America’s public schools are required to welcome and serve all students, regardless of a student’s background, beliefs, or abilities. Yet, on June 5, 2023, Oklahoma’s Statewide Virtual Charter School Board voted to approve the nation’s first religious public charter school, despite clear evidence that the school plans to teach a religious curriculum and discriminate against students, families, and employees who do not follow the school’s religious doctrines. Americans United, along with the American Civil Liberties Union, Education Law Center, and Freedom from Religion Foundation, represents Oklahoma parents, faith leaders, and public-school advocates challenging the school’s approval as a blatant violation of the separation of church and state guaranteed by Oklahoma’s constitution, laws, and regulations.
St. Isidore of Seville Catholic Virtual School stated in its application to the Statewide Virtual Charter School Board that it plans to operate “as a Catholic School” that “participates in the evangelizing mission of the Church.” This “Catholic perspective permeates all subjects” St. Isidore plans to teach, including required theology classes. St. Isidore also plans to discriminate in student admissions, student discipline, and employment on the basis of religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, pregnancy outside of marriage, and sexual activity outside or marriage. Additionally, St. Isidore asserts a right to discriminate against students based on disability and has failed to demonstrate that it will adequately serve students with disabilities.
St. Isidore is sponsored and controlled by the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City and the Diocese of Tulsa. Though these dioceses already operate dozens of private Catholic schools, they now seek to establish St. Isidore as a public charter school to discriminate and evangelize with the authority of the state using public tax dollars. This violates numerous provisions of the Oklahoma Constitution, the Oklahoma Charter Schools Act, and the Statewide Virtual Charter School Board’s own regulations, all of which require public schools to be open to all students and prohibit the state from sponsoring religious schooling. Throughout St. Isidore’s application process, Americans United provided detailed legal analysis via letters, memos, and in-person testimony explaining why the board should reject the application.
In approving St. Isidore, the Statewide Virtual Charter School Board abrogated its duty to uphold Oklahoma’s constitution, laws, and regulations. That’s why, on July 31, 2023, Americans United and our partners filed a lawsuit in Oklahoma State District Court on behalf of the Oklahoma Parent Legislative Advocacy Committee (OKPLAC) and nine parents, faith leaders, and public-school advocates who care deeply about the separation of church and state. We requested that the court prohibit the Board from sponsoring or contracting with St. Isidore and prohibit the State from giving any funding to St. Isidore.
On September 20, 2023, the defendants filed three separate motions to dismiss the case. On October 23, 2023, we filed a consolidated opposition to those motions.
In the meantime, on October 9, 2023, the Board voted to approve a contract with St. Isidore. On January 31, 2024, we filed an amended and supplemental petition to add allegations related to the contract and to add new defendants, the State Board of Education and its members. In addition, the amended and supplemental petition adds an allegation that the defendants are in violation of a state statute that prohibits segregation of children in public schools on the basis of creed, among other characteristics.
As a result of the filing of the amended and supplemental petition, the defendants withdrew their original motions to dismiss and were granted the opportunity to file new motions. The defendants filed new motions to dismiss on March 25, 2024. We filed a consolidated opposition to those motions on April 26. On June 5, AU Associate Legal Director Alex Luchenitser and Litigation Fellow Sarah Taitz presented oral arguments against the defendants’ motions to dismiss. The court rejected almost all of the defendants’ grounds for dismissal and ruled at the hearing that the plaintiffs’ case can proceed.
In addition, we filed a motion for a temporary injunction on May 31, 2024, asking the court to prevent taxpayer dollars from beginning to flow to St. Isidore.
On June 25, 2024, the Oklahoma Supreme Court barred the state from creating and funding St. Isidore as a public charter school. The decision came in Drummond v. Oklahoma Statewide Virtual Charter School Board, a separate lawsuit brought by the Oklahoma Attorney General. (A group of the OKPLAC plaintiffs had filed an amicus brief in the Attorney General’s case on Dec. 27, 2023.)
Following the Oklahoma Supreme Court decision in the Drummond case, the OKPLAC plaintiffs and defendants reached court-approved agreements to put a hold on the OKPLAC case until September 1, 2025, while developments in the Drummond case are pending. St. Isidore agreed not to accept charter-school funding from the state or open to students as a charter school during the 2024-25 and 2025-26 school years as part of these agreements.
On January 24, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to review the Drummond case after St. Isidore and the Oklahoma Statewide Virtual Charter School Board filed petitions. Oral argument is scheduled for April 30.
On April 7, 2025, Americans United and our partners filed an amicus brief in the United States Supreme Court on behalf of the OKPLAC plaintiffs. In our amicus brief, we argue that Oklahoma virtual charter schools are governmental entities and state actors, and therefore they must comply with the Constitution. We argue that a religious public school would be an oxymoron and a blatant violation of the Establishment Clause.
On May 22, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court split 4-4, with one justice recused, meaning that the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s decision was affirmed. Thus, the state remains barred from creating and funding St. Isidore as a public charter school. On July 14, 2025, declaring victory, we dismissed the OKPLAC lawsuit.
