United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 25-1452
CALVARY CHAPEL BELFAST,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
UNIVERSITY OF MAINE SYSTEM; BOARD OF TRUSTEES FOR THE UNIVERSITY
OF MAINE SYSTEM; RYAN LOW, individually and in the official
capacity as Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration,
University of Maine; RACHEL PIPER, in the official capacity as
Executive Director of Strategic Procurement and Services,
University of Maine System; ROBYN CYR, in the official capacity as Senior Director of Strategic Procurement, University of Maine
System; DEREK HOUTMAN, in the official capacity as Associate
Strategic Sourcing Director, University of Maine System,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
[Hon. Stacey D. Neumann, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Montecalvo, Lipez, and Kayatta,
Circuit Judges.
Daniel J. Schmid, with whom Stephen C. Whiting, Whiting Law
Firm, Mathew D. Staver, Horatio G. Mihet, and Liberty Counsel were on brief, for appellant.
Melissa A. Hewey, with whom Jeana M. McCormick and Drummond
Woodsum were on brief, for appellees.
June 30, 2026
LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. At the close of a competitive bid
process during the summer of 2024, the University of Maine System
("the University") selected Calvary Chapel Belfast ("Calvary" or
"the Church") as the winning bidder for the purchase of the
Frederick Hutchinson Center property, a former educational hub
located in the town of Belfast. There was a swift and loud public
outcry against the prospective sale to the Church. About a month
later, in response to two administrative appeals by disappointed
bidders, the University determined that its evaluative criteria
were flawed. The University then cancelled the award to Calvary,
initiated a new public procurement process, and ultimately awarded
the bid to one of Calvary's competitors.
Calvary filed suit in federal court, arguing that the
University's decisionmaking was infected with unconstitutional
anti-religious bias. The Church sought emergency court orders to
stop the sale while it pursued its lawsuit to restore its winning
bid. The district court denied Calvary's separate motions for a
temporary restraining order (TRO) and preliminary injunction,
concluding with respect to each that Calvary had not demonstrated
a likelihood of success on the merits of its Equal Protection or
Free Exercise Clause claims.
Finding no error in the court's application of the
relevant legal principles or clear error in its assessment of the
facts, we affirm.
- 3 -I.
A. Factual Background
We borrow liberally from the district court's
well-stated recitation of the facts. See Waldron v. George Weston
Bakeries Inc., 570 F.3d 5, 7 (1st Cir. 2009) ("We rehearse the
facts as found by the district court, consistent with record
support [in preliminary injunction appeals]."). We set forth these
facts in considerable detail as a necessary prelude to the legal
analysis that follows.
Plaintiff-Appellant Calvary Chapel Belfast is a
nonprofit independent church that is part of the global Calvary
Chapel Association, a "network of churches committed to Biblical
teaching and Christ-centered community outreach."1
Defendant-Appellee University of Maine System is Maine's state
university system, operating seven universities across the state,
with the University of Maine ("UMaine"), located in Orono, as its
flagship. The Frederick Hutchinson Center property ("the
Hutchinson Center" or "the Center") operated as UMaine's Midcoast
satellite campus for about twenty years, serving more than 16,000
learners at its height as "a vibrant hub for university education
and community events in the midcoast." When use of the Center
1The Church is led by Pastor Greg Huston, who has served in
that role for approximately nine years and is also the Church's Chief Executive Officer.
- 4 -declined significantly during and following the COVID-19 pandemic,
the University decided to sell the Center using its competitive
public procurement process2 and the issuance of a Request for
Proposals ("RFP").3 See News Release, Univ. of Me. Sys.,
University of Maine System Trustees authorize sale of Hutchinson
Center in Belfast (July 15, 2024),
https://www.maine.edu/blog/2024/07/15/
university-of-maine-system-trustees-authorize-sale-of-hutchinson
-center-in-belfast/ [https://perma.cc/K9SU-XKCT].
1. The First RFP
On January 17, 2024, the University issued RFP #2024-048
(the "First RFP") to solicit "purchase, lease, or alternative
creative real property offers" for the Center.4 The University
2 As defined by the University, the competitive procurement
process generally "[r]efers to all methods of obtaining prices
from multiple vendors including selections based on bid price
alone, qualifications alone or best value." The public process is a means of "obtain[ing] all goods and services at the lowest cost to the University consistent with those standards of quality,
performance, service, and availability which will best meet the needs of the University."
3 The University defines an RFP as the "document used to
solicit proposals . . . when a product or service cannot be
specifically defined," with "evaluation generally . . . based on a variety of criteria such as a proposal's ability to meet the
identified need, the qualifications of the provider, the
proposal's conformity with the available specifications, and other factors as determined useful." By policy, the University's RFP
awards "will be made to the [responding bidder] whose proposal is determined to best meet the needs of the University taking into consideration the evaluation criteria set forth in the RFP."
4 The University's Office of Strategic Procurement is
- 5 -structured the bid process on a 100-point scale, with points
awarded based on criteria such as the submitted purchase price and
the terms of any financing requirements. The RFP stated that the
University would award the highest-scoring bidder the exclusive
right to negotiate a final real estate contract with the University
for the Center.
By the close of an eight-month submission period, the
University received three timely offers in response to the First
RFP: a $1 million purchase and sale offer from Calvary; a
$1 million purchase and sale offer from Waldo Community Action
Partners ("Waldo"); and an alternative creative real property
offer5 from Future of the Hutchinson Center Steering Committee and
Waterfall Arts ("Waterfall Arts"). To make a competitive offer,
Calvary began to liquidate assets around the time of its bid,
including selling its current property (a utility trailer and a
responsible for drafting and evaluating all RFPs. Generally speaking, the individually named Defendant-Appellees Ryan Low (the University's Vice Chancellor of Finance and Administration),
Rachel Piper (the University's Strategic Director for Procurement/Chief Procurement Officer), Robyn Cyr (the University's Senior Director for Strategic Sourcing), and Derek Houtman (the University's Associate Director of Strategic
Sourcing) have varying levels of involvement with the University's public procurement process.
5The University included an option for a so-called
"Alternative Creative Real Property Offer" for "individuals or
entities who would not or potentially could not have the financial ability to provide conventional offers for sale or lease."
- 6 -shipping container) for a total of $115,000. Calvary also sought,
and later secured, $750,000 in additional financing from TD Bank.
(a) Terms of the First RFP
The district court and the parties highlight several key
provisions of the First RFP relevant to this dispute. First,
Section 2.4 required that the winning bidder's negotiation of the
final contract "may not significantly vary the content, nature or
requirements of the proposal or the University's [RFP] to an extent
that may affect the price of goods or services requested." The
same section additionally provided that the "University may cancel
the [RFP] at its sole discretion."
With respect to the administrative appeals process, the
text of the First RFP specified that parties could file two
different types of challenges to protest the RFP. Prior to
submitting a response, a prospective bidder could challenge the
terms as anticompetitive via a "Specification Protest." As later
explained by the University's Executive Director of Strategic
Procurement and Services, Rachel Piper, specification protests are
appropriate when "a potential respondent who is interested in
providing a response to a solicitation sees something that is
written within the RFP specifications that would prohibit them
from submitting," thereby providing a pre-deadline means of
"identify[ing] . . . areas they feel are restrictive in
competition" and seeking redress. Section 1.8 of the First RFP
- 7 -detailed the process and remedies for specification protests,
including that respondents should direct such protests to the
University's Office of Strategic Procurement. Section 1.8 also
established that these pre-deadline challenges would, without
exception, be considered and responded to only if submitted "no
less than five (5) business days" before the final deadline for
submissions.
