The Little Sisters of the Poor have filed the first class-action
lawsuit against the federal contraception mandate, saying that it would
require them to violate the teachings of their Catholic faith.
“Like all of the Little Sisters, I have vowed to God and the Roman
Catholic Church that I will treat all life as valuable, and I have
dedicated my life to that work,” Mother Loraine Marie Clare Maguire,
superior of the congregation’s Baltimore province, said Sept. 24.
“We cannot violate our vows by participating in the government’s program to provide access to abortion inducing drugs.”
The Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged in Denver and the
Little Sisters of the Poor Baltimore, Inc., both non-profit
corporations, are plaintiffs in the suit, as well as “all others
similarly situated.”
The sisters, who operate 30 homes for needy elderly persons in the U.S.,
could face millions of dollars in IRS fines if they do not comply with
government mandates requiring employee health coverage for sterilization
and contraception, including some drugs that can cause early abortions.
Employers that fail to provide the required coverage face fines of $100
per employee per day. The sisters’ lawsuit is the latest of more than 70
legal challenges that have been filed against the mandate on behalf of
more than 200 plaintiffs nationwide.
The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty filed the class-action suit in
federal District Court in Denver on behalf of the sisters and their
health benefits provider, Christian Brothers Services and Christian
Brothers Employee Benefits Trust.
The legal group said the IRS fines begin Jan. 1 unless the sisters hire
an outside company to provide the objectionable coverage.
While the mandate has an exemption for religious employers, the Little
Sisters of the Poor do not meet the narrow criteria to qualify for it
because although they are a Catholic institution, they are not
affiliated with a specific house of worship.
“The Sisters should obviously be exempted as ‘religious employers,’ but
the government has refused to expand its definition,” said Mark Rienzi,
Senior Counsel for the Becket Fund.
“These women just want to take care of the elderly poor without being
forced to violate the faith that animates their work. The money they
collect should be used to care for the poor like it always has – and not
to pay the IRS.”
The Becket Fund says this is the first class-action suit concerning the
mandate and will represent hundreds of Catholic non-profit ministries
with similar beliefs. The lawsuit is also the first to represent
benefits providers who cannot comply with the mandate in good
conscience.
The lawsuit cites the anomaly of the government’s refusal to grant an
exemption to Catholic groups, despite other non-religious exemptions
granted to thousands of other plans affected by the 2010 health care
legislation.
Members of the affected class face a “stark choice” and “must either
abandon their Catholic beliefs” or be “punished by the government with
an array of fines and penalties unless and until they comply,” the suit
contends.
“The threat of such penalties imposes a substantial burden on the class
members’ religious exercise,” it states, arguing that the mandate
violates the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act.