Elizabeth Hunter, et al. v. U.S. Department of Education
Religious exemptions to civil rights statutes come at a price. The price is paid by the young and vulnerable who find themselves at the mercy of religiously affiliated, taxpayer-funded social service and educational institutions that often turn them away or force them into the closet. This historic lawsuit asserts the constitutional and basic human rights of LGBTQ+ students, seeking to end the sexual, physical and psychological abuses perpetrated under the religious exemption to Title IX at thousands of federally-funded schools, colleges and universities across America.
The Constitution guarantees equal rights for all Americans, holding space for religious belief and practice, while ensuring that religion does not serve as a government-funded vehicle to harm racial, ethnic, gender, sexual, religious or other minorities. Government action that ignores this central principal, including the religious exemption to Title IX, is unconstitutional and must be remedied immediately.
Timeline
April & May 2021
The Council for Christian Colleges & Universities and three religious colleges, represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, ask the Court to intervene in our case. The court grants their request on October 8, 2021.
March 30, 2021
REAP launches a historic, class-action lawsuit representing 33 LGBTQ students and alumni from religious colleges demanding that the U.S. Department of Education to stop granting religious exemptions to taxpayer-funded religious colleges and universities that discriminate against and abuse their LGBTQ students. Learn more about the lawsuit and meet our plaintiffs here.
March 15, 2021
REAP, alongside College Pulse, launches a first-of-its kind report detailing the realities of discrimination and startling disparities in mental health outcomes for LGBTQ students at religious colleges. The report, which surveyed 3,000 students primarily at schools aligned with the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, also found that 12% of students on these campuses identify as LGBTQ. Read the full report here.