After the University selected the winning bid,
disappointed respondents could appeal the University's decision
via an "Award Protest." Section 2.5 of the First RFP specified
that respondents had five business days following notification of
the University's award decision to submit an award protest --including a written statement of the specific basis for the
challenge -- to the University's Executive Director of Strategic
Procurement and Services, who at the time was Piper. Section 2.5
further established that, for award protests, the University would
follow its standard, internal appeals process, as set forth in the
University's Administrative Practice Letter VII-A ("Letter
VII-A").
As detailed in Letter VII-A, the University's standard
administrative appeals process provides two levels of review, with
the second level being the final decision. Piper routinely served
as the University's initial decisionmaker at the first appellate
level, and Gretchen Catlin, the University's Chief Facilities and
- 8 -General Services Officer, typically served as the decisionmaker at
the second and final appellate level. However, shortly after the
issuance of the First RFP, Catlin recused herself from serving as
the final decisionmaker due to her heavy involvement in its initial
development and drafting. With Catlin's recusal, Ryan Low, the
University's Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration,
stepped in as the final decisionmaker -- a role he had served in
previously, though "not very frequently." Low then stopped
participating in all University discussions and meetings about the
sale of the Center.
(b) The Internet Connectivity Hub Addendum
Prior to selecting a winning bid, the University
formally modified the terms and conditions of the First RFP
multiple times through the public release of "addendums." The
Hutchinson Center, in addition to being a classroom building and
conference space, has also long been home to a Networkmaine
regional connectivity internet hub, which provides internet access
to numerous public and private educational institutions,
libraries, and community centers throughout the greater Belfast,
Camden, and Rockland areas. Along with the sale of the Center,
the University initially considered moving the internet hub
entirely offsite.
- 9 -In April 2024, following the initial submission
deadlines for the First RFP6 but prior to the award decision, the
University formally issued Addendum 4 to the First RFP, alerting
bidders that it planned to relocate the internet hub from its
current location in a room inside the Center into an external
"purpose-built utility building" to be constructed elsewhere on
Center property. The University explained that this plan would be
cheaper and more efficient than relocating the hub off-site. Among
other things, Addendum 4 described the size of the "proposed
pre-fabricated equipment shelter" and the fenced in area
surrounding it, announced the University's plan to install a new
generator within the fenced space to shore up the internet hub in
the new location, and provided an aerial photograph marking two
"recommended . . . locations" on the property for the new
infrastructure. Addendum 4 also informed bidders that, to
"facilitate this relocation," the University would be "seek[ing]
to establish a lease agreement or easement to house [the] equipment
shelter . . . along with an easement that [would allow] for access
for utility trucks and University vehicles to gain access to the
fenced in area," and that lease "[n]egotiations [with the winning
bidder] may include the transfer of the existing diesel generator
6 The initial submission deadline for the First RFP was
February 5, 2024, but that deadline was later extended to the end of March 2024 (via a formal addendum to the First RFP) and
eventually was extended through the end of July 2024.
- 10 -. . . within the [Center building] to the new owners." Finally,
Addendum 4 informed bidders that "[u]ntil all site prep work,
shelter placement and connectivity hub equipment relocation is
completed, the University will need to retain 24x7x365 access" to
the internet hub inside the building.
Robyn Cyr, the University's Senior Director of Strategic
Sourcing, reached out to each of the respondents to inquire whether
Addendum 4 would necessitate any changes to their previously
submitted proposals. Calvary responded via email: "It does not
change our submission. As you had stated in a previous bid meeting
[the University's continued access to the internet hub] would be
negotiated with the winning proposal. [Calvary is] happy to lease
the future space and also provide 24 [hour] access in the interim."
About six weeks later, the University followed up on
Addendum 4 by providing Calvary, Waldo, and Waterfall Arts with a
proposed lease -- to be further negotiated and signed by the
winning bidder -- drafted to secure the University's continued
access to the internet hub in two "phases." More specifically,
the lease stated that the "University will continue to operate the
hub [inside the Center] Phase 1 plan . . . with an option to
permanently relocate the hub as outlined in the Phase 2 plan[.]"
With respect to "Phase 1," the lease specified that the University
"require[d] a 'carve out'" allowing for the continued operation of
the internet hub in its current site inside the Center "[u]ntil
- 11 -all site prep work, shelter placement and connectivity hub
equipment relocation is completed." As for "Phase 2," the lease
stated the University "propose[d] the relocation of the hub . . .
to a purpose-built utility building" with a "lease agreement or
easement" granting the University continued uninterrupted access
to the hub following the relocation.
(c) Award of the First RFP to Calvary
In mid-August 2024, the University informed Calvary that
it had been selected as the "top-scoring" respondent to the First
RFP, awarding the Church the exclusive right to negotiate with the
University the terms and conditions of a final purchase agreement
for the Center.7 In the award notification letter sent to Calvary,
the parameters of the award were described as follows:
This award notice does not constitute an
agreement and does not obligate the University
to enter into any agreement with the awardee
or any other vendor. Any actual contract
executed by the University pursuant to the
[First] RFP is contingent on the ability of
the parties to reach agreement on final terms
and conditions . . . . The University will
proceed with the present award [to Calvary] so
long as it determines, in its sole discretion,
that doing so is in the best interest of the
University.
7The winning bid was selected by an "evaluation team,"
consisting of administrators from various University departments that used a "consensus approach to evaluate [submitted proposals] and assign evaluation points" to compare each proposal. The final sale of the Center was "subject to . . . approval" by both senior University leadership and the Board of Trustees.
- 12 -The University also provided all three bidders with an executive
summary detailing the "consensus scoring" results for each of the
three proposals. In a press release announcing its decision to
sell the Center to Calvary, the University reported that various
factors had distinguished Calvary's winning proposal, including
the Church's offer of a $1 annual lease agreement in perpetuity
for the internet hub, its willingness to waive inspection of the
Center, and its offer of $250,000 in earnest money.
In the days following the public announcement, numerous
area residents as well as University alumni, donors, students,
faculty, and staff criticized the University's selection of a
religious entity, and Calvary in particular, as the winning bidder.
One online commentor, for example, referred to the decision as
"disappointing," with another writing, "[t]hese evangelists from
[Calvary] are just another religious cult that believes in magical
thinking." Another comment read: "Boo UMaine. Enabling a little
fascist factory." A Maine State Senator representing Belfast, who
also was a member of Waldo's Board of Directors, publicly opined
that "transferring [the Center] from public access and gifting it
to a religious organization, any religious organization, seems
completely inappropriate." Morgan Womack, Belfast Groups
Challenging UMaine System's Sale of Hutchinson Center to Church,
Portland Press Herald (Aug. 21, 2024)
https://www.pressherald.com/2024/08/21/Umaine-system-faces- 13 -criticism-for-sale-of-hutchinson-center-to-local-church/
[https://perma.cc/ZG6D-UVFV].
University leadership later attested that the scope of
the negative community response to selection of Calvary was
"unusual" for an RFP award, and the University responded to the
backlash by, among other things, cataloging the correspondence
received while staff generated a formal response plan.
2. Protests by the Unsuccessful Bidders
(a) Initial Appeals to Piper
Within five days of the announcement of the award to
Calvary, both Waterfall Arts and Waldo submitted protests -- via
letters addressed to Piper -- challenging the decision.
