Pubdate: Tue, 30 Jan 2001
Source: Quad-City Times (IA)
Copyright: 2001 Quad-City Times
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Author: Associated Press

BUSH STARTS FAITH-BASED AID PROGRAM

WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush, challenging traditional notions about 
separation of church and state, opened the door Monday for religious 
groups to receive government money for their work aiding addicts, 
prisoners, the homeless and more.

"We will not fund the religious activities of any group, but when 
people of faith provide social services, we will not discriminate 
against them," the president said.

By his signature on a pair of executive orders, Bush created a White 
House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives with 
counterpart offices.

In five Cabinet-level departments that will facilitate competition by 
religious groups and charities for a share of the billions of dollars 
that the government pays out for social services.

Today, during a visit to northeast Washington's Fishing School, a 
spiritual youth center, Bush planned to unveil the legislation he 
will submit to Congress opening all federal grant programs to 
participation by religious groups. His proposals will also include 
tax incentives and liability protection to encourage more charitable 
giving, aides said.

"Problems like addiction and abandonment and gang violence, domestic 
violence, mental illness and homelessness we are called by conscience 
to respond," Bush said during Monday's signing ceremony in the White 
House's Indian Treaty Room.

"As long as there are secular alternatives, faith-based charities 
should be able to compete for funding on an equal basis and in a 
manner that does not cause them to sacrifice their mission."

Religious leaders of varied faiths and political backgrounds a 
Catholic nun in her blue habit, a Muslim imam in his turban, an 
Orthodox Jew in his yarmulke surrounded Bush for a smiling photo. 
Among them were ministers Walter Fauntroy and Floyd Flake, both of 
them prominent black Democrats.

In a private meeting beforehand, Bush, who was opposed by nine of 
every 10 black voters in November, assessed the group and, according 
to several participants, joked: "If this was about politics, this 
room would be kind of empty, if you know what I mean."

Carol Porter, executive director of the Houston-based Kidcare, a 
16-year-old "meals on wheels" program for children, told Bush in that 
meeting that the only condition tied to federal money for religious 
groups should be: "No proselytizing."

"I don't think the religion of anyone should be shoved down anyone 
else's throat as a prerequisite for service. Jesus didn't do that," 
Porter told a reporter afterward.

Bush put University of Pennsylvania political science professor John 
J. DiIulio Jr. in charge of the new White House office and asked 
former Indianapolis Mayor Stephen Goldsmith to watch over the 
initiative from a seat on the board of the Corporation for National 
Service.

The idea of religious participation is not entirely novel. The 1996 
welfare overhaul signed by President Clinton and implemented in Texas 
by then-Gov. Bush allowed religious groups to help the government 
move people off welfare and into jobs. Seventeen of those groups in 
Texas are now being sued by the American Jewish Congress and Texas 
Civil Rights Project challenging the constitutionality of such 
"charitable choice."

At the Washington-based Americans United for Separation of Church and 
State, the Rev. Barry Lynn called Bush's planned expansion an assault 
on constitutional principle that will only lead to more litigation.

"The First Amendment was intended to create a separation between 
religion and government, not a massive new bureaucracy that unites 
the two," said Lynn, an attorney and United Church of Christ minister.

Another opponent, Rep. Chet Edwards, D-Va., said he was afraid that 
religious organizations, without tight regulation, could discriminate 
in a way federal programs normally would not countenance.

"I don't want Bob Jones University to be able to take federal dollars 
for an alcohol treatment program and put out a sign that says no 
Catholics or Jews need apply here for a federally funded job," 
Edwards said in an interview.

Goldsmith countered that the Bush administration would make sure to 
maintain secular service providers so that government would not 
"force someone through the door of a religious organization in order 
to get help.

It can fund the soup, it can fund the shelter, it shouldn't fund the Bibles."

Goldsmith estimated that, under Bush's plan, some $10 billion in 
government-funded services such as after-school and charter school 
programs, domestic violence shelters and drug treatment would be 
newly opened to participation by religious providers.
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MAP posted-by: Kirk Bauer