Friday, March 29, 2019

Court Enjoins Obama-Era Contraceptive Mandate Accommodation

In Dobson v. Azar, (D CO, March 26, 2019), a Colorado federal district court reopened proceedings in a case challenging Obama-era Affordable Care Act accommodation for religious non-profits and granted a permanent injunction against their enforcement to the extent they require insurance coverage for drugs or procedures "that may destroy a human embryo or fertilized egg of a mother either before or after the implantation of a fertilized egg in the uterus of its mother." The suit by James Dobson and Family Talk was one of a large number of challenges to regulations that required religious non-profits that wished to opt out of the mandate for contraceptive coverage to complete an exemption form that had the effect of triggering coverage directly from the organization's insurer. The Trump administration promulgated Interim Final Rules creating a broader exemption. However multiple lawsuits have been filed challenging this broader exemption and two courts have issued preliminary injunctions against their enforcement.  The court concluded:
Given the uncertainty presented by the legal challenges to the IFR, I find and conclude that a permanent injunction is proper.
Colorado Springs Gazette reports on the decision.