In its initial appeal, Waterfall Arts argued that its
bid should have been scored higher because it was not credited for
its "added value proposition" to allow the University to keep the
internet hub in its current location inside the building for the
life of the lease -- which Waterfall Arts argued would save the
University the estimated $1 million cost of moving the hub into
new space outside the building. Waterfall Arts also criticized
the University's decision to award the First RFP to Calvary.
Asserting that Calvary and "its parent and sister organizations
have advocated on their websites against non-male/female sexual
relationships and marriage," Waterfall Arts's protest questioned
whether the University's proposed internet hub lease would be
- 14 -"problematic" for Calvary given the lease's explicit requirement
that the lessor refrain from discriminating on the basis of
protected classes, including sex and sexual orientation.
In its appeal letter addressed to Piper, Waldo likewise
challenged the way in which the University scored its proposal.
And, like Waterfall Arts, Waldo criticized the University's
decision to award the RFP to a religious entity, observing: "A
[c]hurch by its very design could be perceived as limiting to some
in the community (real or perceived) and not in alignment with the
University's intention as outlined in its nondiscrimination
section of the lease."
Finding no merit in either appeal of the University's
decision, Piper denied both challenges, explaining in letters to
each disappointed bidder: "After a thorough review of the
solicitation process and all related requirements, I have
determined that the award [to Calvary] will be upheld as originally
issued." In her letter to Waterfall Arts, Piper specifically
dismissed as irrelevant its "'value-added proposition' argument,"
observing:
Value-Added Propositions in a procurement
process are often referred to as cost
avoidance or switching costs. If the
University had planned to consider either cost
avoidance or switching costs, the [First RFP]
would have declared that fact in [the First
RFP] . . . with associated points for the
evaluation.
- 15 -In both letters, Piper also specifically responded to the criticism
levied against the University's decision to award the bid to the
Church, writing that the University had seen "no evidence"
supporting the disappointed bidders' allegations of protectedclass discrimination by Calvary and noting that the "University
does not, and will not, make decisions based on discriminatory
criteria, including the content of a respondent's constitutionally
protected religious speech."
After informing Waldo and Waterfall Arts that their
initial appeals were unsuccessful, the University issued a second
press release announcing that it had received and denied two
"formal protest[s]" from "parties who submitted a non-selected
proposal" and, accordingly, would be moving "forward in
negotiating a final agreement for the sale of the [Center]" to
Calvary. In that press release, the University acknowledged that,
in the weeks since its initial announcement, it had received "at
least 135 citizen comments" about the pending sale to Calvary.
The University responded to criticism of its decision in the
release, stating: the University "cannot discriminate, including
on the basis of religion" as "[d]oing so would be against the law
and inconsistent with the [University's] commitment to inclusion."
(b) Final Appeals to Low
In early September 2024, in letters addressed to Vice
Chancellor Low -- the designated decisionmaker for the second,
- 16 -final level of the internal administrative appeals process -- both
Waldo and Waterfall Arts appealed Piper's decision to deny their
respective challenges to the award of the First RFP to Calvary.
In addition to raising again the same perceived problems
with the University's scoring of its bid, Waldo's appeal asked Low
to reconsider whether the award to Calvary was "best for the
community" and questioned whether the decision adhered to the
University's "mission to public education and accessibility for
all" and support for "diversity and inclusion." Waterfall Arts
similarly reiterated its challenges to the scoring of its proposal,
including its contention that it should have received credit for
its cost-saving proposal to keep the internet hub in its current
location. Like Waldo, Waterfall Arts also emphasized that "tempers
and frustrations with the award decision [to Calvary] are running
high in the community" and suggested that a reversal of the award
would "ameliorate this situation and put the community and the
University back on the same path together."
As Low would later attest in sworn statements to the
court, his role as the final decisionmaker in reviewing award
protests was to focus on asserted errors in the University's
process. Upon conducting this review, Low found no merit in
Waldo's appeal and merit in only one of the challenges raised in
Waterfall Arts's appeal. Specifically, Low would later testify
that he was "intrigued" by Waterfall Arts's argument that its score
- 17 -should have reflected its cost-saving proposal to leave the
internet hub in its current site within the Hutchinson Center
building for the life of the lease, despite the First RFP's
discussion in Addendum 4 and the accompanying proposed lease of
relocating the internet hub outside the building on Center
property. Based on an estimate Networkmaine provided to the
University of the anticipated expense to relocate the internet hub
and its fiber optic cables, combined with the estimated cost of a
new generator, electrical work, site prep, and building
construction, Low agreed with Waterfall Arts that if leaving the
hub in place was in fact feasible it could potentially save the
University approximately $500,000 in costs. Low decided to reach
out to the University's Chief Information Officer to see if such
an option would even be possible and workable for the University
and was told the proposed solution was indeed realistic from an
information technology standpoint.
Armed with this information, Low decided that he
disagreed with Piper's decision to disregard Waterfall Arts's
cost-avoidance argument. In his view, the fact that the
cost-avoidance factor was not explicitly incorporated into the
First RFP's point scale should not have been the determinative
consideration in denying the Waterfall Arts appeal. Reasoning
that the University "would be significantly better off" if it
"could avoid the approximate $500,000 cost of moving the internet
- 18 -hub," Low instead determined that the University's failure to
include proposed cost-avoidance measures in the First RFP's point
scale was "a flaw in the scoring system" and that this flaw was
significant enough to warrant overturning the First RFP award and
restarting the public procurement process. Before informing the
three respondents of his decision, Low conferred with the
University's general counsel, later testifying that he did so to
ensure that he had followed all steps necessary to grant an award
protest and to overturn an award.
In mid-September 2024, Low issued letters to each of the
three bidders informing them of his decision to rescind the
University's award of the First RFP to Calvary. In his letter to
Waterfall Arts, Low more specifically explained his decision to
grant its appeal as follows:
[A]fter a thorough review, I agree with your
assertion that the evaluation criteria did not
allow for due consideration of all materially
relevant financial details . . . .
. . . [I]n Addendum 4, the [University] stated
that in the event of a real property sale, its
existing Networkmaine hub within the [Center]
would need to be relocated . . . in order to
maintain internet connectivity for midcoast
institutions. . . . While other respondents
proposed favorable lease arrangements and
access to the property, [Waterfall Arts]'s
creative alternative offer to allow the hub to
permanently remain within the existing
building would significantly reduce the cost
of site work, new construction and relocation
for the [University].
- 19 -Low additionally explained why his determination as the final
decisionmaker differed from Piper's initial decision:
In ruling on your Aug. 19, 2024 protest as it
relates to this point, [Piper] dismissed
[Waterfall Arts]'s claim about "its
value-added proposition" because the
[U]niversity's original RFP and related
evaluation criteria had not taken so-called
cost avoidance into consideration. While that
is true . . . the avoidance of hundreds of
thousands of dollars in relocation expenses
presents clear financial and operational
benefits that are decidedly in the best
interests of the [University] and thus should
have been valued in the criteria by which all
proposals were scored.
