The Archbishop of Seattle warned state legislators that a proposed bill
requiring abortion coverage in health care plans will result in a fight
to protect the Catholic Church from being forced to pay for the
procedure.
“The Catholic Church in Washington State and its affiliated
organizations do not now, nor will we in the future, offer coverage for
abortion in our health care plans,” Archbishop Peter Sartain told the
Washington Senate Committee on Health Care April 1.
He warned that the legislation would result in court appeals that would be “protracted and costly to all parties.”
“It will not come as a surprise that we oppose the very intent of this
legislation,” the archbishop said. “Deeply rooted in our Catholic faith
is the belief that life is sacred from the moment of conception until
natural death. We cannot equivocate about that belief.”
The legislation would mandate insurance coverage for elective abortion
in all private health insurance plans which provide coverage of
maternity care. It passed in the Democrat-controlled State House of
Representatives in February by a 53-43 vote.
One backer of the bill claims to have 25 of 49 senators willing to vote
for the bill if it reaches the Senate floor, the New York Times
reports. The Senate is controlled by a coalition of two Democrats and
the Republican caucus.
Archbishop Sartain warned that the bill E.H.B 1044 “discriminates
unjustly against churches, religious organizations and people who for
religious reasons oppose abortion.”
The bill has some conscience protections, but the archbishop said they “in reality offer no protection at all.”
One provision guarantees conscientious objection, while another
provision says the conscience protection will not result in a health
plan enrollee’s denial of coverage or timely access to any services as a
result of the conscience clause.
“The Catholic Church and any other organization and individual
employers are granted the right to exercise their consciences and not
provide abortion coverage, but at the same time their employees cannot
be denied coverage and access to abortion services,” the archbishop
said. “As a result, the right to exercise conscience and the requirements of this law are irreconcilable.”
He was skeptical of the bill’s requirement that the insurance
commissioner create a mechanism for these situations. He said a similar
requirement for previous laws has not been acted upon.
The Washington Catholic Conference has warned that the bill would
endanger federal funding to Washington state, since federal law bars
funds to agency or programs that require payment or provision of
abortion.
The conference is asking opponents of the bill to contact their state senators and ask them to vote against it.