A Catholic-owned family business in Michigan does not have to comply
with the provision of the new U.S. healthcare law that requires private
employers to provide employees with health insurance that covers birth
control, a federal judge in Detroit has ruled.
U.S.
District Judge Robert Cleland, in a ruling late Wednesday, temporarily
blocked the government from forcing the owner of Weingartz Supply
Company, which sells outdoor power equipment, to include contraception
in its health coverage of employees.
The ruling only affects the
company's Catholic proprietor, Daniel Weingartz, and the approximately
170 people who work for him. But it opens the door for other firms to
seek relief on religious grounds.
Cleland is now
the second federal judge to temporarily block part of the Affordable
Care Act of 2010 from being enforced against the religious owners of a
family business. In July, U.S. District Judge John Kane in Denver
temporarily prevented the government from requiring the Catholic owners
of Hercules Industries Inc, a private manufacturer of heating,
ventilation and air conditioning equipment, to provide health insurance
that covers birth control.
Weingartz was joined in his lawsuit, filed in May, by Legatus, a national association of Catholic business owners.
Roman Catholic bishops and many Republican lawmakers have
opposed the birth control provision, and priests have been speaking out
against the law from pulpits across the country. Church doctrine opposes
artificial contraception but most American Catholics do not adhere to
church policy.
Lawyers for the Department of Health
and Human Services argued that granting exceptions for small business
owners would interfere with the government's ability to implement the
law. The contraception mandate serves the government's interests in
promoting public health and gender equality, they argued.
The federal government has carved out an exemption from the
contraception requirement for religious organizations. Allowing
additional relief for Weingartz Supply Co and its 170 employees would
not be a much greater burden, the company argued. Cleland agreed with
Weingartz.
"The harm in delaying the implementation
of a statute that may later be deemed constitutional must yield to the
risk presented here of substantially infringing the sincere exercise of
religious beliefs," Cleland wrote in a 29-page opinion.
The judge refused to shield Legatus from the law, finding that the
non-profit association would likely qualify for the government's
accommodation for religious organizations. If the government later tries
to enforce the mandate against Legatus, the group can resume its court
challenge then, Cleland wrote.
Erin Mersino, an
attorney with the Thomas More Law Center, which filed the challenge,
called the ruling "not only a victory for our clients, but for religious
freedom."
The Department of Health and Human Services did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
More than 20 lawsuits have been filed against the birth
control mandate by organizations including the University of Notre Dame,
Catholic University of America and the Archdiocese of New York.
In July, another federal judge in Nebraska dismissed a
similar lawsuit brought by seven states, two Catholic individuals and
three Catholic non-profit institutions, finding that the plaintiffs did
not face any immediate harm from the law.
The case
in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan is Legatus
et al v. Sebelius et al, No. 12-12061.