Paul L. Caron
Dean





Sunday, May 18, 2008

Mirkay: Reevaluating the 501(C)(3) Exemption of Religious Organizations that Discriminate

Nicholas A. Mirkay (Widener) has posted Losing Our Religion: Reevaluating the 501(C)(3) Exemption of Religious Organizations that Discriminate on SSRN.  Here is the abstract:

Religious organizations occupy an enviable legal stature in American society, receiving over 200 exemptions and other regulatory breaks in federal legislation over the last 18 years alone. Religious organizations enjoy numerous federal as well as state and local tax exemptions representing hundreds of billions of dollars in foregone revenue. The propriety of these lucrative tax exemptions must be questioned when religious organizations engage in discrimination against members of society. As illustrated in real-life occurrences contained in pages 3 and 4 of the article, ostensibly widespread discrimination by such organizations exists not only with respect to employment, but more importantly in providing services or engaging in activities for which the organization was originally granted tax-exempt status (e.g., education). The primary bases for such discrimination are currently sexual orientation and marital status.

In a prior article published in the Wisconsin Law Review, I proposed a solution to the problem of discrimination by charitable organizations (a term commonly interpreted to include religious organizations) - enact a broad and well-defined nondiscrimination condition on tax exemption under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Inherent in that proposal is the notion that discrimination by charitable organizations is intrinsically incompatible with such organizations' purpose and mission. Although my prior article briefly addressed the constitutional and other difficulties inherent in applying a nondiscrimination requirement to religious organizations, it acknowledged the necessity of additional and more thorough discussion on the issue - thus, the focus of this Article. Accordingly, this Article examines the propriety and constitutionality of subjecting religious organizations to a nondiscrimination requirement and crafting a more narrow church exception to that requirement. It proposes statutory and regulatory amendments to prevent certain church-affiliated organizations from avoiding the nondiscrimination requirement.

https://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2008/05/mirkay-reevalua.html

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Comments

Rick, I don't think our commitment to the First Amendment compels tax exemption, only religion-neutral criteria for exemption. FWIW, the public benefit created by churches is frequently negligible, so if this is a good hook to ditch exemption for some religious organizations, so much the better.

Posted by: jpe | May 19, 2008 10:37:19 AM

It seems to me that what religious institutions do when they hire and fire in accord with religious teachings and commitments is not helpfully regarded as "discrimination." "Discrimination", it seems to me, carries with it the suggestion that improper or irrelevant criteria -- even unjust ones -- are being used in decision-making. But, it is not unjust for a religious institution or enterprise to employ criteria like religious affiliation, compliance with religious teachings on various matters, etc., when hiring and firing. (Or, do others think that it is?) The very liberal commitments that, I would think, make it unjust for the state to use such criteria also protect the right of a religious institution to do so. So . . . why would we without a tax exemption from an institution -- which otherwise satisfies our standards for tax exemption -- on the ground that it is doing what our commitments to religious freedom require us to permit it to do?

Posted by: Rick Garnett | May 19, 2008 8:09:13 AM