DENVER–A Colorado state agency has settled a lawsuit brought by a Christian children’s summer camp over regulations demanding campers be allowed to use the private bathing, dressing, and sleeping facilities of the opposite sex.
As previously reported by Complete Colorado, Camp IdRaHaJe (derived from the hymn “I’d Rather Have Jesus”) in May sued when the Colorado Department of Early Childhood amended its regulations requiring state-licensed camps to allow children to use private bathing, dressing, and sleeping facilities according to their “gender-identity.”
The 75-year-old camp, located east of Breckenridge, previously requested a waiver from the regulations based on religious belief, but was denied.
The lawsuit named executive director of Colorado Department of Early Childhood, Lisa Roy, and director of the Department’s division of early learning licensing and administration, Carin Rosa, as defendants.
Lawyers for the camp last Wednesday announced a settlement favorable to IdRaHaJe.
According to a release from Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) the settlement exempts IdRaHaJe from the state’s gender identity rules and “allows the camp to operate without compromising its religious commonsense beliefs about biological sex.”
ADF is a public interest law firm specializing in defending First Amendment protections and parental rights. It is perhaps best known for its successful defense of Colorado cake decorator Jack Phillips, who refused to make a wedding cake for two gay men. Phillips eventually won his case before the U.S. Supreme Court. ADF also is currently before the US Supreme Court challenging the constitutionality of Colorado’s ban on conversion therapy for minors on behalf of a state-licensed counselor.
“Government officials should never put a dangerous ideology ahead of kids,” said ADF Legal Counsel Andrea Dill. “State official must respect religious ministries and their beliefs about human sexuality; they can’t force a Christian summer camp to violate its convictions.”
Additionally, the Department is putting a clarification memo up on their website stating “churches, synagogues, mosques, or any other place that is principally used for religious purposes” are exempt from the requirements.
Camp IdRaHaJe agreed to dismiss any further legal action as part of the settlement.
“We’re pleased that Camp IdRaHaJe is again free to operate as it has for more than 75 years; as a Christian summer camp that accepts all campers without fear of being punished for its beliefs,” concluded Dill.