DC Church Claims Proposed Bike Lane Goes Against "Constitutionally Protected Rights Of Religious Freedom"
Judicial Ethics Complaint Filed Against Alabama Supreme Court Justice For Inappropriately Commenting On Pending Marriage Equality Cases
Our friends at the Southern Poverty Law Center are taking one Alabama Supreme Court Justice to task for speaking openly about pending marriage equality cases.
Sore Losers: Religious Zealots Call For ‘Resistance’ To Marriage Equality
Marriage equality may be the law of the land in the United States, but that doesn’t mean the Religious Right has given up on the matter. In fact, a group led by the head of a government religious liberty council thinks all who oppose the ruling should employ “constitutional resistance” and essentially ignore the U.S. Supreme Court.
Kim Davis Sought Support From Lawmakers Months Before Marriage Equality Decision
Indiana City Passes Anti-Discrimination Ordinance Despite Conservative Pushback
In a state known for its discriminatory RFRA, one Indiana city has passed an anti-discrimination ordinance.
How Do You Get Policy Change In Washington?: Persistence, Persistence, Persistence
When President George W. Bush took office, his administration set about to change the rules for how the federal government funds faith-based organizations to perform social services, like running soup kitchens, job training programs and homeless shelters. He established the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, which worked with agencies across the federal government to weaken the longstanding church-state protections that had applied to these programs. Unfortunately for religious freedom, the effort was successful and almost every social service program funded by the government was subject to these new, lax rules.
Alabama Judges Believe They Can Deny Same-Sex Couples Marriage Licenses Because Of One Word In Segregation-Era Law
The Sour Grapes Of Wrath: Tenn. County Politician Seeks To Stave Off God’s Vengeance Over Marriage Equality Ruling
Sweet Victimhood: Bakers Claim They Can’t Pay Fine Despite Raising Half A Million Dollars
It's Not Just Kim: Kentucky Boasts Two Other Recalcitrant County Clerks
Kim Davis has taken up a lot of our collective bandwidth since the Supreme Court's decision on marriage equality. A Davis-free day is a small ray of sunshine in what has been an otherwise unending gloom. Unfortunately, we're not able to give you a totally Kimless blog post, but we promise that this one will only be Davis-adjacent.
Contemptuous Clerks: In Kentucky, Local Officials Are Breaking The Law Rather Than Allow Same-Sex Couples To Marry
This article was featured in the October 2015 edition of Americans United's Church & State magazine.
Don't Forget About Me: Anti-LGBT Bakers Jump On The Kim Davis Train By Ignoring Court-Ordered Fine
The problem with the Kim Davis media circus (in which we have participated, admittedly) is that it encourages other anti-LGBT attention seekers to air their terrible opinions. Tired of taking a back seat on the Davis Train, a pair of old friends are back in the news.
Change Is Not Coming: Pope Francis’ Meeting With Kim Davis Signals That ‘Culture Wars’ Are Still Raging
Pope Francis secretly met with Kim Davis last Thursday in Washington D.C., according to The New York Times.
Shocker: Pope Francis Supports Government Officials Who Refuse To Issue Marriage Licenses To Same-Sex Couples For Religious Reasons
Warped Weekend: Extreme Comments From The Values Voter Summit
The “Values Voter Summit” (VVS), an annual Religious Right gathering in Washington, D.C., took place over the weekend. The rhetoric at the confab, which is now in its 10th year, is pretty consistent: speakers preach Christian “persecution,” Islamophobia, homophobia, dissatisfaction with the federal government and religious revivalism to whip about 3,000 attendees into a frenzy.
This Just In: Sun Still Rises In The East, Scalia Still Mad About Marriage Equality Decision
Americans United's Greg Lipper Debates Religious Liberty With Becket Fund's Kristina Arriaga
Have a spare 45 minutes and an interest in the intersection between religious liberty and LGBT issues? Our own Senior Litigation Counsel Greg Lipper debated Kristina Arriaga of the the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty about this very subject on the National Constitution Center's We The People podcast.
