This Just In: Sun Still Rises In The East, Scalia Still Mad About Marriage Equality Decision

In case you thought that Justice Antonin Scalia was mellowing in the months following Obergefell, let the following disabuse you of the notion.

Americans United's Greg Lipper Debates Religious Liberty With Becket Fund's Kristina Arriaga

Have a spare 45 minutes and an interest in the intersection between religious liberty and LGBT issues?  Our own Senior Litigation Counsel Greg Lipper debated Kristina Arriaga of the the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty about this very subject on the National Constitution Center's We The People podcast.

Americans United Supports Employees of Catholic Hospital System Dignity Health In Their Fight For Retirement Security

Last week, Americans United, the ACLU, and the ACLU of Northern California submitted a friend-of-the-court brief to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of a lawsuit by employees against Dignity Health, a Catholic hospital system and one of the largest not-for-profit provider hospital providers in the United States.

RFRA Jumps The Shark: The 8th Circuit Strikes Down The Contraception Accommodation (Part 2)

This article by Americans United's Senior Litigation Counsel Gregory M. Lipper originally appeared on Harvard Law's Bill of Health blog. 

Thomas Jefferson famously said that “[i]t does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.” Note what Jefferson did not say: “my neighbor is entitled to pick my pocket and break my leg, so long as the government can refill my pocket and pay for a cast on my leg.”

But the latter formulation seemed to influence last week’s Eighth Circuit ruling that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) bars the government from implementing an accommodation for employers with religious objections to including contraception in their health plans. In my previous post, I explained why the Eighth Circuit reduced RFRA’s substantial-burden requirement to a mere formality, potentially subjecting any and every federal law or regulation to strict scrutiny. Once things get to strict scrutiny, the Eighth Circuit goes even further, suggesting that a federal regulation cannot be sustained if the government could, in theory, provide the benefit or service itself.

The Eighth Circuit first applied this approach to the process by which employers obtain the religious exemption. Under the current rules, an objecting organization need only send a written notice to the government and identify its insurance provider or third-party administrator; the government then works with the insurance provider or third-party administrator to arrange for the employees to receive the contraceptive coverage to which they are entitled by law.

The Eighth Circuit, however, reasoned that there is a less-restrictive alternative to requiring this information, since the government could identify the necessary insurance providers and third-party administrators on its own—well, maybe: “Even if the [third-party administrators] are not known, the government has not shown at this stage of the proceedings that the inconvenience of identifying the [third-party administrators] likely would create an administrative problem of sufficient magnitude to make its entire scheme unworkable.” According to the Eighth Circuit, then, no disclosure requirement can be sustained unless the government can prove that it would be unable to discover the information after its own investigation.

Because the plaintiffs would likely object to even this alternative, the Eighth Circuit went further still, suggesting that RFRA can block virtually any regulation of the private sector on the ground that the government could always do the job itself. The plaintiffs argued that “the government could provide subsidies, reimbursements, tax credits, or tax deducations to employees, or that the government could pay for the distribution of contraceptives at community health centers, public clinics, and hospitals with income-based support”; the Eighth Circuit agreed that “the government has not shown that these alternatives are infeasible.”

Courts have not previously accepted the argument that “the government can always put the affected employees on public assistance,” and for good reason. Consider the following scenarios:

  • The owner of a law firm believes, as a matter of faith, that women should never be the primary breadwinner in their household. As a result, he pays women lawyers half as much as their male counterparts. The owner argues that there is a less-restrictive alternative to enforcing the equal-pay laws: the government can offer a salary supplement to the affected women.
  • The owner of a commercial shipping company refuses, due to his religious beliefs, to hire Catholic drivers. The owner argues that there is a less-restrictive alternative to enforcing the ban on religious discrimination: the government can hire the discriminatee to work at the Postal Service.
  • The owner of a mining company objects on religious grounds to providing helmets to the company’s miners. The owner argues that there is a less-restrictive alternative to enforcing the federal worker-safety rules: OSHA can arrange to deliver helmets to the mine workers at their homes.

Yet under the Eighth Circuit’s approach, RFRA might prevent the application of federal employment law in each of those cases.

Not long ago, plaintiffs tried and failed to bring similar free exercise challenges to rules requiring Social Security paymentsminimum wage and overtime compensation, andequal pay. In each case, the court allowed the government to enforce federal law and refused to allow exemptions that would “operate[ ] to impose the employer’s religious faith on the employees.”

In none of those cases did the courts say, “The employers should be exempt because the government can make up for the loss of compensation.” The already-accommodated contraception objectors have no basis to demand more here.

Kim Davis: Marriage Licenses For Same-Sex Couples Not "Valid In God's Eyes"

Listen up, all. Kim Davis has more to say

To EACH Their Own: Americans United's Legislative Team Comments on The EACH Act

Americans United's Legislative team explains the EACH Act and its potential costs to both the ACA and society.