3. The Second RFP
About three weeks later, the University issued a new
RFP, RFP #2025-031 (the "Second RFP"), that largely mirrored the
original terms. However, critically, in place of Addendum 4 and
the proposed lease's description of the hub's relocation outside
of the building, the Second RFP instead outlined a mandatory
leaseback provision to keep the internet hub in its existing
location within the building, requiring the winning bidder to lease
back 120 square feet of closet space to the University for an
annual fee of no more than $3,000. This lease term would extend
for five years, with potential renewals. Like the First RFP, the
Second RFP stated that submissions would again be evaluated and
"consensus scored" on a 100-point scale, but now up to five of
those points would be allocated to measuring the "Networkmaine
- 20 -Lease Cost," with five points assessing any "contingencies" and
the remaining points scoring the "purchase price."
The University received timely bids from the same three
respondents. Calvary's revamped bid offered a purchase price of
$1.1 million, a free lease to the University for the internet hub
space, and an offer to pay all utilities related to the internet
hub.
The University ultimately awarded the Second RFP to
Waldo, the entity that received the highest score based on the
modified selection criteria, thereby granting Waldo the right to
negotiate a final agreement to purchase the Center. Waldo's new
offer of $3.06 million was more than $1 million higher than
Waterfall Arts's and almost $2 million higher than Calvary's. On
November 20, 2024, Calvary -- the recipient of the lowest
score -- submitted a first-level protest appealing its score and
the University's decision to award the bid to its competitor, which
was denied by Piper in early December. Finding no errors in the
process for the Second RFP, Low denied the second, final level of
Calvary's appeal in mid-December 2024.
B. The District Court's Decisions
On November 19, 2024 -- the day before submitting its
initial challenge of the Second RFP to Piper -- Calvary filed suit
in federal court alleging that the University's decision to rescind
the award of the First RFP to Calvary was unconstitutional and
- 21 -seeking to halt the University's sale of the Center to Waldo.8
Relying on quoted language perceived as anti-religious in both
Waldo and Waterfall Arts's letters of appeal and in various public
statements by community members and pointing to alleged
irregularities with respect to the First RFP, Calvary asserted
that the University's decision was impermissibly motivated by
religious animus in violation of the Equal Protection and Free
Exercise Clauses of the United States Constitution.9
The court held oral argument on Calvary's motion for a
TRO on January 6, 2025. After the hearing, and solely on the paper
record, the court denied Calvary's motion, finding that Calvary
had "not produced enough probative circumstantial evidence of
impermissible religious bias for the [c]ourt to conclude that it
is likely to succeed on the merits of its Equal Protection Clause
claim" and that it had "not carried its burden to demonstrate that
it is likely to succeed on the merits of its Free Exercise Clause
claim." Calvary Chapel Belfast v. Univ. of Me. Sys., No. 24-cv00392, 2025 WL 71701, at *9, *10 (D. Me. Jan. 10, 2025). The court
8 The parties later agreed to delay the federal court
proceedings while Calvary protested the award decision through the University's internal appeal process.
9 Calvary's complaint included other claims, but Calvary's
motion for a preliminary injunction was based solely on Counts I (violation of the Equal Protection Clause) and II (violation of the Free Exercise Clause).
- 22 -also found that Calvary failed to establish that it would suffer
irreparable harm absent injunctive relief. Id. at *10.
In early March 2025, the court held an evidentiary
hearing on Calvary's motion for a preliminary injunction.
Twenty-three joint exhibits were entered into evidence, and the
court heard testimony from four witnesses: Piper, Low, Cyr, and
Pastor Greg Huston. As detailed above, Low testified that neither
the fact that Calvary is a religious institution nor any of the
community opposition to Calvary played any role in his decision to
grant Waterfall Arts's appeal. Rather, Low testified, "the one
and only ground upon which" he "rescinded [the First RFP]" was
"cost savings."
Following the submission of post-hearing briefs, the
court issued a written decision denying Calvary's motion for a
preliminary injunction. Specifically finding the testimony of
"all [four] witnesses credible," the court concluded that Calvary
again had not demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits
of either its Equal Protection or Free Exercise Clause claims.
Calvary Chapel Belfast v. Univ. of Me. Sys., No. 24-cv-00392, 2025
WL 1333243, at *1, *13 (D. Me. May 7, 2025). As of early October
2025, the University had moved forward in its negotiations with
Waldo but had not yet closed the sale of the Center "because of
the pendency of this . . . appeal."
- 23 -II.
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court's denial of Calvary's
preliminary injunction motion for abuse of discretion. US Ghost
Adventures, LLC v. Miss Lizzie's Coffee LLC, 121 F.4th 339, 347
(1st Cir. 2024). Proceeding with the understanding that such
injunctive relief is an "extraordinary and drastic remedy that is
never awarded as of right," id. (quoting Peoples Fed. Sav. Bank v.
People's United Bank, 672 F.3d 1, 8-9 (1st Cir. 2012)), we examine
"answers to abstract legal questions de novo, findings of fact for
clear error, and judgment calls with significant deference to the
trial court," id. Put differently, we will reverse the district
court's decision "only if the court clearly erred in assessing the
facts, misapprehended the applicable legal principles, or
otherwise is shown to have abused its discretion." Wine & Spirits
Retailers, Inc. v. Rhode Island, 418 F.3d 36, 46 (1st Cir. 2005).
A plaintiff requesting a preliminary injunction "must
establish" that: (1) it is likely to succeed on the merits; (2) it
is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary
relief; (3) the balance of equities tips in its favor; and (4) the
requested injunction is in the public interest. Doe v. Trump, 157
F.4th 36, 46 (1st Cir. 2025) (quoting Winter v. Nat. Res. Def.
Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 20 (2008)). "When . . . the movant
'do[es] not argue on appeal that the [other three factors] mandate
- 24 -an injunction even if [its] claims are not likely to succeed on
the merits,' we may rest an affirmance solely on an
unlikelihood-of-success holding."10 Becky's Broncos, LLC v. Town
of Nantucket, 138 F.4th 73, 78 (1st Cir. 2025) (quoting Ocean State
Tactical, LLC v. Rhode Island, 95 F.4th 38, 43 (1st Cir. 2024)).
The logic of that option is straightforward: "if the moving party
cannot demonstrate that [it] is likely to succeed in [its] quest,
the remaining factors" usually become "matters of idle curiosity."
New Comm Wireless Servs., Inc. v. SprintCom, Inc., 287 F.3d 1, 9
(1st Cir. 2002).
B. Equal Protection Claim
Calvary asserts an intentional discrimination claim,
arguing that the University violated the Equal Protection Clause
by carrying out the facially neutral public procurement process in
a discriminatory way. In support of that claim, Calvary contends
that the district court erroneously concluded that the Church was
unlikely to succeed on the merits of its claim because of a flaw
in its legal analysis. See Rosario-Urdaz v. Rivera-Hernandez, 350
F.3d 219, 221 (1st Cir. 2003) ("An error of law is, of course, an
abuse of discretion."). Specifically, Calvary argues that the
10 As stated above, based on its conclusion that Calvary failed
to adduce sufficient evidence to demonstrate a likelihood of
success on the merits of its equal protection and free exercise clause claims, the district court denied the preliminary
injunction motion without reaching the remaining factors.
- 25 -court created a "novel rule" when it required Calvary "to make a
direct 'showing connecting the animus in the community to the
government action' to raise an inference of discriminatory
intent." Instead, Calvary asserts, the court should have
"engage[d] in a sensitive inquiry into all available direct and
circumstantial evidence that may be probative of a discriminatory
purpose." Calvary then asserts that the district court also
committed clear error in its factual analysis of the evidence
supporting its request for a preliminary injunction.
We consider these arguments in turn.
1. Assertion of Legal Error
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
requires that "similarly situated persons . . . receive
substantially similar treatment from their government." Davis v.