Americans United Supports Employees of Catholic Hospital System Dignity Health In Their Fight For Retirement Security
Last week, Americans United, the ACLU, and the ACLU of Northern California submitted a friend-of-the-court brief to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of a lawsuit by employees against Dignity Health, a Catholic hospital system and one of the largest not-for-profit provider hospital providers in the United States.
RFRA Jumps The Shark: The 8th Circuit Strikes Down The Contraception Accommodation (Part 2)
This article by Americans United's Senior Litigation Counsel Gregory M. Lipper originally appeared on Harvard Law's Bill of Health blog.
Thomas Jefferson famously said that “[i]t does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.” Note what Jefferson did not say: “my neighbor is entitled to pick my pocket and break my leg, so long as the government can refill my pocket and pay for a cast on my leg.”
But the latter formulation seemed to influence last week’s Eighth Circuit ruling that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) bars the government from implementing an accommodation for employers with religious objections to including contraception in their health plans. In my previous post, I explained why the Eighth Circuit reduced RFRA’s substantial-burden requirement to a mere formality, potentially subjecting any and every federal law or regulation to strict scrutiny. Once things get to strict scrutiny, the Eighth Circuit goes even further, suggesting that a federal regulation cannot be sustained if the government could, in theory, provide the benefit or service itself.
The Eighth Circuit first applied this approach to the process by which employers obtain the religious exemption. Under the current rules, an objecting organization need only send a written notice to the government and identify its insurance provider or third-party administrator; the government then works with the insurance provider or third-party administrator to arrange for the employees to receive the contraceptive coverage to which they are entitled by law.
The Eighth Circuit, however, reasoned that there is a less-restrictive alternative to requiring this information, since the government could identify the necessary insurance providers and third-party administrators on its own—well, maybe: “Even if the [third-party administrators] are not known, the government has not shown at this stage of the proceedings that the inconvenience of identifying the [third-party administrators] likely would create an administrative problem of sufficient magnitude to make its entire scheme unworkable.” According to the Eighth Circuit, then, no disclosure requirement can be sustained unless the government can prove that it would be unable to discover the information after its own investigation.
Because the plaintiffs would likely object to even this alternative, the Eighth Circuit went further still, suggesting that RFRA can block virtually any regulation of the private sector on the ground that the government could always do the job itself. The plaintiffs argued that “the government could provide subsidies, reimbursements, tax credits, or tax deducations to employees, or that the government could pay for the distribution of contraceptives at community health centers, public clinics, and hospitals with income-based support”; the Eighth Circuit agreed that “the government has not shown that these alternatives are infeasible.”
Courts have not previously accepted the argument that “the government can always put the affected employees on public assistance,” and for good reason. Consider the following scenarios:
- The owner of a law firm believes, as a matter of faith, that women should never be the primary breadwinner in their household. As a result, he pays women lawyers half as much as their male counterparts. The owner argues that there is a less-restrictive alternative to enforcing the equal-pay laws: the government can offer a salary supplement to the affected women.
- The owner of a commercial shipping company refuses, due to his religious beliefs, to hire Catholic drivers. The owner argues that there is a less-restrictive alternative to enforcing the ban on religious discrimination: the government can hire the discriminatee to work at the Postal Service.
- The owner of a mining company objects on religious grounds to providing helmets to the company’s miners. The owner argues that there is a less-restrictive alternative to enforcing the federal worker-safety rules: OSHA can arrange to deliver helmets to the mine workers at their homes.
Yet under the Eighth Circuit’s approach, RFRA might prevent the application of federal employment law in each of those cases.
Not long ago, plaintiffs tried and failed to bring similar free exercise challenges to rules requiring Social Security payments, minimum wage and overtime compensation, andequal pay. In each case, the court allowed the government to enforce federal law and refused to allow exemptions that would “operate[ ] to impose the employer’s religious faith on the employees.”
In none of those cases did the courts say, “The employers should be exempt because the government can make up for the loss of compensation.” The already-accommodated contraception objectors have no basis to demand more here.