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White House Misrepresents Its Own Contraceptive Mandate
February 03, 2012

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has issued the following response to the February 2 post on the White House blog.

 

Full text follows:

 

The Obama administration, to justify its widely criticized mandate for contraception and sterilization coverage in private health plans, has posted a set of false and misleading claims on the White House blog (“Health Reform, Preventive Services, and Religious Institutions,” February 1).  In what follows, each White House claim is quoted with a response.

 

Claim:Churches are exempt from the new rules: Churches and other houses of worship will be exempt from the requirement to offer insurance that covers contraception.”

 

Response: This is not entirely true.  To be eligible, even churches and houses of worship must show the government that they hire and serve primarily people of their own faith and have the inculcation of religious values as their purpose.  Some churches may have service to the broader community as a major focus, for example, by providing direct service to the poor regardless of faith.  Such churches would be denied an exemption precisely because their service to the common good is so great.  More importantly,   the vast array of other religious organizations – schools, hospitals, universities, charitable institutions – will clearly not be exempt.

 

Claim: “No individual health care provider will be forced to prescribe contraception: The President and this Administration have previously and continue to express strong support for existing conscience protections.  For example, no Catholic doctor is forced to write a prescription for contraception.”

 

Response: It is true that these rules directly apply to employers and insurers, not providers, but this is beside the point:   The Administration is forcing individuals and institutions, including religious employers, to sponsor and subsidize what they consider immoral.  Less directly, the classification of these drugs and procedures as basic “preventive services” will increase pressures on doctors, nurses and pharmacists to provide them in order to participate in private health plans – and no current federal conscience law prevents that from happening.  Finally, because the mandate includes abortifacient drugs, it violates one of the “existing conscience protections” (the Weldon amendment) for which the Administration expresses “strong support.”

 

Claim: “No individual will be forced to buy or use contraception: This rule only applies to what insurance companies cover.  Under this policy, women who want contraception will have access to it through their insurance without paying a co-pay or deductible.   But no one will be forced to buy or use contraception.”

 

Response: The statement that no one will be forced to buy it is false.  Women who want contraception will be able to obtain it without co-pay or deductible precisely because women who do not want contraception will be forced to help pay for it through their premiums.  This mandate passes costs from those who want the service, to those who object to it.

 

Claim: “Drugs that cause abortion are not covered by this policy:  Drugs like RU486 are not covered by this policy, and nothing about this policy changes the President’s firm commitment to maintaining strict limitations on Federal funding for abortions. No Federal tax dollars are used for elective abortions.”

Response: False.  The policy already requires coverage of Ulipristal (HRP 2000 or “Ella”), a drug that is a close analogue to RU-486 (mifepristone) and has the same effects.[i] RU-486 itself is also being tested for possible use as an “emergency contraceptive” – and if the FDA approves it for that purpose, it will automatically be mandated as well.

 

Claim: “Over half of Americans already live in the 28 States that require insurance companies cover contraception: Several of these States like North Carolina, New York, and California have identical religious employer exemptions.  Some States like Colorado, Georgia and Wisconsin have no exemption at all.”

 

Response: This misleads by ignoring important facts, and some of it is simply false.  All the state mandates, even those without religious exemptions, may be avoided by self-insuring prescription drug coverage, by dropping that particular coverage altogether, or by taking refuge in a federal law that pre-empts any state mandates (ERISA).  None of these havens is available under the federal mandate.   It is also false to claim that North Carolina has an identical exemption.  It is broader:  It does not require a religious organization to serve primarily people of its own faith, or to fulfill the federal rule’s narrow tax code criterion.  Moreover, the North Carolina law, unlike the federal mandate, completely excludes abortifacient drugs like Ella and RU-486 as well as “emergency contraceptives” like Preven.

 

Claim: “Contraception is used by most women: According to a study by the Guttmacher Institute, most women, including 98 percent of Catholic women, have used contraception.”

