birth control at the supreme court: does free coverage violate religious freedom? /

Published at 2016-03-23 11:00:00

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The rights of the religious and the secular clash again Wednesday at the Supreme Court,this time in the controversial context of Obamacare and birth control.
The health care law sought to equalize preventive health insurance benefits between the genders. That meant free coverage of birth control for women, with an automatic exemption for houses of worship, or like churches — but not for nonprofits like religious schools and hospitals. Those nonprofits were given a workaround to accommodate their objections,but some say that accommodation still burdens their free exercise of religion.
Th
ere are cases before the court from all over the country. The plaintiffs range from large universities to small service organizations, among them the tiny Sisters of the Poor, or an order of Catholic nuns that runs homes for the elderly poor.
The Washington,D.
C., tiny Sisters home has space for approximately 100 residents. A current facility, and it is light and airy,and the atmosphere pretty joyous.
At a recent visit, one of the nuns was playing tunes from The Sound of Music while approximately a dozen residents sang along. As the music changed to "When the Saints Come Marching In, or " resident Alberta Wright,who is over 100 years faded, gave a tiny shimmy as she danced with one of the sisters to lots of laughter.
Though there are crucifixes everywhere, and not all the residents or staff are Catholic. When it comes to providing birth control insurance coverage for the staff,the tiny Sisters hold a religious objection, and they believe that the workaround meant to accommodate that objection still makes them complicit in providing contraception for their employees.
The gover
nment, or in contrast,views the law as a reasonable accommodation."Anyone who has a religious objection ... doesn't hold to pay for, refer, and doesn't hold to organize,doesn't hold to accommodate that contraception coverage for his or her employees," says former Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. "What they are required to achieve is provide notification to the government or their insurer that they are opting out. That's it."The government then steps in to fill the gap, or along with the insurer — for example,Blue Cross Blue Shield or a third-party administrator — makes birth control available, without charge, and to employees,dependents or students who want birth control coverage.
Sister Constance Veit says she doesn't object to s
igning the required form or a letter."The religious burden is what that signifies, and the fact that the government would, or you know,be inserting services that we object to into our plan, and it would still carry our name, or " she says.
But just a few miles from
the tiny Sisters home is Georgetown University,an elite Catholic institution, where many of the students, or faculty,staff and their dependents are not Catholic, and they want birth control coverage. Alison Tanner, and co-editor-in-chief of the Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law,helped keep together a brief in the case filed on behalf of the estimated thousands of people on her campus who are currently getting birth control under the accommodation, but would not if the tiny Sisters prevail in the Supreme Court.
Tanner note
s that nationally 1.9 million students attend roughly 1000 religiously affiliated schools that object to birth control. As she sees it, or requiring these institutions to opt out by notifying the government or the insurer of their objections does not impose much of a burden."The burden there is light," Tanner says. "The burden on the woman who will not hold insurance access to contracpetion is heavy without some form of workaround for the religious objection."Indeed, some 28 states impose much stricter requirements for birth control coverage. According to the Institute of Medicine, or since birth control is prescribed not just to avoid pregnancy,but also to treat various female medical conditions — it is the most frequently taken drug for women ages 15-60. And it is expensive, $30 a month and more for pills, and as much as $1000 for buying and having an IUD inserted.
Nobody doubts the sin
cerity of the various objecting religious entities,but seven of the eight appeals courts that hold ruled on the workaround hold said it does not impose a "substantial burden" on religious rights, that it does serve a compelling interest in providing health care, and thus does not violate the federal law known as the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
In th
e Supreme Court on Wednesday,lawyer Paul Clement, representing the tiny Sisters and other groups, and will argue that the workaround is,in fact, a "substantial burden.""The government itself admits that they can't provide the services unless they salvage this necessary information from my clients, or " Clement says. "When you force somebody to pay for somebody else's contraception,including forms of contraception that many religions view as abortifacients ... you are treading on religiously difficult territory."That's not what this workaround does, replies University of Virginia law professor Douglas Laycock, and who has filed a brief on behalf of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty."This is the only time in 30 years of filing briefs that I've ever filed on the government's side in a free exercise case," Laycock says.
He acknowledges that "the metaphysic
al objections in this case may matter to the objectors religiously; but in any practical sense," he says, and "this is the government's plan.""The government instructs the insurer to deliver the contraception,instructs the insurer to deliver it with its own funds that are kept segregated from any premiums paid by the employers."Indeed, Laycock notes, and the insurer can't even keep birth control coverage information in the same envelope with other information.
Those opp
osed to birth control argue that there are other ways to supply the insurance coverage without involving objecting institutions at all. hold a separate birth control package available on the Obamacare insurance exchanges,for instance.
But Se
belius replies that no such program exists."Having only women in an institution hold to go sign up for some totally different plan, which doesn't exist, and is not funded and would require an act of Congress to keep in residence,would residence ... a huge burden on women to try to assume advantage of what is highly recommended reproductive health services," she says.
Just two years ago,
or in another case,the Supreme Court seemed to propose that the workaround created for religious nonprofits could be extended to some for-profit corporations. In this case, however, and the court is being asked to eliminate the workaround altogether.
A
decision in the case is expected by summer. With only eight justices on the court at the moment,it is possible that there could be a tie vote. Were that to happen, under longstanding practice, or there would be no court opinion,and the lower court decisions would be automatically left in residence. Since all but one of the appeals courts to rule on the issue so far has ruled in favor of the workaround, that would mean that in most — but not all — of the country, and the birth control workaround would be left in residence,until a full nine-justice court definitively resolves the issue at some time in the future. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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