Coakley, 802 F.3d 128, 132 (1st Cir. 2015) (quoting Tapalian v.
Tusino, 377 F.3d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 2004)). A plaintiff claiming a
violation of the right to equal protection therefore must show (1)
that "compared with others similarly situated, [the plaintiff] was
selectively treated" and "(2) that such selective treatment was
based on impermissible considerations such as . . . religion,
intent to inhibit or punish the exercise of constitutional rights,
or malicious or bad faith intent to injure a person." Id. at 132-33 (quoting Rubinovitz v. Rogato, 60 F.3d 906, 910 (1st Cir. 1995))
(laying out prima facie case for a disparate treatment Equal
- 26 -Protection Claim); see also Buchanan v. Maine, 469 F.3d 158, 178
(1st Cir. 2006) (similar).
A plaintiff need only establish that impermissible bias
was one of the "motivating factor[s]" for its selective treatment
-- not the only motivating factor. Vill. of Arlington Heights v.
Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 265-66 (1977). But, at the
end of the day, some "[p]roof of . . . discriminatory intent or
purpose is required to show a violation of the Equal Protection
Clause." Id. at 265. Of course, direct evidence of discriminatory
purpose is rarely available. See, e.g., Riordan v. Kempiners, 831
F.2d 690, 697 (7th Cir. 1987) ("Defendants of even minimal
sophistication will neither admit discriminatory animus nor leave
a paper trail demonstrating it[.]"). It is thus well established
that impermissible discriminatory animus can be inferred from the
totality of the circumstances, including both direct and
circumstantial evidence. See Arlington Heights, 429 U.S. at 266-68; Bos. Parent Coal. for Acad. Excellence Corp. v. Sch. Comm. of
Bos., 996 F.3d 37, 45 (1st Cir. 2021) (describing the Arlington
Heights framework); see also, e.g., Mi Familia Vota v. Fontes, 129
F.4th 691, 725 (9th Cir. 2025) (referring to the Arlington Heights
framework as a "totality of the circumstances" test).
More specifically, to assess discriminatory intent in
equal protection selective treatment cases, courts are instructed
to conduct "a sensitive inquiry into such circumstantial and direct
- 27 -evidence of intent as may be available," including reviewing "[t]he
historical background of the decision," "[t]he specific sequence
of events leading up to the challenged decision," and "contemporary
statements by members of the decisionmaking body[.]" Arlington
Heights, 429 U.S. at 266-68. As particularly relevant here, in
assessing the totality of the circumstances, an established
departure "from the normal procedural sequence" followed by the
decisionmaker can provide telling circumstantial evidence of
discriminatory intent, as can an established "[s]ubstantive
departure[]" in that decisionmaking, "particularly if the factors
usually considered important by the decisionmaker strongly favor
a decision contrary to the one reached." Id. at 267; see also
Macone v. Town of Wakefield, 277 F.3d 1, 6-7 (1st Cir. 2002)
(observing that both substantive and "procedural abnormalities can
provide a basis for finding discriminatory intent").
Calvary insists that instead of applying this
totality-of-the-circumstances framework, the district court
improperly applied what amounted to a heightened Arlington Heights
standard. That is, Calvary maintains that the court erred by
demanding a "provable connection between the religiously hostile
community animus and the [University's] alleged procedural
irregularities," thus overstating the required showing for a
violation of the Equal Protection Clause.
- 28 -To support its allegations of anti-religious
discrimination by the University, Calvary's complaint cited
language used by community members angered by the University's
decision to sell the Center to Calvary in various internet postings
and in written communications to University officials. It also
quoted passages from Waterfall Arts's and Waldo's appeal letters
criticizing the University's selection of Calvary as the winning
bidder.11 Post-hearing, Calvary's briefing seeking injunctive
relief asserted that the University's rescission of the award to
the Church immediately following this public outcry, as well as
several "procedural anomalies" in the First RFP process,
constitute circumstantial evidence of the decisionmaker's
discriminatory intent. In making this argument, Calvary pressed
two issues in particular: Low's decision to cancel the First RFP
(thereby revoking the award to Calvary) rather than to negotiate
the "option" of keeping the internet hub in its present location
11 "We look at the allegations in the plaintiff['s]
complaint[] and the evidence from the preliminary injunction
proceedings" when considering a preliminary injunction appeal.
Doe, 157 F.4th at 47. Calvary provided the source material for
the quoted language in attachments to its verified complaint or within the complaint itself. See generally 28 U.S.C. § 1746 (unsworn declarations); Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b)(3) (pleadings signed under penalty of perjury certify that "the factual contentions
have evidentiary support"). Much of the source material was also included in the joint exhibits introduced by the parties at the preliminary injunction hearing. In any event, at this stage in
the litigation, the University has not contested that there was animus towards Calvary in the community at the time, maintaining instead that its decisionmakers were not influenced by that animus.
- 29 -directly with the Church (which we will call the "cancellation
decision"); and the classification of Waterfall Arts's appeal as
an award protest instead of dismissing it outright as an untimely
specification protest (which we will refer to as "the protest
consideration issue").
Faced with these contentions, the district court
reasonably began its analysis by "survey[ing] case law where public
pressure combined with procedural anomalies was held sufficient to
show discriminatory purpose." Calvary Chapel Belfast, 2025 WL
1333243, at *8 (collecting cases). The court observed that
"[o]ften, the connection between the community animus and the
government action is a procedural irregularity, a hurdle that
deviates from the procedural norms, or a substantive departure
from factors usually considered important to the decisionmaker."
Id. The court further recognized that community sentiment can
have an improper impact even if the decisionmaking official "does
not personally share those views." Id.
Despite what the Church suggests, the court did not
rigidly demand any "provable connection" between the community
animus and a procedural irregularity or improperly "fuse[]" those
two Arlington Heights factors. Instead, it merely noted that there
must be something suggesting that the government actually bowed to
such pressure and highlighted that a procedural irregularity is
one way that can sometimes imply such acquiescence. The court
- 30 -then closely examined the proffered evidentiary support for the
two primary irregularities alleged by Calvary -- the cancellation
decision and the protest consideration issue. See id. at *11-12
(referring to the first alleged irregularity as a "substantive
deviation" and the latter as a "procedural deviation"). The court
ultimately found that evidence insufficiently probative of the
type of irregularities contemplated by Arlington Heights -- i.e.,
a departure from the standard process for decisionmaking or from
the usual substantive factors used in decisionmaking -- to support
an inference that discrimination was a true motivating factor for
the decision. See id. (citing Vill. of Arlington Heights, 429
U.S. at 267).
The court's articulation of the applicable inquiry
aligns with the required analysis set forth above. The court
recognized that widespread religious animus in the community can,
in certain circumstances, support an inference that a government
official acted with discriminatory intent by essentially adopting
the community's view even if the official did not personally share
that view. See, e.g., Jesus Christ is the Answer Ministries, Inc.
v. Baltimore Cnty., 915 F.3d 256, 263 (4th Cir. 2019) ("[A]
government decision influenced by community members' religious
bias is unlawful, even if the government decisionmakers display no
bias themselves. Such impermissible influence may be inferred
where expressions of community bias are followed by irregularities
- 31 -in government decision-making." (citations omitted)); Smith v.
Town of Clarkton, 682 F.2d 1055, 1066 (4th Cir. 1982) (similar).