 

Response: This is irrelevant, and it is presented in a misleading way. If a survey found that 98% of people had lied, cheated on their taxes, or had sex outside of marriage, would the government claim it can force everyone to do so? But this claim also mangles the data to create a false impression.  The study actually says this is true of 98% of “sexually experienced” women.  The more relevant statistic is that the drugs and devices subject to this mandate (sterilization, hormonal prescription contraceptives and IUDs) are used by 69% of those women who are “sexually active” and “do not want to become pregnant.”  Surely that is a minority of the general public, yet every man and woman who needs health insurance will have to pay for this coverage.  The drugs that the mandate’s supporters say will be most advanced by the new rule, because they have the highest co-pays and deductibles now, are powerful but risky injectable and implantable hormonal contraceptives, now used by perhaps 5% of women.  The mandate is intended to change women’s reproductive behavior, not only reflect it.

 

Claim: “Contraception coverage reduces costs: While the monthly cost of contraception for women ranges from $30 to $50, insurers and experts agree that savings more than offset the cost.  The National Business Group on Health estimated that it would cost employers 15 to 17 percent more not to provide contraceptive coverage than to provide such coverage, after accounting for both the direct medical costs of potentially unintended and unhealthy pregnancy and indirect costs such as employee absence and reduced productivity.”

 

Response: The government is violating our religious freedom to save money?  If the claim is true it is hard to say there is a need for a mandate: Secular insurers and employers who don’t object will want to purchase the coverage to save money, and those who object can leave it alone.  But this claim also seems to rest on some assumptions: That prescription contraceptives are the only way to avoid “unintended and unhealthy pregnancy,” for example, or that increasing access to contraceptives necessarily produces significant reductions in unintended pregnancies.  The latter assumption has been cast into doubt by numerous studies (see http://old.usccb.org/prolife/issues/contraception/contraception-fact-sheet-3-17-11.pdf).

 

Claim: “The Obama Administration is committed to both respecting religious beliefs and increasing access to important preventive services. And as we move forward, our strong partnerships with religious organizations will continue.”

 

Response: False.  There is no “balance” in the final HHS rule—one side has prevailed entirely, as the mandate and exemption remain entirely unchanged from August 2011, despite many thousands of comments filed since then indicating intense opposition.  Indeed, the White House Press Secretary declared on January 31, “I don’t believe there are any constitutional rights issues here,” so little was placed on that side of the scale.   The Administration’s stance on religious liberty has also been shown in other ways.  Recently it argued before the Supreme Court that religious organizations have no greater right under the First amendment to hire or fire their own ministers than secular organizations have over their leaders– a claim that was unanimously rejected by the Supreme Court as “extreme” and “untenable.”  The Administration recently denied a human trafficking grant to a Catholic service provider with high objective scores, and gave part of that grant instead to a provider with not just lower, but failing, objective scores, all because the Catholic provider refused in conscience to compromise the same moral and religious beliefs at issue here.  Such action violates not only federal conscience laws, but President Obama’s executive order assuring “faith-based” organizations that they will be able to serve the public in federal programs without compromising their faith.


[i] See A. Tarantal, et al., 54 Contraception 107-115 (1996), at 114 (“studies with mifepristone and HRP 2000 have shown both antiprogestins to have roughly comparable activity in terminating pregnancy when administered during the early stages of gestation”); G. Bernagiano & H. von Hertzen, 375 The Lancet 527-28 (Feb. 13, 2010), at 527 (“Ulipristal has similar biological effects to mifepristone, the antiprogestin used in medical abortion”).

 
TX Catholic Voice: Bishops Call for Defense of Religious Liberty, Reversal of HHS Mandate
February 03, 2012
February 3, 2012
Overturn HHS Mandate
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recently announced that religious employers will be required to provide health care plans that include coverage of sterilization, contraceptives, and abortifacients. Catholic schools, hospitals, and charities are not exempt from this mandate.  This violation of religious liberty is unconscionable and unnecessary. 

The TCC HHS Mandate web page includes up-to-date news and videos on the Bishops' response to this issue, as well as information on how you can contact your U.S. Representative and the White house and urge them support conscience protection. Click here to visit the page.



