[faithandlife] PAT ROBERTSON BLESSED WITH $500,000 OF YOUR TAX DOLLARS

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From: charles scott <crscottblu@...>
Date: Sat, 9 Nov 2002 04:24:10 -0800 (PST)
Faith-based Legislation Stalled

White House moves ahead on regulatory, funding fronts.
Mark Stricherz in Washington | posted 11/1/2002
Stymied by Senate Democrats, the Bush administration
has turned to Plan B on its faith-based initiative.
"Our preferred route is to go through Congress," said
James Towey, the director of the Office of Faith-Based
and Community Initiatives. But "the President is
certainly going to work administratively to achieve
his goal: to make the public square faith-friendly."

On October 3, the Department of Health and Human
Services announced $24.8 million in "compassion
capital" grants to 21 recipients. The federal dollars
can go for training and hiring staff, managing
programs, and receiving technical help in applying for
grants.

Operation Blessing International, Pat Robertson's
Virginia Beach–based humanitarian agency, received
$500,000. Previously, Robertson had expressed deep
reservations about the Bush initiative because of
possible government funding of groups such as the
Church of Scientology or the Unification Church. A
Robertson spokeswoman was unavailable for comment.
Regulatory review

The Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives
has new branches at five departments: Education,
Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban
Development, Justice, and Labor.

According to an internal government memo obtained by
Christianity Today, Bush officials believe that some
existing federal regulations remain inconsistent with
Supreme Court case law and with Bush administration
policy. Neither the internal memo nor administration
officials provided specific examples.

A September 3 Associated Press story reported that
Bush administration officials were poised to rewrite a
slew of federal regulations governing religious groups
that serve the needy, to make it easier for them to
apply for federal dollars. But a Bush administration
official, asking not to be named, disavowed most of
the AP account. "Are we likely to change regulations?
Absolutely," the official told CT. "Have we decided on
which ones those will be? Absolutely not."

In a related effort, the White House began hosting
daylong regional conferences, starting in Atlanta in
October. Bush administration officials will teach
religious groups how to apply for federal grants. The
five to seven conferences will run through early 2003
and are similar to smaller forums the faith-based
office has already hosted.

Hiring clause
The faith-based bill has languished in the
Democrat-controlled Senate since July 2001, when the
House passed H.R. 7. The chief stumbling block is
whether religious charities may choose not to hire
people who do not share their beliefs or observe their
moral and sexual norms. Under the 1996 Charitable
Choice Act, on which H.R. 7 is based, charities need
not hire such people. The Senate's version, the
Charity, Aid, Recovery, and Empowerment Act (CARE),
avoids the issue. Sponsors Joseph Lieberman,
D-Connecticut, and Rick Santorum, R-Pennsylvania,
worked out a compromise in February with the White
House. The aim was to enlist more Democratic support.

But the American Civil Liberties Union and the Human
Rights Campaign, a homosexual-rights advocacy group,
say the legislation would override local and state
anti-discrimination laws. Greg McCarthy, a spokesman
for Sen. Jack Reed, D-Rhode Island, said he is likely
to "sponsor an amendment that addresses the [bill's]
silence on the issue of discrimination."

Both Santorum and Towey told Christianity Today they
would reject any legislation that prevents charities
from hiring whom they wish. "I think, along with Sen.
Lieberman, that any changes to the bill will be
fought," Santorum said. He said he hopes to attach it
to homeland security legislation. Lawmakers consider
that bill a high priority before adjourning for the
year.
Copyright © 2002 Christianity Today. November 18,
2002, Vol. 46, No. 12, Page 25




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