But the presence of community opposition does not, without more,
imply a conclusion of intentional discrimination by the
decisionmaker. See, e.g., Jesus Christ is the Answer Ministries,
Inc., 915 F.3d at 263 (noting that impermissible influence "may be
inferred where expressions of community bias are followed by
irregularities in government decision-making" (emphasis added)).
And here the court found scant evidentiary support for the alleged
irregularities -- "the more" -- urged by Calvary.
Though Calvary itself stressed the purported
irregularities in its complaint and arguments to the district
court, Calvary now disagrees on appeal with the critical importance
to its case of establishing any such irregularities. Calvary
insists instead that the University's "revocation of the Church's
winning bid" amidst "vociferous community opposition" was itself
"sufficiently probative of discriminatory intent." Put another
way, the Church argues that, when the community protest is loud or
"relentless" enough, it is virtually impossible for a government
actor to make a decision that is not impermissibly "tainted" by
that public pressure.
That argument is simply not the law. As the University
points out, Calvary is arguing, in effect, for a per se rule: if
a religious entity seeks legal relief amid widespread community
- 32 -opposition to the religious group's position, the presence of that
animus alone establishes the causal connection between the public
pressure and the governmental action. To the contrary, as the
district court observed in its decision denying Calvary's motion
for a TRO,
[t]he fact that there was religious animosity
present in the community and even argued to
the [University by Waldo and Waterfall Arts]
as a basis for appeal cannot mean that the
[University] is locked into a decision that it
determined would result in a substantial net
financial loss for it when there is no other
evidence to suggest it acted on impermissible
motives.
Calvary Chapel Belfast, 2025 WL 71701, at *9.
Each case on which Calvary relies to support its
inevitable "taint" argument is factually or procedurally
inapposite. For example, in Innovative Health Sys., Inc. v. City
of White Plains, 117 F.3d 37 (2d Cir. 1997), the Second Circuit
affirmed the district court's conclusion that a drug and alcohol
rehabilitation center was likely to succeed on the merits of its
disability discrimination case based on the argument that the
zoning board allowed illegal prejudice in the community to
influence the decisionmaking process. Id. at 49. But the court
did so only upon finding that "[t]here is little evidence in the
record to support the [zoning board]'s decision on any ground other
than the need to alleviate the intense political pressure from the
surrounding community brought on by the prospect of drug- and
- 33 -alcohol-addicted neighbors." Id. The court additionally
concluded the adverse decision was "highly suspect in light of the
requirements set forth in the zoning ordinance" and that the "lack
of a credible justification for the . . . decision raises an
additional inference that the decision was based on impermissible
factors[.]" Id.; see also Mhany Mgmt., Inc. v. Cnty. of Nassau,
819 F.3d 581, 611 (2d Cir. 2016) (noting that the "district court
was entitled to conclude, based on the Arlington Heights factors,
that something was amiss here," where, in addition to the community
animus, the government "abrupt[ly]" deviated from its historical
decisionmaking process and where the testimony of government
officials was not credible).12
In short, there was no error of law in the district
court's approach to Calvary's equal protection claim. To determine
whether the University's stated reason for its decisionmaking was
likely to be found pretextual, the court properly looked at the
totality of the circumstances, see Arlington Heights, 429 U.S. at
266-67, including the intensity of the community animus and the
timing of Low's decision in its immediate wake, see Calvary Chapel
Belfast, 2025 WL 1333243, at *5-6, *8, and appropriately focused
12 Another case highlighted by Calvary, Avenue 6E Invs., LLC
v. City of Yuma, 818 F.3d 493, 509 (9th Cir. 2016), is procedurally inapposite given that the case, in relevant part, was at the motion to dismiss stage, and the court accepted as plausible the existence of the procedural irregularities identified by the plaintiff.
- 34 -its analysis on the two alleged procedural irregularities that
Calvary had itself highlighted -- the cancellation decision and
the protest consideration issue, see id. at *9-12. In completing
its inquiry into whether the government decisionmaker -- not the
community -- acted with discriminatory intent, the court credited
Low's testimony that he was motivated solely by cost savings, as
the court was entitled to do, see id. at *1, *6, *11-12, and the
court found Calvary's evidence of any irregularity to be wanting,
see id. at *11-12, a finding that we will examine closely as part
of our clear error review. Calvary offered no other direct or
circumstantial evidence suggesting that Low adopted or bowed to
the discriminatory animus of others. The court thus concluded
that the Church had not carried its burden to establish that it
was likely to succeed on the merits of its Equal Protection Clause
claim. See id. at *12.
2. Assertion of Clear Error in the Court's Factfinding
We proceed, then, to our highly deferential clear error
review of the critical factual findings underpinning the court's
ultimate determination -- i.e., that, based on a review of the
totality of the circumstances, Calvary did not establish that the
University's cost-saving rationale for the decision to cancel the
First RFP was pretextual, and hence Calvary was unlikely to succeed
on the merits of its claim of intentional discrimination under the
Equal Protection Clause. See Stauffer v. Internal Revenue Serv.,
- 35 -939 F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2019) (noting that the "clear-error
standard is extremely deferential" (quoting United States v.
Marquez, 280 F.3d 19, 26 (1st Cir. 2002))); see also Wine & Spirits
Retailers, Inc., 418 F.3d at 46 (findings of fact underpinning an
equal protection claim are reviewed for clear error in abuse-ofdiscretion review of a denial of injunctive relief); Ramos v. Roche
Prods., Inc., 936 F.2d 43, 46 (1st Cir. 1991) ("The Supreme Court
has held that 'a finding of intentional discrimination is a finding
of fact.'" (quoting Anderson v. Bessemer City, 470 U.S. 564, 573
(1985))). In performing this clear error review, we focus on the
court's critical findings that the cancellation decision and the
protest consideration issue were not irregularities suggestive of
pretext. See Calvary Chapel Belfast, 2025 WL 1333243, at *11 ("The
Court does not conclude the isolated use of the term 'option' in
a draft lease that was never executed is probative of pretext or
discriminatory animus."); id. at *12 ("The Court does not conclude
the [University]'s consideration of the disappointed bidders'
protests is evidence of discriminatory animus.").13
13 We note that these preliminary factual findings by the
district court are not binding on the ultimate decisionmaker,
whether that decisionmaker is the court in future summary judgment proceedings or a jury in a future trial. See Akebia Therapeutics, Inc. v. Azar, 976 F.3d 86, 98 n.6 (1st Cir. 2020) ("We recognize that, at the preliminary injunction stage, this [factual] finding is merely a predicted outcome, subject to reexamination[.]");
Narragansett Indian Tribe v. Guilbert, 934 F.2d 4, 6 (1st Cir.
1991) (noting that preliminary injunction decisions "are to be
understood as statements of probable outcomes" only); Roland Mach.
- 36 -We begin, however, with an observation regarding the
primary obstacle Calvary must surmount to prevail before this
court. Key to each of the district court's rulings on the alleged
procedural irregularities, and therefore to ours, is the court's
determination that Low testified credibly that his decision to
undo the award of the First RFP to Calvary was driven solely by a
desire to save the University from an unnecessary
half-million-dollar expense. See id. at *1, *6, *11-12.
We recently observed that "[w]hen a judge's factual
'finding is based on [a] decision to credit the testimony of . . .
