Catholic college to drop health care coverage as bishops threaten
to sue over Obamacare
By Liz Goodwin | The Lookout
A group of religious leaders testifying before Congress about
the birth control mandate in February. (Carolyn …The U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops reiterated its threat to sue the Obama administration over its
rule that all employers must offer contraception without a copay in their
insurance plans.
Churches
and other organizations that mainly employ and serve people of one religion are
exempt from the rule, but the bishops say religiously affiliated hospitals,
schools and other organizations should also be exempt. In February, President
Barack Obama announced an "accommodation"—that insurance companies
would offer the contraception coverage directly to employees, so that employers
wouldn't have to violate their conscience by being a middleman in the exchange.
Later, the administration said third-party companies would offer the birth
control coverage, and that religious schools with self-insured plans would be
exempt from the contraception requirement.
In a letter to the Department of Health and Human Services, the
bishops' conference rejected President Obama's accommodation, asserting
that religiously affiliated employers will be forced to drop insurance for its
employees entirely in order to avoid violating their beliefs that contraception
and sterilization are wrong.
At least one religious school is making good on the threat.
The Franciscan University of Steubenville, a small Catholic college in Ohio,
announced Tuesday that it will drop coverage for students entirely rather than
"violate the consistent teachings of the Catholic Church on the sacredness
of human life,"Reuters
reported. The change will affect 200 out of the
school's 2,500 students, although with its overwhelmingly Catholic student
body—the university has been called "The Most
Catholic University in the World"—the
Franciscan University would likely fall into the category of exempt employers.
Some other Catholic and evangelical schools are suing over the mandate and
have threatened to drop health coverage. (It's
possible that the Supreme Court will announce next month that it has struck
down the health care law altogether, which would make such suits unnecessary.)
Most
employer insurance plans will have to start covering birth control this August,
but religiously affiliated employers will have another year before they must
come into compliance. The bishops want the government to either rescind the
mandate altogether or add a clause that allows any employer to opt out if he or
she has moral or religious qualms. President Obama said in February that he
respected religious freedom but that all women should have access to affordable
birth control, no matter their employers' religious beliefs.
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