The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled
in Mitchell v. Helms that
Blaine
Amendments have "a shameful pedigree that we do not hesitate to
disavow" and represent a "doctrine, born of bigotry, [that] should be
buried now."
Though this proposed amendment
will remove
a limit on the power of the state to spend funds, the state will
continue to be limited by the Establishment Clauses of the Florida and
U.S. Constitutions. Under the Establishment Clauses,
government aid
may not result in governmental indoctrination, define its recipients by
reference to religion, or create an excessive entanglement.
"People in private
organizations should
not be disenfranchised from working with the public sector on some of
society's most difficult problems," said Senator Altman.
"This
constitutional amendment restores the way America was envisioned to
work," concluded Altman.
The proposed
constitutional amendment will
read:
Proposing
an amendment to the State Constitution to provide that an individual or
entity may not be barred from participating in any public program
because of religion and to delete the prohibition against using
revenues from the public treasury directly or indirectly in aid of any
church, sect, or religious denomination or in aid of any sectarian
institution.
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