[a] witness[] . . . who[] has told a coherent and facially
plausible story that is not contradicted by extrinsic evidence,
that finding, if not internally inconsistent, can virtually never
be clear error.'" Urizar-Mota v. United States, 171 F.4th 445,
465 (1st Cir. 2026) (quoting Anderson, 470 U.S. at 575). As we
Co. v. Dresser Indus., Inc., 749 F.2d 380, 388 (7th Cir. 1984)
(observing that the preliminary injunction framework does not
determine the wrongfulness of a defendant's conduct or assign
rights and entitlements to settle a dispute but rather functions to help judges avoid the more costly of two errors: "the error of denying an injunction to one who will in fact (though no one can know this for sure) go on to win the case on the merits, and the error of granting an injunction to one who will go on to lose"); Jacob Cogdill, Note, The Law of Vibes: Much Ado About Preliminary Injunctions, 101 Wash. U. L. Rev. 1345, 1346-47 (2024) ("As opposed to other pretrial remedies like summary judgment or dismissal for failure to state a claim, preliminary injunctions enforce
potentially harsh penalties against parties without judging the sufficiency of a plaintiff's claims or the wrongfulness of a
defendant's conduct.").
- 37 -shall explain, that observation is apt here. In reviewing the
asserted procedural irregularities, we find no basis for
discrediting the court's determination that "Low made the decision
to rescind the award and issue a new RFP based on one of the same
factors the second-appeal-level administrator would usually
consider -- cost savings." Calvary Chapel Belfast, 2025 WL
1333243, at *11.
(a) The Cancellation Decision
In defending against Calvary's assertion that Low's
cost-saving rationale for rescinding the award to Calvary and
starting a new RFP process was pretextual, the University relies
on the testimony and declaration of Low to assert that direct
negotiations with Calvary about leaving the internet hub in its
present location would have contravened the First RFP's
prohibition against "significantly vary[ing] the content, nature
or requirements of . . . the [RFP] to an extent that may affect
the price of goods or services requested." More specifically, in
his letters to both Waterfall Arts and Calvary explaining his
reasoning for granting Waterfall Arts's second-level appeal, Low
observed that issuing the second RFP "would appropriately take
into account both the real and potential value of all aspects of
the proposals including those that related to" the internet hub.
Low's reasoning is corroborated by the declaration submitted to
the court prior to the TRO hearing by Gretchen Catlin (the
- 38 -University's Chief Facilities and General Services Officer, and
the recused second-level decisionmaker for the First RFP). In her
declaration, Catlin explained that a new RFP would offer the dual
benefit of requiring all bids to include that cost-saving factor
and informing prospective bidders that similar cost-saving
proposals would be awarded points in the selection process.
Calvary contends that this explanation is belied by the
language the University used in drafting the proposed lease that
was circulated with Addendum 4. Calvary argues that, by referring
in the lease to the permanent relocation of the internet hub as
"an option"14 the University conveyed to First RFP bidders that the
cost-saving measure of leaving the hub in place had always been a
viable possibility. Therefore, Calvary argues, a new RFP was
14The draft lease accompanying Addendum 4 to the First RFP
read as follows:
Currently situated within the Hutchinson Center in room
100Y, the hub is backed up by a generator . . . .
[T]he University will continue to operate the hub
[in the] Phase 1 plan . . . with an option to permanently
relocate the hub as outlined in the Phase 2 plan."
The draft lease also detailed the treatment of the hub in those two referenced phases: Phase 1 specified that the University would "require[] a 'carve out'" allowing for the continued operation of the internet hub in its current site inside the Center "[u]ntil all site prep work, shelter placement and connectivity hub
equipment relocation is completed;" Phase 2 specified that the
University "proposes the relocation of the hub . . . to a purposebuilt utility building" with a "lease agreement or easement"
granting the University continued uninterrupted access to the hub following its relocation.
- 39 -unnecessary and religious animus (rather than cost saving) was the
true reason for rescission of the award.
The district court disagreed, instead finding that
Calvary's suggested reading of the lease was inconsistent with the
vast majority of the record evidence, see id. at *11, which
corroborated Low's testimony that Addendum 4 to the First RFP was
issued for the purpose of alerting the bidders of the University's
then-definitive plan to move the internet hub out of the building
as soon as practicable. That understanding was supported by the
terms of the lease, which described two phases, with Phase 1
consisting of a temporary, transitional period that would last
only until the new, external utility building could be constructed.
It was also supported by the language of Addendum 4 itself, which
described in detail all aspects of the second phase, including the
specific dimensions of the "pre-fabricated equipment shelter" and
the fenced-in area surrounding it, the need to install a new
generator within the fenced space, and even the suggested locations
for the placement of the planned infrastructure.
As the district court pointed out, Calvary's own
witness, Pastor Huston -- the "[l]ead point of contact" for
Calvary's bid -- offered testimony consistent with Low's
explanation. See id. at *10. Huston began his hearing testimony
by stating that he read the word "option[]" in the lease to mean
that phase 2 was "discretionary, I suppose." He then testified
- 40 -that, when Calvary advised the University that the terms of
Addendum 4 and the circulated lease did not require any changes to
its already-submitted offer to purchase, the Church knew that it
had to accommodate the University "should they move" the internet
hub outside. However, in a subsequent answer on direct
examination, Huston stated that he understood that, by issuing
Addendum 4 and circulating the proposed lease, the University was
informing the bidders that "the hub would stay [within the Center]
until it was moved at a certain point." He then confirmed on
cross-examination that Calvary's response to the First RFP
incorporated an understanding that "ultimately, the hub would be
moved outside."
In addition, contemporaneous documents in the record
indicated that, similar to Low, Calvary understood during this
period that moving the internet hub outside of the Center was a
requirement. For example, in Calvary's email message telling the
University the Addendum and lease did not change its bid, Calvary
affirmed that it agreed to "lease the future space" to the
University and would "also provide" the University round-the-clock
access to the current space "in the interim." (Emphasis added.)
In another email exchange about six weeks later, Calvary
corresponded with the University regarding the location and
landscaping of the to-be-constructed utility building. That email
read as follows:
- 41 -As far as location we would like to put the
ground lease location in the Northwest corner
of the lot . . . between the current sign and
the property line adjacent to Sweetser Dr. to
keep it out of usable space. We would want
the University to plant shrubs around the
perimeter for improved esthetics.
Moreover, the district court credited the testimony of
Low and Piper, the two University witnesses who heard the appeals
concerning the First RFP. See id. at *1, *10. Both similarly
testified that, at the time they were considering the appeals,
they understood that the hub would be relocated. Low, as the
University's final decisionmaker, candidly acknowledged at the
preliminary injunction hearing that sloppy drafting by the
University in its use of the word "option" could be read to suggest
that the move of the internet hub outside the Hutchinson Center
was discretionary, and hence leaving the hub in the building was
always an alternative. But Low testified that when he was
reviewing the protest materials from Waldo and Waterfall Arts, he
did not "realize" that leaving the hub inside the Center "was truly
an option" because "[e]verything in all of the materials led [me]
to believe that there was going to be a phase 2" in which the hub
would be relocated. Low then explained that because he believed
that the First RFP, including Addendum 4, did not contemplate the
possibility of the internet hub remaining in the existing building,
and because he thought bidders might change their offers in
- 42 -response to a new RFP requiring the purchaser to permanently house
the hub, he felt that "rescission of [the First RFP] . . . was
absolutely necessary" for the University to "avoid the $500,000
relocation expense."
Finally, as the district court acknowledged, it is
possible that Low was "mistaken about whether he was required to
rescind the award to the Church in order to leave the hub in place
permanently[.]" Calvary Chapel Belfast, 2025 WL 1333243, at *11.
