đź“° Full Story
The U.S. Supreme Court on April 20 agreed to hear an appeal from Catholic preschools and the Archdiocese of Denver that challenge Colorado’s exclusion of faith-based providers from its taxpayer-funded universal preschool program.
The plaintiffs — two parishes, the archdiocese (which oversees 34 preschools) and a family — say they were barred because their admissions policies would not admit children of LGBTQ+ parents or those whose families reject Catholic teachings.
Lower courts, including a federal district court and the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, upheld Colorado’s nondiscrimination requirement, finding the program neutral and generally applicable.
The Trump administration filed an amicus brief supporting the challengers.
The Supreme Court said it will consider whether the program’s exceptions for priorities such as disabilities or low income undermine the rule’s neutrality and whether to narrow the 1990 Employment Division v.
Smith precedent on religious exemptions.
Oral arguments are expected in the Court’s next term this fall, with a decision likely by June 2027.
The case is St.
Mary Catholic Parish v.
Roy.








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