Bishop Mulvey Defends Religious Liberty in Latest Texas Catholic Podcast

 

Corpus Christi Bishop Wm. Michael Mulvey explains how the Obama Administration's forcing of religious employers to provide contraceptive and abortifacient coverage is an assault on religious liberty in the most recent episode of the Texas Catholic Podcast.

 

The podcast, available via iTunes or on the Texas Catholic Conference Audio Archive, was recorded during Bishop Mulvey's homily at the Corpus Christi Cathedral on January 29, 2012.  Bishop Mulvey stressed that his objections to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) mandate were not political in nature, but were instead, "a matter of conscience. This is a matter of religious freedom.”


Dioceses Celebrate Catholic Schools Week



Catholic Schools across the state participated in spirit days, prayer services, special Masses, and other activities in celebration of National Catholic Schools week (Jan. 29 -
Feb. 4). This year's theme - "Catholic Schools: Faith. Academics. Service" - underscores the key strengths of a Catholic education. The week is an annual celebration of the important role that Catholic elementary and secondary schools across the country play in providing a values-added education for America's young people. Click here to access a link to the Catholic schools in your diocese.

Doctors wonder how federal mandate will affect practice of medicine
By Nancy Frazier O'Brien, Catholic News Service

Whether they are just starting out or nearing the end of their careers, Catholics who want to practice medicine in conformity with the church's teachings wonder how a new federal regulation requiring health plans to cover contraceptives and sterilization free of charge will affect their work. Although the requirement will not directly impact physicians, some said it represents a governmental intrusion into health care that could grow in the future.
The first Pastoral Letter of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter
The first Pastoral Letter of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter in the territory of the United States Catholic Conference of Bishops, was sent by the Ordinary, Fr Jeffrey Steenson, to Anglican ministers and faithful who have decided to enter into full and visible communion with the Catholic Church. The letter’s aim was to inform and accompany the faithful on this important journey. “The Ordinariate”, it read, “is finally off and running, after much anticipation, work, and prayer. We have just completed a wonderful Formation Weekend in Houston for the priest candidates and their wives for the Ordinariate of the Chair of St Peter. With deeply moving contributions from His Eminence Daniel Cardinal DiNardo, we have begun to take the first steps in preparing a group of very dedicated men for ordination. As the Ordinariate was only established this month, this was our first opportunity to come together in mutual discernment and encouragement. 
 





Pastoral Messages from the Texas Bishops

Protecting Catholic religious liberty
Bishop Curtis J. Guillory
Diocese of Beaumont

The war against religious freedom escalates
Bishop Kevin Farrell
Diocese of Dallas
The Texas Catholic Voice is the E-Newsletter of the Texas Catholic Conference - The Official Public Policy Voice of the Texas Bishops.

 
 
Protecting Catholic religious liberty
February 03, 2012

By Bishop Guillory, Diocese of Beaumont, for the East Texas Catholic

 

When you go to your place of worship, you do not worry that your worship might be interrupted or that someone is spying on you. In fact, you do not even think about your worship being interrupted. This is because we have guaranteed religious freedom in our country.

 

As you know so well, this is not the case in many countries. The most recent high profile case happened in Nigeria where a group of Catholic Christians were at Church worshipping and a bomb exploded, killing a large number of worshippers. In this case, the perpetrators were from a religious extremist group. In many places in the Middle East, Christians are being forced to hide or leave their country because the government will not allow them to practice their faith. Some are dying for their faith.

 

Being able to worship as we choose is a freedom that that we take for granted in our country. Our founding fathers guaranteed religious freedom in the United States Constitution and in the Bill of Rights. This means that every person has a right to practice his/her faith and is free to practice it without coercion on the part of others or the government. No one is forced to act against one’s conviction in private or publicly.

 

The teaching on religious freedom is based on the dignity of the human person. God created man in his image and likeness and imprinted on the soul the freedom to worship and honor God. Furthermore, religious freedom means that one’s faith both forms and informs one’s values. Those values serve as a GPS for one’s life journey.

 

Many are of the opinion that religious values must be kept to oneself and in one’s place of worship, but not in the public arena. We can see on the part of many people a reluctance to express their religious views on certain topics because they might be criticized or isolated. The old saying comes into play: if you want peace in the family and with friends and co-workers, then do not bring up religion or politics. So much is lost if one has to fear expressing one’s opinion on a subject from a religious perspective.

 

Religious freedom is a right given by God, not by the State. On its part, the State has the obligation to protect religious freedom and to help provide an environment in which one can worship and express religious opinions. The government also has the right to get involved if those who are exercising religious freedom become abusive or engage in criminal behavior. Recent examples would be the sexual scandals in the Catholic Church and other religious denominations and the FLDS cult in Texas and other States.

Read more...
 
Bishop Mulvey Defends Religious Liberty in Latest Texas Catholic Podcast
February 02, 2012

Corpus Christi Bishop Wm. Michael Mulvey explains how the Obama Administration's forcing of religious employers to provide contraceptive and abortifacient coverage is an assault on religious liberty in the most recent episode of the Texas Catholic Podcast.

 

The podcast, available via iTunes or on the Texas Catholic Conference Audio Archive, was recorded during Bishop Mulvey's homily at the Corpus Christi Cathedral on January 29, 2012.  In it, Bishop Mulvey stressed that his objections to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) mandate were not political in nature, but were instead, "a matter of conscience. This is a matter of religious freedom.”

 

“The Administration has cast aside the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, denying to Catholics our nation’s first and most fundamental freedom, that of religious liberty," Mulvey told parishioners.  "This is a dangerous path for our government to follow, as it violates one of the core values upon which our country was founded.”

 

Bishop Mulvey called upon the faithful to pray for the protection of religious liberty and contact their Congressmen to reverse the HHS ruling. He also used the opportunity to elaborate on the Church’s teaching on conscience and why its protection is intrinsically tied to the free practice of religion, emphasizing that conscience is being present to one’s self so that one “can hear the truth revealed by God in Jesus Christ and live and act by it.“

 

Listeners can access Bishop Mulvey’s letter on the mandate on the Diocese of Corpus Christi’s web site at www.diocesecc.org.
 
Former Episcopal bishop to head new U.S. ordinariate for former Episcopalians
February 02, 2012
By Nancy Frazier O'Brien / Catholic News Service
Catholic News Service
Father Jeffrey N. Steenson, pictured here when he was a bishop in the Episcopal Church, has been named to head a new U.S. ordinariate for former Anglicans who wish to become Catholics. (CNS file photo)
Pope Benedict XVI has established a U.S. ordinariate for former Anglicans who wish to become Catholics and named a married former Episcopal bishop to head it.

The Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter -- functionally equivalent to a diocese, but national in scope -- will be based at a parish in Houston. It will be led by Father Jeffrey N. Steenson, the former Episcopal bishop of the Rio Grande who was ordained a Catholic priest of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, N.M., in February 2009.

The establishment of the ordinariate and the naming of its first leader were announced by the Vatican Jan. 1.

More than 100 former Anglican priests have applied to become Catholic priests in the ordinariate and 1,400 individuals from 22 communities have expressed interest in joining. In fall 2011, the members of St. Luke's in Bladensburg, Md., and St. Peter of the Rock Community in Fort Worth, Texas, were received into the Catholic Church with the intent of joining the ordinariate. 

It is the second such jurisdiction established under the provisions of Pope Benedict's 2009 apostolic constitution "Anglicanorum coetibus." The first was the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, created for England and Wales in January 2011; others are under consideration in Canada and Australia.

The parishes and communities accepted into the ordinariate will be fully Catholic but retain elements of their Anglican heritage and traditions, particularly in the liturgy.

Father Steenson and his wife, Debra, have three grown children -- a daughter and two sons -- and a grandson.

Because he is married, the 59-year-old Father Steenson will not be ordained a bishop and will not be able to ordain priests. He will, however, otherwise function as a bishop and will be a voting member of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. Read Full Story >>
 
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