden placed primarily on religious institutions, in that Title VII's prohibitions on hiring or firing on the basis of religion had a much greater negative impact on the purpose and mission of a religious organization in comparison to the effect of the prohibitions on a secular institution. When a religious organization cannot organize itself on the basis of religion, such a limitation runs counter to the requirements of the Free Exercise Clause.
See Amos,
The majority in
Amos
recognized the constitutional necessity of providing such an exemption, arguing that limiting the Title VII exemption solely to the religious activities of religious employers would still "affect the way an organization carried out what it understood to be its religious mission.”
Id.
at 336,
Unlike the exemption held constitutional in
Amos,
RLUIPA requires the government
itself,
through the actions of prison administrators, to accommodate religious inmates to a greater degree than non-religious inmates.
See id.
at 337 n. 15,
The difference between Amos and RLUIPA is, like all Establishment Clause cases, a question of degree. However, the difference in degree between the two is substantial, and congressional neutrality is the line that divides them. When Congress has acted to impose an affirmative burden on religion, it is necessary for Congress to remove that burden in order to retain a position of neutrality towards religious belief. However, when Congress acts to provide religious inmates, and only religious inmates, with a level of constitutional protection that the Supreme Court has deemed unnecessary to protect religious rights, it has gone beyond protecting religion to affirmatively advancing it.
. The supporters of RLUIPA in Congress had no difficulty in asking courts to "continue the tradition of giving due deference to the experience and expertise of prison and jail administrators in establishing necessary regulations and procedures to maintain good order, security and discipline, consistent with consideration of costs and limited resources.” Statement of Senators Hatch and Kennedy, 146 Cong. Rec. at S7775. However, this suggestion rings hollow when one considers that the strict scrutiny standard under RLUIPA is no different from that applied in any other strict scrutiny context.
Some courts, in examining prison regulations under RFRA and RLUIPA, have softened the compelling interest test to allow speculative administrative judgments concerning security and cost to suffice to allow the regulation to survive strict scrutiny.
See, e.g., U.S. v. Jefferson,
. As stated previously, the strict scrutiny tests of RFRA and RLUIPA are identical.
. Even if courts interpret RLUIPA in a manner that weakens the strict scrutiny standard in order to continue to give great deference to prison administrators, the ease with which a prisoner is able to come to court under RLUI-PA continues to give the religious prisoner a place in the prison community that is privileged relative to the non-believer. The cost of litigating RLUIPA claims will lead prison administrators to give more weight to a regulation's effect on religious inmates than to the effect on non-religious inmates in promulgating a regulation.
