My understanding is that college administration discovered (after a change in 
insurance providers) that the new insurance policy covered abortion, 
sterilization, and contraception.  Since all three are contrary to Catholic 
teaching, the college administration immediately  requested its private health 
insurer to eliminate coverage for these items.  I'm told that North Carolina 
law has a specific state exemption which permits a religious employer to 
provide health insurance which does not cover these items, so as a matter of NC 
state law, the college was on firm ground.  In fact, but for the change in 
health insurance providers, I do not believe these items would have ever been 
covered to begin with.  
 
(And of course, there is no prohibition on private individuals paying for 
excluded services on their own; it's just a question of whether a religious 
employer should be required to pay for services or items which it believes are 
morally objectionable).  
 
At the end of the day, it really creates an interesting dynamic because there 
is no federal or state law which requires Belmont Abbey to offer priavte health 
insurance coverage.  If there is a holding that Belmont Abbey cannot offer 
health insurance coverage without covering abortion, sterilization and 
contraception, then Belmont Abbey will simply be forced to stop offering health 
insurance coverage for its employees (a result which would more adversely 
affect staff members, than the faculty who brought the challenge in the first 
place).  
 
Will
 
 
 

Will Esser --- Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam
Charlotte, North Carolina

********************
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark;
the real tragedy is when men are afraid of the light.
Plato (428-345 B.C.)
********************

--- On Sat, 8/15/09, Michael R. Masinter <masin...@nova.edu> wrote:


From: Michael R. Masinter <masin...@nova.edu>
Subject: Re: EEOC says Catholic College Discriminated by Removing Contraceptive 
Coverage from Health Insurance
To: religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu
Date: Saturday, August 15, 2009, 5:51 PM


The PDA makes denial of health insurance benefits relating to pregnancy sex 
discrimination without regard to whether an employer denies men coverage for 
some other condition that affects only men.  Denying coverage for a 
prescription drug that prevents pregnancy, a risk to which only women are 
exposed, may therefore be sex discrimination under the PDA even if men are not 
denied coverage for vasectomies.  Whether the cost of prevention of pregnancy, 
as distinct from the health related cost of pregnancy, counts as one of the 
risks and burdens associated with pregnancy the PDA was intended to relieve 
women from bearing under employer provided health insurance and other employee 
benefit programs might better frame the question a court ultimately will have 
to answer.

Michael R. Masinter                      3305 College Avenue
Professor of Law                         Fort Lauderdale, FL 33314
Nova Southeastern University             954.262.6151 (voice)
masin...@nova.edu                        954.262.3835 (fax)



Quoting "Vance R. Koven" <vrko...@gmail.com>:

> Whatever else may be right or wrong with Gilbert or the statute, Griswold
> was a constitutional claim based on the flat prohibiting by legislation of a
> form of birth control for women, whereas the EEOC finding in Belmont Abbey
> is a matter of what the college will fund as part of its private health
> insurance. Presumably women are still free to obtain contraception on their
> own nickel.
> Have we ascertained that the Belmont Abbey insurance policy, and the
> college's internal policy, permitted men to obtain condoms and/or more
> medically-oriented forms of birth control (e.g. vasectomies, spermicides)?
> If so, then there's a live sex-discrimination issue. If not, then the EEOC
> decision may be subject to question.
> 
> Vance
> 
> On Sat, Aug 15, 2009 at 5:10 PM, Steven Jamar <stevenja...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> I'm not sure how paul arrives at his characterization of my response to an
>> inquiry of another in which I sketch a possible way a court could go wrong.
>> 
>> Nonetheless, it seems to me that even though Gilbert was overturned by
>> legislation, the legislation did not in fact reach the illogic of the
>> court's reasoning, but rather the outcome of that reasoning.
>> While I think that a court that would reason as I hypothesized one might
>> would be wrong in doing so in light of the dialogue between the Court and
>> Congress(see boumediene), I fear I have seen such toturing of laws often
>> enough to not consider such error to beyond the realm of possibility.
>> 
>> I guess I don't quite see how a statute based claim with EP overtones would
>> impact a constitutional liberty-based privacy claim, though at times we do
>> cross those sorts of boundaries.
>> 
>> 
>> Stev
>> 
>> Sent from Steve Jamar's iPhone
>> 
>> 
>> On Aug 15, 2009, at 1:57 PM, Paul Finkelman <paul.finkel...@yahoo.com>
>> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>>>  _______________________________________________
>> To post, send message to Religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu
>> To subscribe, unsubscribe, change options, or get password, see
>> http://lists.ucla.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/religionlaw
>> 
>> Please note that messages sent to this large list cannot be viewed as
>> private.  Anyone can subscribe to the list and read messages that are
>> posted; people can read the Web archives; and list members can (rightly or
>> wrongly) forward the messages to others.
>> 
> 
> 
> 
> --
> Vance R. Koven
> Boston, MA USA
> vrko...@world.std.com
> 





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