Cite This Case
Ariella Hellman v. Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, No. 25-1417 (2026).
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Ariella Hellman v. Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, No. 25-1417 (2026). https://religiousliberty.tv/case-library/hellman-v-massachusetts-department-of-elementary-and-secondary-education/
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Ariella Hellman v. Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (No. 25-1417) [2026] — Massachusetts does not violate the Constitution by requiring private school students to travel to public sites for disability services, as the state has a right to decide where it provides services. Source: ReligiousLiberty.TV (https://religiousliberty.tv/case-library/hellman-v-massachusetts-department-of-elementary-and-secondary-education/, accessed March 25, 2026).
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Holding: Massachusetts does not violate the Constitution by requiring private school students to travel to public sites for disability services, as the state has a right to decide where it provides services.
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Official Documents
Ariella Hellman v. Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (No. 25-1417) is a Education case in 2026. The court held that massachusetts does not violate the Constitution by requiring private school students to travel to public sites for disability services, as the state has a right to decide where it provides services.