Several Catholic universities and nonprofits have gone to court to say that they don’t have to fill out a form to opt out of birth control coverage. Not true, said two federal appeals courts within 24 hours of each other.
All insurance plans are required to cover birth control under the Affordable Care Act. Last June, the Supreme Court ruled in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby that for-profit corporations can opt out of birth control coverage if the owners have religious objections. But the Supreme Court didn’t specifically weigh in on the Obama administration’s workaround for non-profit employers that oppose birth control: Employers can let the insurer know they object by filling out a form, so that the government or the insurer pays for the coverage instead.
Some religiously affiliated nonprofits say that’s not good enough, because they say they’re still being forced to participate in someone getting birth control by filling out the form.
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But in cases involving Catholic universities — including the University of Notre Dame, and the anti-contraception and anti-abortion group Priests for Life — a majority of judges said that’s not how the law works. The judges say the form doesn’t “trigger” the coverage, because under law, the default is insurance plans covering birth control; all the form does is remove the employer from the equation. And though some religious and conservative legal groups say that they should have the final word on what is a “substantial burden” on religious freedom, these federal judges beg to differ.
“Although Notre Dame is the final arbiter of its religious beliefs, it is for the courts to determine whether the law actually forces Notre Dame to act in a way that would violate those beliefs,” wrote Judge Richard Posner on Tuesday, on behalf of two our of three judges on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Notre Dame has already signed the form in question, so its employees are already getting birth control coverage, leading Posner to repeatedly demand what, exactly, the university was asking him to do. At the most recent oral argument in April, an attorney for Notre Dame said they wanted to be treated like churches are – meaning no birth control insurance coverage for anyone.
In his opinion Tuesday, Posner rejected the alternatives that Notre Dame claimed the government could have pursued for women to get contraceptive access. “Does Notre Dame expect the government to establish a federal contraception agency to which Notre Dame women should send the bills for the contraceptives?” Posner asked skeptically.
Less than 24 hours later, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals denied Priests for Life and several Catholic educational institutions a rehearing from the full court. The group also wants to avoid filling out the birth control coverage form. The explanation of the court’s rejection was written by Judge Cornelia Pillard, who had also written the original November 2014 opinion Priests for Life wanted overturned.









