School Finance Aguilar V. Felton Term Paper

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School Finance Aguilar v Felton

EDUCATION AND RELIGION

The Aguilar et al. v Felton et al. Case of 1985

Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 allowed for the reimbursement of the salaries of public employees teaching in parochial schools (LII, 2012). These selected teachers provided instruction to low-income children with special needs. A group of taxpayers filed a case, claiming that the program created an excessive entanglement of church and state. It thus violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the Constitution. In a 5-4 decision in 1985, the Supreme Court, in 473 U.S. 42 or Aguilar et al. v Felton et al., invalidated the New York plan (LII).

Majority Opinion by Justice William Brennan

The supervision used by New York City created excessive entanglement between the government and religion (LII, 2012). Advancing religion may not have been its primary effect, but their close interaction produced that result. Justice Brennan argued that a religious school primarily aims at advancing and preserving a particular religion. This aim clashed against the pressure of the presence of state personnel who monitored teachers and students and guarded them against the influence of "religious thought." Furthermore, the state needed to coordinate schedules and other problems with the religious school. While the court recognized the neutrality of the statue, it was also cautious about the potential for religious advancement. The court would no longer want to risk public instructors' engaging in religious instruction by allowing them into religious classrooms (LII).

Dissenting Opinions

Justice Sandra Day O'Connor argued that the Title I program did not present the risk of advancing religion (Carlson, 1986). Supervision of the teachers controlled that risk. The program was furthermore not a state subsidy of religion on account of a statutory provision that the funds supplement rather than supplant services by the local educational agency. O'Connor concluded that there was no unconstitutionality in the state's supervision of the teachers.
Moreover, they were fully responsible for the selection of students. They were not answerable to the school administration. Justice O'Connor thus did not see excessive government entanglement with religion (Carlson).

Justice William Rehnquist expressed concern over the Court's support for a purely secular society (Carlson, 1986). He did not interpret the First Amendment as providing for such an extremist intent. He saw the Court straying from that intent. Religious schools were unlikely to be influenced in their sectarian nature because the teachers were carfully supervised by public officials. Furthermore, most of them visited many different schools every week and these did not have the same religion as the parochial students. Justice Rehnquist criticized and called for the abandonment of the Lemon test (Carlson).

Background

Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act aimed at providing adequate education to all children in the United States, whatever their economic conditions (LII< 2012). This Act distributed federal funds to state governments and, in turn, to local education agencies. These funds were for eligible students, whether in public or private schools. Educational services had to be secular, neutral and non-ideological. In 1966, the Board of Education of the City of New York applied for funding. The Board used a plan whereby public school teachers provided instruction in the private school buildings. It also enforced stipulations meant to prevent a violation of the Establishment Clause. When the Court reviewed the plan in the said case, it was found to have resulted in an unconstitutional entanglement between the government and religion. The District Court issued an injunction that ordered the Board from continuing with the plan (LII).

A new plan was formulated to deliver the same service without creating conflict between the Church and state (LII, 2012). It would incur more than $100 million in leasing property and vehicles for the service. The amount would be deducted from the Title I grant before the grant money could.....

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"School Finance Aguilar V Felton", 27 January 2012, Accessed.7 July. 2025,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/school-finance-aguilar-felton-53825