HomeMy WebLinkAbout15-Parks and Recreation
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CI.TV OF SAN BERNARDI~'" "~qUf'..sT FOR COUNCIL AC\lON
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From: Annie F. Ramos, Director \~ ..~\l- Subject: APPROVAL OF $6,000 FROM 7TH WARD PARK
\ EXTn~SION FUND FOR PURCHASE AND INSTAl ~
Dept: Parks, Recreati on & Communi ty Servi ces lATION OF FENCE BETWEEN CAMPO SANTO
MEMORIAL PARK AND HOLY ROSARY SCHon l
Date: April 24, 1989 J"Yl.{,
Synopsis of Previous Council action:
None.
Recommended motion:
That $6,000 from 7th Ward Park Extension Fund for the purchase and installation of
fencing between Campo Santo Memorial Park and Holy Rosary School be approved.
tk 7 AZ~v
t1" Signature .
Contact parson:
Annie F. Ramos
Phone:
5030
7
Supporting data attachad: S ta f f R E po rt
Ward:
FUNDING REQUIREMENTS: .
Amount:
$6,000
Sourca: (ACCT. NO.) 241-361-57007
(ACCT. DESCRIPTION) 7th Ward Park Extension Fund
Finance: .t1'ffI~u / ;. i~.L._
,th'"
Council Notel:
n.02l1
Agenda Item No.
/..5
CI~ OF SAN BERNARDICO - REQU,..T FOR COUNCIL AC~OlI
APPROVAL OF $6,000 FROM 7TH WARD PARK STAFF REPORT
EXTENSION FUND FOR PURCHASE AND INSTAL-
LATION OF FENCE BETWEEN CAMPO SANTO
MEMORIAL PARK AND HOLY ROSARY SCHOOL.
In recent months, there have been several incidents of illicit activities in the
section of Campo Santo Park adjacent to the Holy Rosary School playground. In an
effort to shield that portion of the park from the children on the playground and
to provide a safer play environment, it is recommended that a fence be installed
between the properties. The fence, to be installed along the city property line,
would be chain link, 6 feet high with plastic slats to obscure the view through
the fence. The cost of the contract for installation of the fence by a private
contractor will be $8,600. The $6,000 from 7th Ward Funds will be supplemented hy
$2,600 from Parks Division operations budget for Maintenance Materials, Account
#001-382-53203.
This item has been. coordinated with Councilwoman Miller.
April 24, 1989
75-0264
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CI
BERNARDINO
300 NOR~1Sf!~1IlR!E'G'S"1NI!lEf!~1'IRDINO. CALIFORNIA 92418
,
'89 MAY 12 P4 :20
JAMES F. PENMAN
CITY ATTORNEY
1714) 384-5355
January 26, 1989
Opinion No. 89-2
10.39
COUNCILMAN TOM MINOR
Council Office
Re: Holy Rosary Academy
ISSUE
You have asked two questions of this office, which we have
stated as follows:
1. May the City pay for, or participate in paying for,
repairs to a fence owned by the Holy Rosary Academy?
2. If not, may the City accept a donation of the fence
and then move it to its own property and thereafter maintain
it?
BACKGROUND
There currently exists on the Holy Rosary Academy
property adjacent to Campo Santo Memorial Park, a city
cemetery, a fence to divide the two properties. This fence has
been cut allowing neighborhood youths to pass back and forth
between the two properties.
ANALYSIS
The questions presented will be discussed in turn.
1. The initial question relates to the separation of
Church and State.
In pertinent part, the First Amendment to the United
States Constitution provides:
.Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion or prohibiting
the free exercise thereofl ....
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COUNCILMAN TOM MINOR
Ja,l""'ary 26, 1989
P a\,.. Two
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This prov1s1on contains two separate and distinct
clausesl the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause,
neither of which may be violated. That of primary significance
in this discussion is the Establishment Clause.
The California Constitution, in two sections, is even
more explicit. Article 1, Section 4 reads:
"Free exercise and enjoyment of religion
without discrimination or preference are
guaranteed. ... the Legislature shall
make no law respecting an establishment
of religion. ..."
And then Article 16, Section 5 provides:
"Neither the legislature, nor any county,
city and county, township, school district
or other municipal corporation, shall ever
make an appropriation, or pay from any
public fund whatever, or grant anything
to or in aid of any religious sect, church,
creed or sectarian purpose, ~ ~ 12
support ~ sustain anv school, college,
university, hospital, or other institu-
tion controlled Qy ~ reliaious creed,
church, or sectarian denomination what-
everl nor shall any grant or donation
of personal property or real estate ever
be made by the state, or any city, city
and county, township, or other municipal
corporation for any religious creed,
church, or sectarian purpose whateverl
. . ." (emphasis added)
Although this constitutional prohibition seems very clear
in its language, the courts have noted that relationships
between church and state are virtually inevitable.
"... (R)ecognizing that in complex modern
society some interaction between government
and religious organizations is inevitable,
the court has determined that a a law which
confers indirect, remote, or incidental benefits
upon religious institutions is not, for that
reason alone, constitutionally defective."
(Citation omitted - California Educational
Facilities Authoritv v. Priest (1974) 12 C.3d
593, 5991 see also Zorach v. Clausen (9152)
343 U.S. 306, 314, 72 S. Ct. 679, 684, 96
L. Ed. 9541 and Meek v. Pittenaer (1975) 421
U.S. 349, 359, 95 S. Ct. 1753, 1760, 44 L. Ed.
