ORDER ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Sоme school districts in Maine do not have public high schools. 'Instead, they have found it more cost effective to pay tuition for their resident students directly to public high schools in other distriсts or private schools. Maine statutes permit the procedure but allow such payments to be made only to nonsectarian schools. The issue in this case is whether such a limitation is constitutional. I conclude that it is.
Facts
Maine law provides for compulsory education for school-aged residents. 20-A M.R.S.A. § 5001-A. Towns and school districts in Maine that do not operate their own public high schools can meet their statutory responsibilities by paying tuition to other public high schools or state-approved private schools at the legal tuition rate. 20-A M.R.S.A. § 5204(4). Under state law, only nonsectarian schools are eligible for receipt of public funds for tuitiоn purposes. 20-A M.R.S.A. § 2951(2).
Each of the plaintiffs lives in Minot. The town of Minot is one of three towns comprising School Union No. 29, and neither Minot nor School Union No. 29 operates its own secondary school. These parents accordingly have chosen to send their children to St. Dominie’s Regional High School, a private, Catholic sectarian school. After unsuccessfully seeking reimbursement for tuition paid to St. Dominic’s in the fall of 1996, Mr. and Mrs. Strout, along with the other plaintiffs, brought this lаwsuit against the Maine Commissioner of Education asserting that 20-A M.R.S.A. § 2951(2) is unconstitutional. Both sides have moved for summary judgment and agree that there are no genuine issues of material fact.
Analysis
The genеral norm in Maine, as in most parts of the country, is for a school district to provide a secular high school education at a public high school financed, owned and operated by the school district. Such public high schools must be nonsectarian to comply with the Constitutiоn if not with the electorate’s preferences. If a state permits a school district to choose not to build and operate its own public high school, can it achieve thе same objective of providing a secular education by allowing subsidy payments only to nonsectarian schools — whether they be public high schools in another district or private nоnseetarian schools — while at the same time denying subsidy payments to sectarian schoоls? By all logic, the answer is yes, and the plaintiffs have provided no authority to the contrary.
I аm not called upon here to decide whether a state may make
other
choices — -fоr example, to make a payment to its students of high school age that they could then sрend at any school they choose, whether sectarian or nonsectarian. The plaintiffs have provided easelaw that suggests the United States Supreme Court is not as restrictivе as it once was in testing such programs against First Amendment restrictions.
See, e.g., Agostini v. Felton,
The plaintiffs certainly are free to send their children to a sectarian school. That is a right protected by thе Constitution.
Pierce v. Society of Sisters,
The defendants’ motion for summary judgment is Granted and the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is Denied.
So Ordered. 4
Notes
. The Wisconsin Supreme Court has recently upheld a schoоl voucher program that can be used at sectarian as well as nonsectarian sсhools.
Jackson v. Benson,
. The state superior court has recently reached the same conclusion. See Bagley v. Maine Dep’t of Education (Mills, J.), No. CV97-484 (Me.Super.Ct. Apr. 20, 1998).
. This is not a forum case like
Rosenberger v. Rector,
.The plaintiffs challenge- the determination of what is a "sectarian” school and assеrt that the Department applies the prohibition to only "pervasively sectarian" sсhools, thereby creating excessive entanglement contrary to the First Amendment. On the summary judgmеnt record, however, it is admitted that the Department accepts the self-identification provided by the schools and that there has never been a dispute over the issue. See Commissioner’s Statement of Material Facts ¶ 23 (unopposed; see Local Rule 56). The entanglement issue is therefore specious.