Deputy Clerk Alleges Kim Davis Interfered With Marriage Licenses Against Court Order

You might have heard the name Brian Mason in conjunction with the Great Kim Davis Debacle of Rowan County, Kentucky. One of Davis' deputy clerks, Mason spoke to the press during his boss's imprisonment, announcing to the country that he would continue to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples regardless of the county clerk's opinion on the matter. Since then, he's done just that, ignoring the raging political battle going on outside his office doors. Unfortunately for Davis, some changes she has made to the marriage license forms has inspired Mason to speak out again. 

RFRA Jumps The Shark: The 8th Circuit Strikes Down the Contraception Accommodation (Part 1)

This article by Americans United's Senior Litigation Counsel Gregory M. Lipper originally appeared on Harvard Law's Bill of Health blog. 

Federal Court Shuts Down Kim Davis Once Again While Others Take Up Her Flag

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals is getting really tired of Kim Davis' shenanigans. Yesterday, they denied her motion for a stay of the September 3 preliminary injunction pending appeal

Bad Decision: Federal Appeals Court Strikes Down Non-Profit Religious Accommodation For Contraception Coverage

In a baffling decision, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has decided to strike down the ACA contraception accommodations for religious non-profits in the case of Dordt College v. Burwell. 

Another Blow For Kim Davis From The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals

Kim Davis might be out of jail and back in the office, but that doesn't mean that things are necessarily going well for her.

Missouri School Board Updates Anti-Discrimination Policy To Include Gender Identity And Expression

It's always a pleasure to add good news to this blog

First Marriage License Issued to Same-Sex Couple After Kim Davis' Return

Kim Davis may (still) not be doing her job, but that doesn't mean that her deputy clerks are sitting idle.

North Carolina County Magistrates Refuse To Perform Any Marriages Because Of Marriage Equality

Meanwhile, in states that are not Kentucky..

Kim Davis Supporters Call On Deputy Clerks To Either Stop Issuing Marriage Licenses Or Quit

In a stunning display of hypocrisy, Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis' supporters urged the Rowan County deputy clerks working under Davis to follow their oaths and not issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. 

Kim Davis Should Go Back To Jail If She Interferes With Deputy Clerks’ Ability To Issue Marriage Licenses, Says Americans United

Church-State Watchdog Group Says Recalcitrant Clerk
Must Be Closely Monitored

Controversial Rowan County, Ky., clerk Kim Davis should be sent back to jail if she interferes with her office’s ability to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, says Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

“Reports have surfaced that Kim Davis intends to violate the court order by again denying marriage licenses to same-sex couples,” said Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United. “If Davis does that, she deserves to go back behind bars.”

U.S. District Judge David L. Bunning ordered Davis released today under the condition that she not interfere with the ability of her deputy clerks to issue licenses to all couples who are legally permitted to obtain them. Several media outlets, however, have reported that Davis doesn’t intend to abide by that condition.

Davis has refused to issue marriage licenses to any couples in Rowan County because she opposes same-sex marriage. Her staff was willing to issue the licenses, but she ordered them not to.

Lynn expressed dismay over the Davis saga and said efforts by Religious Right groups to portray her as a hero are offensive.

“Kim Davis’ supporters who believe she is akin to Martin Luther King are delusional,” Lynn said. “The woman is much more like George Wallace. Davis is abusing the authority of her office to restrict rights, not expand them. That makes all the difference.”

Added Lynn, “Davis believes her religious beliefs give her the right to tell others what to do. Her efforts to pose as a ‘religious freedom’ martyr are laughable. If she really believes she can’t do her job, she ought to do the honorable thing and resign.” 

Kim Davis To Be Released From Jail On Judge's Orders

After a brief holiday weekend break, all eyes are back on Kentucky where the recently jailed Kim Davis is about to once again breathe the free air.

(Final) Reply to Author of Cato Brief in Little Sisters Contraception Case

This article by Americans United's Senior Litigation Counsel Gregory M. Lipper originally appeared on Harvard Law's Bill of Health blog. 

This is the third and (I promise) final installment in my skirmish with Josh Blackman over a brief that he and Cato Institute filed in support of Little Sisters of the Poor’s quixotic challenge to regulations requiring them to fill out a form to obtain an exemption from providing contraceptive coverage to its employees. If you haven’t read the previous posts, you can do so here (my first post), here (Josh’s response to me), here (my first reply to Josh), and here (Josh’s second response to me). The basic gist is that, contrary to Cato’s brief, (1) HHS had the authority to implement the nonprofit accommodation, and (2) if HHS didn’t have the authority to issue the accommodation, then Hobby Lobby no longer controls whether the original contraceptive coverage requirement satisfies RFRA, because the Court in Hobby Lobby pointed to the HHS accommodation as the basis for concluding that a less-restrictive alternative exists.