U.S. appeals court blocks Trump administration birth control exemptions
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[July 13, 2019]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - A federal appeals court on
Friday blocked the Trump administration from enforcing new rules
allowing employers to obtain exemptions from an Obamacare requirement
they provide health insurance that covers women's birth control.
The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia upheld a
nationwide injunction that blocked the implementation of rules allowing
employers with religious and moral objections to seek exemptions from
the 2010 healthcare law's requirement.
The three-judge panel agreed with Democratic state attorneys general
from Pennsylvania and New Jersey pursuing the case that the rules issued
by the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor and Treasury
had "serious substantive problems."
The lawsuit was one of several by Democratic state attorneys general
challenging the rules, which targeted a requirement in the Affordable
Care Act, or Obamacare, former Democratic President Barack Obama's
signature domestic policy achievement.
The contraceptive mandate required employer-provided health insurance
include coverage for birth control with no co-payment.
Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro on Twitter said the ruling
would protect women's access to contraceptive care.
Republican President Donald Trump's administration itself has estimated
up to 126,400 women nationally would lose contraceptive coverage due to
their employers taking advantage of the exemptions.
Kelly Laco, spokeswoman for the U.S. Justice Department, which defended
the rules in court, said it was disappointed. "Religious organizations
should not be forced to violate their mission and deeply-held beliefs,"
she said.
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An illustration picture shows a woman holding a birth control pill
at her home in Nice January 3, 2013. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
The appellate ruling upheld a nationwide injunction issued in
January by a federal judge in Philadelphia. Another judge in
California has blocked the rules' enforcement in 14 states and the
District of Columbia.
In Friday's decision, U.S. Circuit Judge Patty Shwartz, writing for
the panel, said the administration lacked good cause to forgo a
requirement to provide the public notice and the chance to comment
on interim versions of the rules it adopted in 2017.
The administration had cited an urgent need to alleviate the harm
faced by employers with religious objections.
But Shwartz said its "desire to address the purported harm to
religious objections does not ameliorate the need to follow
appropriate procedures."
She said government agencies showed a "lack of open-mindedness" when
they later adopted similar, final rules in 2018, which were also not
authorized by Obamacare.
A nationwide preliminary injunction preventing the rules'
enforcement was necessary, she said, to protect the states from
against the potential costs they would face if women's employers
refused to provide insurance that covered birth control.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; editing by Tom Brown)
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