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To keep free of federal reins, a Catholic college is refusing aid (Wyoming College)
Cruxnow ^ | April 14, 2015 | Jack Healy

Posted on 04/15/2015 5:53:25 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o


Praying at an outdoor Mass at Wyoming Catholic College

LANDER, Wyo. — An insurrection is brewing here at Wyoming Catholic College, a tiny redoubt of cowboy-style Catholicism where students learn about horseback riding and Thomas Aquinas, and take grueling mountain hikes conducted entirely in Latin.

Citing concerns about federal rules on birth control and same-sex marriage, the school decided this winter to join a handful of other religious colleges in refusing to participate in the federal student-aid programs that help about two-thirds of students afford college. For students here, the decision means no federal loans, work-study money, or grants to finance their annual $28,000 tuition, which includes housing in gender-segregated dorms and three meals in the school’s lone dining hall.

To the college’s leaders, rejecting government-backed aid was an expensive effort to defend against what they called growing government threats to religious freedoms. If you do not take the money, leaders argue, the government cannot tell you what to do.

“It allows us to practice our Catholic faith without qualifying it,” said Kevin Roberts, the college’s president, a Louisiana transplant who now wears a black cowboy hat to work in this town of 7,500. “It’s clear that this administration does not care about Catholic teaching.”

The young college, whose first students enrolled in 2007, has not yet been accredited, so its students do not qualify for federal loans and have been using private loans. But late last year, the school reached a milestone toward becoming accredited, which could have led to access to funding from federal loan programs worth close to 20 percent of its $5 million budget. The vote by the school’s board was unanimous.

The move adds to a national debate over the boundaries between religious liberty and discrimination. Across the country, courts are judging faith-based objections to requirements that health insurance provide birth control and debating whether cake bakers and photographers have a right to refuse to cater to same-sex weddings.

While a few private colleges also decline federal dollars — examples include Christendom College in Virginia, Hillsdale College in Michigan and New St. Andrews College in Idaho — more than two dozen religious schools and universities are among the businesses and religious groups that have filed a fusillade of lawsuits challenging the birth-control coverage required under the Affordable Care Act.

Some have been encouraged by the Supreme Court’s decision last year to let Hobby Lobby, a private company, refuse to cover contraceptives under its health insurance for religious reasons. Others say they would like to stop taking federal student aid, but they balk at the cost and question whether it would provide any additional protections not already offered by the Constitution’s guarantees to freedom of religion.

At Belmont Abbey College, a Catholic liberal-arts school in North Carolina, school officials who say they are increasingly concerned about one day being required to provide benefits to same-sex spouses of employees or bathrooms for transgender students have been looking at the financial costs of withdrawing from student-aid programs. The college president, William K. Thierfelder, said the college had determined that it would need a $375 million endowment to cover the loans and grants its 1,550 students would lose. Their current endowment is $10 million.

“We can’t afford to do it right now, but we want to do it,” Thierfelder said. “We couldn’t support or condone homosexual lifestyle, transgender, this kind of thing. We’re not trying to tell anyone how to live.”

But he said abiding by Catholic teachings about sex, marriage, and gender was fundamental to the school’s identity: “This is why we exist. This is why we’re here.”

At Wyoming Catholic College, which prides itself as being “authentically Catholic,” spiritual identity and the restrictions that accompany it are written into the student handbook. Students — 90 percent from outside Wyoming — all enroll in a single program of liberal-arts study that includes sacred texts and Great Books, leadership courses, and expeditions into the Wind River mountains.

Curfews are set at 10:30 p.m. during the week. The dress code calls for businesslike attire and forbids men to walk around shirtless, but this being Wyoming, it does allow “dress jeans” in class. Couples are allowed to hold hands on campus and “an occasional hug,” but are advised not to be overly physical. And the college says it supports Church teachings on marriage, which forbid premarital sex.

School leaders said the 120 students studying here and their families know what they want from a college, and know what they want from the experience. Students who are transgender, openly gay and dating, or active gay-rights supporters “would be contravening Church teaching just by being here,” Roberts said.

About 80 percent of the students receive some kind of financial aid, so the school figured it would lose $650,000 annually in loans and $250,000 in Pell grants that students would have used to pay their tuition. School officials talked to students and parents about the additional financial burdens of getting private loans at higher rates, and asked whether it would be worth it to turn their backs on a revenue source accepted by an overwhelming majority of religious and secular schools. The overwhelming response, the officials said, was “yes.”

"We really didn’t want the federal government meddling in our lives here." said David S. Kellogg, member of the Wyoming Catholic College board.

Participating in loan programs would have freed up more money for faculty salaries or expanding the nascent campus. For students, federal loans tend to be easier to defer after college, and some do not accrue interest while students are still studying.

The college gives out scholarships and itself provides loans to students, but also urges them to seek help from private banks.

Ultimately, the board said accepting the money would have been a Faustian bargain that could compromise the school’s core beliefs and mission.

