Must public school officials make school facilities available during nonschool hours for religious use by religious organizations?
Some courts hold that the school may not refuse rental requests by religious groups if they grant such requests to other community groups. Other courts hold that the school may deny the rental requests of religious organizations which seek to use the premises for religious purposes as long as they do so consistently and do not apply selective rules to certain religious groups.
Related Questions
- Must public school officials make school facilities available during nonschool hours for religious use by religious organizations?
- Can graduation prayer and religious baccalaureate ceremonies be held in public school facilities?
- May public school facilities be used by outside community groups during nonschool hours?