Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
House Passes Religious Exemption To Required Health Insurance For Those Who Are Opposed To All Medical Treatment
With bipartisan support, the House of Representatives yesterday passed by voice vote and sent to the Senate H.R. 1814-- the Equitable Access to Care and Health (EACH) Act. The Hill reports on the House vote which extends an exemption (26 USC 5000A(d)(2)) currently in the Affordable Care Act that exempts members of a "recognized religious sect" whose tenets oppose accepting benefits of medical insurance. The bill passed by the House provides an exemption to individuals whose "sincerely held religious beliefs would cause the individual to object to medical health care that would be covered under such coverage." The bill is apparently intended to cover only those who hold sincere religious beliefs object to all health care supervised by physicians. It does not require the objector to be a member of a religious group with such tenets. To obtain the exemption, an individual would be required to file a sworn statement with his or her tax return. The exemption is lost if the individual during the year receives medical health care.