But the district court effectively found that even if Low was
mistaken it was a good faith mistake that was not tainted by
religious bias. See id. Given the evidence recounted above
concerning Addendum 4 and the lease -- the testimony of Low, Piper
and Huston, and Calvary's email messages -- we find no basis in
the record before us to conclude that the judge clearly erred in
believing Low that religious bias did not taint his decision to
rescind the award to Calvary at the end of the First RFP process.
(b) The Protest Consideration Issue
We likewise find no clear error in the court's finding
that the University's treatment of Waterfall Arts's appeal as a
timely award protest was not a procedural deviation suggestive of
pretext. In both its first- and second-level administrative
appeals of the award to Calvary, Waterfall Arts challenged the
evaluation committee's failure to award any points for their
proposal to leave the internet hub in place, thereby saving the
- 43 -University the costs of moving the facility. As the initial
decisionmaker, Piper denied the protest, reasoning that
cost-saving measures were not among the scoring criteria of the
First RFP. Low, on the other hand, concluded that the omission of
cost-saving considerations was a flaw in the first RFP's criteria,
and he thus found Waterfall Arts's protest valid.
Calvary asserts that both decisions were problematic
because Waterfall Arts's argument was a specification protest --not an awards protest -- and thus needed to be raised before the
deadline for response submissions. Relying on the testimony of
both Piper and Low, which it credited, the district court concluded
that Calvary had not adduced sufficiently compelling evidence of
a procedural deviation and that, even if the process was unusual,
the University's handling of the protest was not suggestive of
pretext. See id. at *12.
Piper testified that, in her experience evaluating RFP
protests, the argument by Waterfall Arts was properly categorized
and evaluated as a timely post-award protest. She explained that
her judgment that the First RFP excluded cost-avoidance as a factor
warranting points did not involve the sort of argument raised in
a specification protest, which challenges a factor that is
disqualifying at the outset of the bid process. Such a factor
needlessly limits competition, and a pre-deadline protest allows
for a potential remedy before the close of bidding. In her
- 44 -testimony, Piper provided the following illustrative example of a
specification protest to a hypothetical RFP for the delivery of
office supplies requiring that supplies had to be delivered in "a
yellow van with a man with a mustache on it": a specification
protest would be a means for "Staples or Office Max to say . . .
[t]hat's not a fair specification. If you're trying to just get
delivery, we should be able to bring them in our white van."
Piper pointed out that, unlike the exclusionary factor
of the color of a van, Waterfall Arts's administrative appeal was
a "protest[] of the award itself," objecting to the allocation of
points resulting from an omission in the scoring factors that was
not apparent when the First RFP was issued. As Piper stated, how
an RFP's scoring criteria will be applied is simply "not something
that" a responding bidder would "have any insight to until after
the award's been made."
Like Piper, Low testified that he believed the argument
made by Waterfall Arts in its appeal was appropriately before him
as an award protest because it was a challenge to the University's
"scoring" approach. He explained that it was only upon reading
Waterfall Arts's "object[ion] to the scoring" of its award that it
occurred to him that cost-saving factors should have been included
in the criteria for evaluating the bids all along.
Relying on Piper's testimony in particular, the district
court agreed that, ultimately, Waterfall Arts simply "could not
- 45 -have known in advance how the scoring criteria would be applied to
their responses." Id. Indeed, if the imprecise use of the word
"option" in Addendum 4 and the lease left Waterfall Arts with the
impression that the cost-saving benefit of retaining the internet
hub in the building would be considered and credited, while Calvary
and Waldo appeared to construe that same language to require the
internet hub to be moved out of the building, the full benefit of
this particular cost-saving proposal could only have been
understood after the award process had fully played out. We thus
cannot fault the district court's conclusion that the record in no
way compelled a finding that the University deviated from its
typical procedures in treating Waterfall Art's argument as an award
protest, not an untimely specification protest.
Hence, on the record before us, we detect no clear error
in the district court's factual findings and reasoned judgment
that, based on the totality of the circumstances, Calvary did not
show sufficient "[p]roof of . . . discriminatory intent or
purpose" for the court to conclude that Calvary was likely to
succeed on the merits of its Equal Protection Claim.15 Arlington
Calvary also makes three additional arguments in its
15
briefing, largely undeveloped, on the issue of discriminatory
intent. None has merit. First, Calvary asserts that
discriminatory intent is shown by the fact that the University
overruled its strategic-procurement experts. However, given that the district court cited record evidence and credited testimony by Low and Piper that each had deep expertise and related professional experience relevant to the strategic-procurement process -- Low in
- 46 -Heights, 429 U.S. at 265. The district court analyzed all of
Calvary's circumstantial evidence of alleged discriminatory animus
and made supportable credibility and other factual findings that
the Church did not establish any procedural irregularities
probative of discriminatory intent or any other link between the
hostility in the community and the University's decisionmaking.
To the contrary, ample record evidence corroborated Piper's
hearing observation that the University's two-level appeal process
worked "exactly how [it was] set up to work."
finance, and Piper in "procurement and sourcing" -- we see nothing to suggest that the University's appeal process played out in
anything but the typical fashion and as designed.
Next, Calvary presses the fact that the discriminatory impact
of the decision was clearly foreseeable. To be sure, it was "foreseeable" that Low's decision to rescind the award of the First RFP to Calvary would have a negative impact on a church. However, a negative impact is not equivalent to a discriminatory one, and here Calvary has made no effort to frame its lawsuit as one of
disparate impact on a religious entity, focusing instead on alleged disparate treatment. As we have explained, the court appropriately credited Low's testimony that neither the fact that Calvary is a religious institution nor any of the community opposition to
Calvary played any role in his decision to grant Waterfall Arts's appeal.
Finally, Calvary asserts that, in restarting the public
procurement process rather than negotiating the placement of the internet hub with Calvary, the University ignored less discriminatory avenues and thereby revealed its discriminatory
intent. This argument is simply a reformulation of the claim that Piper and Low did not testify credibly when they explained their non-discriminatory reason for restarting the public procurement process. We have already explained that the district court's
rejection of that claim was not clear error.
- 47 -C. Free Exercise Claim
Under the Free Exercise Clause, the government must act
neutrally toward religious beliefs and "cannot impose regulations
that are hostile to the religious beliefs of affected citizens and
cannot act in a manner that passes judgment upon or presupposes
the illegitimacy of religious beliefs and practices." Masterpiece
Cakeshop v. Colo. C.R. Comm'n, 584 U.S. 617, 638 (2018). In our
analysis of Calvary's equal protection claim, we determined there
is no basis for overturning the district court's finding that
Calvary failed to adduce sufficient evidence that the University's
decision to rescind the award of the First RFP to Calvary and to
start a new RFP process was attributable to religious animosity.
Thus, Calvary likewise failed to establish a likelihood of success
on the merits of its Free Exercise Claim.
III.
The district court did not abuse its discretion when it
denied Calvary's motion for a preliminary injunction because it
applied the appropriate legal standards and made no clear error in
its factual determination that the University's decisions were not
tainted by religious bias. Therefore, Calvary failed to
demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits of either of its
constitutional claims -- the sine qua non of the preliminary
injunction analysis. New Comm Wireless, 287 F.3d at 9. We need
- 48 -not consider the remaining preliminary injunction factors. See id.
The district court's decision is therefore affirmed.
So ordered.
- 49 -