On June 5, 2019, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas issued a permanent injunction against the federal government from enforcing the Affordable Care Actโs (โACAโโs) contraceptive mandate and accompanying accommodation process against any members of the two classes certified in Judge Reed O’Connor’s decision. The two classes in this order are as follows:
The Employer Class argues that having to choose between either complying with the contraceptive mandate, filing out a self-certification form to object to such coverage, or paying a hefty penalty for noncompliance violates its religious exercise under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (โRFRAโ). Similarly, the Individual Class asserts that the contraceptive mandate violates RFRA by forcing individuals who oppose the contraceptive coverage based on sincere religious beliefs to either purchase health insurance that includes contraceptives or go without health insurance all together.
In its 35-page decision, the Court found that the accommodation processโthe act itself of an employer notifying its insurer, TPA, or federal government in writing to object to the contraceptive mandate due to its sincere religious beliefsโviolates RFRA. Therefore, employers who do not wish to provide contraceptive coverage due to their sincere religious beliefs are no longer required to object through the accommodation process โ they simply donโt have to provide it. However, employers with health plans covered by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (โERISAโ) will need to articulate the exclusion of contraceptives within the summary plan description (โSPDโ).
In addition, Judge OโConnor reasoned that the contraceptive mandate combined with the individual mandate essentially made Individual Class plaintiffs choose between violating their sincere religious beliefs or violating federal law, thus putting a substantial burden on their religious exercise. It is important to note that this decision only applies to employers and individuals with sincere religious objections and does not mention sincere moral objections (see Compliancedashboardโs previous blog for more information on this distinction).
Although the federal government is prohibited from enforcing these laws against members of the certified classes, Judge OโConnor provides certain โsafe harborsโ for the federal government to be able to question employers or individuals that fail to comply with the mandate about whether they are sincere religious objectors. If the government reasonably and in good faith doubts the sincerity of an employer’s or individual’s asserted religious objections, the government can ask the court to resolve the issue. If the court determines the employers or individuals are not sincere religious objectors, then the federal government may enforce the mandate.ย However, it is important to note that even if an individual or employer meets the class membership requirements, state laws requiring insurers to provide contraceptive coverage may still apply.
For more information, the order can be viewed here.
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The information and content contained in this blog post are for general informational purposes only, and does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice.