Massachusetts Defends Denial of Catholic Couple’s Foster License Despite 2025 Policy Change
Massachusetts is asking a federal court to uphold its 2023 decision to deny a foster-care license to Catholic couple Mike and Kitty Burke, even though the state revised its LGBTQ-related foster-parent policy in December 2025 after federal health officials warned it may violate applicants’ constitutional rights. In cross-motions for summary judgment filed March 13, the Burkes argue discovery shows they were rejected 'on the basis of their religious beliefs' about gender and sexuality and say the later policy change undercuts the state’s claim that its old rules were necessary. State lawyers counter that the couple were turned down not for being Catholic but for refusing to meet then-existing requirements to 'support and respect' a foster child’s gender identity and sexual orientation, and insist those rules were neutral, applied to all applicants, and allowed no exceptions because DCF cannot know in advance which children will identify as LGBTQ. The state further contends the case should be judged solely under the 2023 rules in effect at the time of denial, while the Burkes and their attorneys at Becket accuse Massachusetts of hypocrisy for defending a policy it has since amended at HHS’s urging. The outcome could shape how far child-welfare agencies may go in conditioning foster and adoptive placements on compliance with gender-identity and sexuality standards when those conflict with prospective parents’ religious beliefs.
📌 Key Facts
- Mike and Kitty Burke sued Massachusetts officials in August 2023 after the state’s Department of Children and Families denied their foster-care application.
- At the time, DCF policy required foster parents to 'support and respect' a child’s gender identity and sexual orientation and 'allowed for no exceptions.'
- DCF amended those LGBTQ-related requirements in December 2025 after the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services raised concerns about applicants’ constitutional rights.
- Both sides filed summary-judgment motions on March 13, with Massachusetts arguing the denial was based on failure to meet licensing criteria, not anti-Catholic bias, and should be evaluated under the 2023 rules.
📊 Relevant Data
Approximately 30.4% of youth in foster care identify as LGBTQ+, compared to lower rates in the general youth population.
LGBTQ+ Youth in Foster Care 2023 Fact Sheet — Children's Rights
In Massachusetts, there were 8,824 children in foster care as of September 30, 2022, amid reports of a shortage of foster parents.
Massachusetts 2024 — CWLA
46% of transgender and nonbinary young people seriously considered attempting suicide in the past year, compared to 30% of cisgender LGBTQ+ youth.
2024 U.S. National Survey on the Mental Health of LGBTQ+ Young People — The Trevor Project
3.3% of youth aged 13 to 17 in the U.S. identify as transgender, representing about 724,000 youth.
How Many Adults and Youth Identify as Transgender in the United States? — Williams Institute
In a study of 317 youth who socially transitioned, 94% continued to identify as binary transgender an average of 5 years later, with a 7.3% retransition rate.
Gender Identity 5 Years After Social Transition — PMC - NIH
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