“My concern was about the overreach of this administration,” said Richard W. St. Pierre, a board member who brought up the Hobby Lobby case. “We may find ourselves in a similar position if you take federal money and don’t comply with an executive order.”

Their decision also had a tinge of the Western small-government sentiment that sparks complaints from farmers and ranchers around here about federal sage grouse protections, new rules for hydraulic fracturing in the oil and gas fields, and regulations about waterways and land conservation.

“We really didn’t want the federal government meddling in our lives here,” said David S. Kellogg, a Wyoming Catholic board member. “The federal government hands you money and then threatens to withdraw that money if you don’t do what they want.”

Over a lunch of chicken sandwiches and potato chips, several students said they felt the school had made the right decision. Even if funding their education privately ends up costing thousands of dollars more over the lifetime of their loans, they said Wyoming Catholic was still a bargain in the mountains compared with other schools.

“We prefer to stay on the side of siding with our beliefs,” said Matthew Gaddis, 23, a senior from Casper, Wyoming.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; US: Wyoming
KEYWORDS: catholic
They ought to run continuous gofundme's online for scholarships, loan funds, building funds, faculty salaries. I'd give. I bet thousands would.
1 posted on 04/15/2015 5:53:25 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o
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To: Mrs. Don-o
Hillsdale College has done it successfully for years. So has Grove City. Maybe others. This school can do it too. They just need an aggressive campaign for donations, and maybe a few large benefactors to get them over the hump.
2 posted on 04/15/2015 6:01:12 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: hinckley buzzard

Don’t know much about college these days,but 28K a year sounds like a lot for what they offer.


3 posted on 04/15/2015 7:36:59 PM PDT by oldtech
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To: Mrs. Don-o
Wyoming is a great little school. It has a core program based on real education before the Enlightenment crowd got a hold of it.

Perfect for homeschooled students whose parents taught them Latin and real philosophy.

4 posted on 04/15/2015 8:24:57 PM PDT by Slyfox (If I'm ever accused of being a Christian, I'd like there to be enough evidence to convict me)
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To: hinckley buzzard

Colleges that do not accept federal funding:

Hillsdale College (MI)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillsdale_College
Grove City College (PA)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grove_City_College
Patrick Henry College (VA)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Henry_College
Wyoming Catholic College (WY)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wyoming_Catholic_College

Most Conservative Colleges
Most Conservative Colleges ranks 888 college campuses based on a political poll of 50,000 students. A high ranking indicates that a high percentage of students self-identify as being conservative (or leaning conservative) and that students perceive the campus community as being very conservative politically.
https://colleges.niche.com/rankings/most-conservative-colleges/

The 20 Best Conservative Colleges in America
http://www.thebestschools.org/rankings/20-best-conservative-colleges-america/

Young America’s Foundation Top Conservative Colleges
http://www.yaf.org/topconservativecolleges.ASPX

An attack on liberty-loving colleges (Government now seeks monopoly on student loans)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2486953/posts
5APR2010


5 posted on 04/15/2015 8:34:44 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine (Pubbies = national collectivists; Dems = international collectivists; We need a second party!)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

While I’m not Catholic, I applaud this school. I am constantly amazed at the stories about Catholic colleges—I’m not trying to demean the church, but I don’t see why they don’t disassociate from these viper pits. This school sounds like the opposite, and it should be vocally supported by all true Catholics.

The FedGov has destroyed education across the spectrum, and colleges are the worst. Independent colleges have to cut the cord. I love Hilsdale—they are the sole charity in my will. Not that I will bequeath much, but I love the fact that they walk the walk without compromise...


6 posted on 04/15/2015 8:56:42 PM PDT by antidisestablishment ( Everyone is equal in the state of desperation. GOP delenda est!)
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To: antidisestablishment
Most Catholic colleges/universities were lost as far back as 1967, when a lot of the leadership signed the "Land 'o' Lakes" statement which was a declaration of independence from the Catholic Church. They were basically divorcing Catholicism but they retained certain parts of the institutional form.

There's probably less than 2 dozen Catholic colleges/Universities now that are still faithful.

7 posted on 04/16/2015 10:54:22 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (What unites us all, of any race, gender, or religion, is that we all believe we are above average.)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

I guess that answers my question, but it’s a damned shame—and that’s not a simple use of profanity, but a statement of truth.


8 posted on 04/16/2015 11:01:08 AM PDT by antidisestablishment ( Everyone is equal in the state of desperation. GOP delenda est!)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
where students learn about horseback riding and Thomas Aquinas

They have all the bases covered.

For those who don't know, Catholic colleges went down the tubes in the late 1960s, after the "Land o' Lakes Conference," when Catholic college boards were laicized.

The experiment has been an unmitigated disaster.

But in recent years, about 10-15 Catholic colleges have rediscovered orthodoxy, and they are flourishing.

Hopefully these smaller colleges will have an impact on the larger, nominally Catholic colleges.

9 posted on 04/16/2015 11:17:30 AM PDT by St_Thomas_Aquinas ( Isaiah 22:22, Matthew 16:19, Revelation 3:7)
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