Supreme Court allows lawsuit over zoning bias in Louisiana parish to continue
The Supreme Court quietly decided not to intervene in a Louisiana zoning case, opening the door for a discrimination lawsuit against St. James Parish to resume in federal court, as The Christian Post reports.
The case, originally filed by a local church and two advocacy groups, accuses officials of pushing polluting industrial sites into predominantly Black neighborhoods while shielding white communities from similar development.
Without issuing a comment, the high court declined to hear an appeal from St. James Parish, effectively backing an earlier ruling from the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals that reversed a lower court’s dismissal of the lawsuit.
Controversial Land Use Allegations in Focus
Mount Triumph Baptist Church, RISE St. James, and Inclusive Louisiana filed the lawsuit in 2023, arguing that the parish's zoning policies amounted to both racial and religious discrimination, particularly targeting Black places of worship and neighborhoods.
The legal complaint hinges on the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000, a law designed to protect religious institutions from undue burdens placed by land-use regulations—a law that has long served as a shield for churches facing activist-driven overreach.
The plaintiffs claim the parish authorized the development of pollution-heavy industrial facilities only in predominantly Black areas, while sparing majority-white communities from such harms—a pattern activists say is deeply entrenched in what they call "Cancer Alley."
District Court Throws Out Case on Technicality
U.S. District Judge Carl J. Barbier initially tossed the suit in November 2023, not because he found the allegations baseless, but because he ruled it came too late to be heard.
According to Judge Barbier, the parish adopted a central land use plan in 2014, meaning that any complaints should have been raised long before the plaintiffs took action in 2023.
“The zoning events that occurred before the 2014 plan, while related to Defendants’ subsequent decisions, are discrete actions that put Plaintiffs on notice to protect their rights,” Barbier wrote, essentially blaming the clock, not the government conduct.
Appeals Court Reverses Dismissal, Lawsuit Revived
The tables turned in April when a three-judge panel from the Fifth Circuit unanimously reversed Barbier’s dismissal, stating that the allegations were, in fact, filed within the legally allowed window.
Circuit Judge Carl E. Stewart, writing on behalf of the panel, emphasized that “the allegedly discriminatory acts plainly fall within the applicable statute of limitations period.”
The panel not only restored the case but also concluded that the organizations had the legal standing to move forward, citing the alleged harm to their property rights stemming from the parish's zoning decisions.
Federal Judiciary Clears Path for Trial
Judge Stewart also noted, “Because each appellant pleaded cognizable property injuries that are traceable to the conduct of the Parish and redressable by the various forms of relief they seek from the court, the Organizations have sufficiently demonstrated standing.”
In other words, the court believes there’s enough smoke here to keep looking for fire—and allow the facts to come out in discovery and trial, rather than being swept under the bureaucratic rug.
“Of course,” Stewart added, “whether the Organizations will prove their allegations or prevail on any of their claims remains to be seen.” A fair caveat, but at least one that leaves the courtroom door open.
Political and Legal Implications Beyond Louisiana
The Supreme Court’s refusal to intervene marks an unusual moment of restraint. For all its recent willingness to weigh in on land use and religious liberty, the justices let this case simmer a little longer below the surface.
Critics of the lawsuit argue that zoning decisions are inherently local, while supporters say they reflect systemic disparities propped up over generations. And now, instead of being preemptively shut down, that argument will get its day in court.
Though wrapped in legalese, the public message is clear: If you're going to preach equality and fairness, you'd better be practicing it in your planning commission, too.





