DENVER (AP) – Some fellow conservatives are criticizing Focus on the Family founder James Dobson for supporting proposed Colorado legislation to give same-sex couples limited legal protections.

The proposal would smooth the way for any two people who cannot marry to register for rights to hospital visits, making medical decisions for each other and property transfers. These rights are already available to two persons but they need lawyers to prepare paperwork.

Dobson said he believes in equality under the law but doesn’t want to redefine marriage.

Prison dispute heads to judge

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Arguments have concluded in a closely watched church-state case over whether Iowa’s Christian prison program is unconstitutional and should end.

The InnerChange Freedom Initiative at Newton Correctional Facility houses inmates in a special unit and enrolls them in a program of immersion in Christian values in order to improve behavior, reduce recidivism and protect public safety.

Kansas, Minnesota and Texas have similar programs.

Attorney Alex Luchenitser, representing Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, sued in U.S. District Court in Des Moines, saying the program seeks converts and requires participation in religious activities.

Lawyers for the Iowa Department of Corrections and Prison Fellowship Ministries, which sponsors InnerChange, said inmates participate voluntarily. Deputy Attorney General Gordon Allen said “this is a program that works … and it works constitutionally.”

Anthony Troy, representing Prison Fellowship, disputed a claim that InnerChange excludes inmates who aren’t Christian. “Inmates of all faiths and no faiths are welcome,” Troy said.

U.S. District Judge Robert Pratt heard testimony in the case last fall.



http://www.ifiprison.org



North Carolina Republican Party criticized for seeking church directories

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) – North Carolina’s state Republican Party is facing criticism over its request for church directories to use in voter registration and get-out-the-vote efforts.

Charlotte’s Roman Catholic Diocese said it doesn’t share personal information with anyone and priests and individual parishioners shouldn’t do so either.

The Rev. Ken Massey, a Greensboro Baptist, said he doesn’t fault Republicans for trying but would tell members that providing directories “would be an abuse of our friendship.”

State Democratic Party Chairman Jerry Meek said his party doesn’t seek membership lists.

“We believe that people go to church to worship and not to sign up to receive Republican propaganda,” Meek said. “We should not inject politics into the church.”

The Republican request, sent statewide by e-mail, said research by the national party shows “people who regularly attend church usually vote Republican when they vote.”

In the 2004 presidential race, the Republican National Committee asked Catholics who backed Bush to give parish directories to the RNC as a way to identify and mobilize new voters.

Republican spokesmen argued the directories are public documents available to anyone, and making the request violates no law.

Richard Land, head of the public policy arm of the Southern Baptist Convention, who is an outspoken Bush supporter, has condemned the practice as intruding on the “sanctity of the church.”



Religious group asks appeals court to allow meetings in public libraries

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – A Christian group told a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel that prohibiting it from using a public library room for prayer meetings is discriminatory and violates free speech rights.

Faith Center Church Evangelistic Ministries is suing over a Contra Costa County policy that prohibits religious activities in libraries. It held one “prayer, praise and worship” service last year at the Antioch library before the county banned further meetings.

Judge Richard Paez asked county attorneys why groups like Narcotics Anonymous are allowed when their meetings often involve prayers, discussion of figures like Jesus and help from a “higher power.”

Kelly Flanagan, a county attorney, said there’s a difference between informal discussions about religion and religious services, which should be banned in public buildings because that would subsidize religion.

The 9th Circuit is reviewing a lower federal judge’s decision that blocked the county from discriminating against religious groups on library use.



Massachusetts governor, House leader, cool to Catholic bid for gay adoption exemption

BOSTON (AP) – Gov. Mitt Romney and a top legislator say the state’s Roman Catholic bishops are unlikely to win exemptions so church social service agencies aren’t forced to place adoptive children with gay couples.

Romney told The Boston Globe he’s not authorized to grant such exemptions. State Rep. Eugene O’Flaherty, House chairman of the joint judiciary committee, said he respects the church’s position but would oppose exemptions from anti-discrimination laws for a social agency that contracts with the state.

The archbishop of Boston and bishops of Fall River, Springfield and Worcester plan to have lawyers explore strategies for opting out of gay adoptions.

Catholic Charities in Boston had made 13 out of 720 placements the past 20 years with gay couples to comply with anti-discrimination laws, all with “hard to place” foster children. The Catholic Charities board voted unanimously in December to continue letting gays adopt.



Federal judge backs Christian school on dismissing unwed pregnant teacher

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) – The decision by a Christian school to fire an unwed pregnant teacher has been upheld by a judge who ruled the school is exempt from federal pregnancy discrimination law.

U.S. District Judge William Acker Jr. said Tessana Lewis’ pregnancy was a motivating factor in her firing but Covenant Classical School in Trace Crossing, as a religious institution, is exempt and can hire and fire based on its beliefs.

Lewis also lost her bid to win damages of $15,000 for mental anguish as a jury suggested.

School lawyers said Lewis was fired not over pregnancy but sex outside marriage, which violates Covenant’s Bible-based principles.

AP-ES-02-22-06 1256EST



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