2d 217)
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COUNCILMAN TOM MINOR
Jar~.ry 26, 1989
pa~,,,,,. Three
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Although the courts have been vigilant in their
protection of the -Wall of Separation- between Church and
State, as described by Jefferson (See Everson v. Board of
Education. etc. (1947) 330 U.S. 1, 15-16, 67 S. Ct. 504, 511-
512, 91 L. Ed. 711), they have also noted that this wall Ris a
blurred, indistinct, and variable barrier depending on all the
circumstances of a particular relationship.- (Lemon v.
Kurtzman (1971) 403 U.S. 602, 614, 91 S. Ct. 2105, 2112, 29 L.
Ed 2d 745; and Wolman v. Walter (1977) 433 U.S. 229, 236, 97 S.
Ct. 2593, 2599, 53 L. Ed. 2d 714. Even though this is a
difficult area of analysis, we have been provided with a three-
prong test to determine if the Establishment Clause has been
violated by particular state action or legislation.
-First, the statute must have a secular
legislative purpose; second, its prin-
cipal or primary effect must be one that
neither advances nor inhibits religion
...; finally, the statute must not foster
an excessive government entanglement with
religion.- (Lemon v. Kurtzman, Suora, 403
U.S. at pp. 612-613, 91 S. Ct. at 2111;
Mueller v. Allen (1983) 463 U.S. 388,
394, 103 S. Ct. 3062, 3066, 77 L. Ed. 2d
721)-
Of course, in applying this
it only serves as a -helpful sign
Establishment Clause challenges.
U.S. at 394, 103 S. Ct. at 3066).
test, we
post- in
(Mueller
must be aware that
dealing with
v. Allen, Suora, 463
It could be argued that the proposed fence repair does
have a secular purpose, that of protecting the Cemetery, but
for the fact that the fence does not surround the Cemetery.
Perhaps the secular purpose could be found in assisting the
police in apprehending fleeing youths by closing off an escape
route, but still the primary benefit is to the Academy by
improving its security. It seems clear that the proposal does
not meet the first prong of the test.
But even if the first prong was met, with respect to the
second prong of the test, the Supreme Court in Meek v.
Pittenqer, Suora, 421 U.S. at 365-366, 95 S. Ct. at 1763,
concluded:
-Even though earmarked for secular purposes,
'when it flows to an institution in which
religion is so pervasive that a substantial
portion of its functions are subsumed on the
religious mission, state aid has the imper-
missible primary effect of advancing religion.-
(See also Hunt v. McNair (9173) 413 U.S. 734,
93 S. Ct. 2868, 2874, 37 L. Ed 2d 923).-
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COUNCILMAN TOM MINOR
Jaf'"'"ary 26, 1989
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Whether the mission of the proposed recipient of the
state aid is noble or generally beneficial to society cannot be
a part of a discussion such as this. It is clear that to
provide public funds to assist the Academy in maintenance and
upkeep of its physical facilities would be to publicly fund a
religion and thereby violate the Establishment Clause.
The third prong relates to excessive entanglement with
religion and it seems clear that if the City were to repair the
fence directly or pay a contractor to make such repairs that
there would be virtually no entanglement with the sectarian
school. Of course facts could be discovered which would show
otherwise.
Aid to sectarian schools raises issues distinctive in
character from aid to other religious institutions. The
California Supreme Court in a comprehensive review of this area
in California Teachers Assn. v. Riles (1981) 29 C3d 794,
reviewed the three prong test cited above and also acknowledged
the .child benefit. theory as propounded by the United States
Supreme Court in Board of Education v. Allen (1968) 392 U.S.
236, 88 S. Ct. 1923, 20 Led 2d 1060:
· ... [TJhe financial benefit provided
by the program was to the children and
their parents rather than to the parochial
schools .... (at pg. 802)
The State Supreme Court also cited the decision of the
United States Supreme Court in Meek v. Pittenoer (1975) 421
U.S. 349, 362-366, 95 S. Ct. 1753, 44 Led 2d 217, 230-232,
which held unconstitutional money grants to repair and maintain
facilities and equipment of parochial schools as a subsidy to
the schools' religious mission (at pg. 803).
2. The second issue essentially relates to whether the
City may accept a gift subject to conditions. It must be
assumed that the Academy will only donate the fence to the City
if it is moved to City property, retained as a fence and
maintained to repair any future openings. Although the
acceptance of such a conditioned gift is sUbject to the
discretion of the Mayor and Council, (see Charter Section
40(a)), if it is determined that the primary benefit of such a
fence is to the sectarian school even if it is on City property
and maintained by City then it is prohibited as a violation of
the Establishment Clause. From the information available to
us, we are unaware of any City benefit arising from the fence.
As noted above, it would be a different matter if the City saw
the need to completely fence the Cemetery and this fence served
as only one part of that project. Based on that presumption,
however, it must be concluded that the City also may not accept
as a gift and thereafter maintain the fence.
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COUNCILMAN TOM MINOR
Jar'ar'.[ 26, 1989
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CONCLUSION
It is the conclusion of this office that the City may
neither repair the aforementioned fence as school property nor
accept it as a gift, and move it to City property.
Respectfully submitted,
h
DENNIS
Sr. Asst.
BARLOW
City Attorney
DAB:mw
cc: Mayor
City Administrator
City Clerk
Approved:
7#
Attorney