Officials in Montgomery County, Ohio, agreed to a more than $120,000 settlement after reversing a decision to exclude a Christian organization from the foster care system.

Gracehaven, whichassistsyoung people rescued from sex trafficking, filed a lawsuit in 2024 accusing the county of barring them from “a public program and benefit for which it is otherwise qualified.”

The decision was “based solely on the ministry’s commitment to hire only employees who share and adhere to its religious beliefs,” according to a May 12releasefrom the Alliance Defending Freedom.

Montgomery County had previously contracted with Gracehaven for years, reimbursing the ministry with public funds in exchange for their care services.

An OH ministry worked with local government to help victims of sex trafficking … until officials ended the relationship over the ministry’s faith-based hiring.

After an@ADFLegallawsuit, the ministry is helping young women in the county again—and the county is paying $120K.pic.twitter.com/8bLoDtv2yI

— Kristen Waggoner (@KristenWaggoner)May 13, 2026

But they “suddenly decided to exclude” Gracehaven after the organization “told county officials that it was not waiving or surrendering its constitutionally protected freedom to employ those who share its faith.”

The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohioruledlast year that Gracehaven could not be excluded from the foster care program because of its policy to only hire employees aligned on faith.

Montgomery County has now agreed to make that decision permanent — and to pay over $120,000 in attorneys’ fees.

Source: VidNews » Feed