http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2012/12/27/hobby-lobby-faces-millions-in-fines-for-bucking-obamacare/
By Eric Marrapodi, CNN Belief Blog
Co-Editor
Washington (CNN)– Craft store giant Hobby
Lobby is bracing for a $1.3 million a day fine beginning January 1 for
noncompliance with the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, dubbed
Obamacare.
The company opposes providing some
contraceptives to employees through its company health care plan on religious
grounds, saying some contraceptive products, like the morning after pill,
equate to abortion.
After failing to receive temporary relief
from the fines from the Supreme Court, Hobby Lobby announced late Thursday
through its attorneys that it "will continue to provide health insurance
to all qualified employees. To remain true to their faith, it is not their
intention, as a company, to pay for abortion-inducing drugs."
In September, Hobby Lobby and affiliate
Mardel, a Christian bookstore chain, sued the federal government for violating
their owners' religious freedom and ability to freely exercise their religion.
"All they're asking for is a narrow
exemption from the law that says they don't have to provide drugs they believe
cause abortions," Hobby Lobby attorney Kyle Duncan, a general counsel for
the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, told CNN affiliate KFOR in November.
"Our basic point is the government can't put a corporation in the position
of choosing between its faith and following the law."
The lawsuit
says the companies' religious beliefs prohibit them from providing insurance
coverage for abortion inducing drugs. As of August 2012, the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act requires
employer-provided health care plans to provide "all Food and Drug
Administration approved contraceptive methods, sterilization procedures, and
patient education and counseling for all women with reproductive
capacity," according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Churches and houses of worship are exempt
from the regulation and a narrow exemption was added for nonprofit religious
employers whose employees "primarily share its religious tenets" and
who "primarily serve persons who share its religious tenets."
In the face of that opposition, the
Department of Health and Human Services tweaked its original rule in February
to require health insurers, not employers, to cover the cost of contraception
coverage, reasoning that would prevent religious groups from having to finance
such coverage. Critics have argued that exemption for nonprofits is far too
narrow and a host of nonprofit religious groups have sued the administration
over the regulations.
The Internal Revenue Service regulations
now say that a group health care plan that "fails to comply" with the
Affordable Care Act is subject to an "excise tax" of "$100 per
day per individual for each day the plan does not comply with the
requirement." It remains unclear how the IRS would implement and collect
the excise tax.
The Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, based Hobby
Lobby chain has more than 500 stores that employ 13,000 employees across 42
states, and takes in $2.6 billion in sales. The company's attorneys say January
begins a new health care plan year for Hobby Lobby and that excise tax from the
IRS would amount to $1.3 million a day.
Hobby Lobby is
owned by CEO and founder David Green and members of his family. "The
foundation of our business has been, and will continue to be strong values, and
honoring the Lord in a manner consistent with biblical principles," a
statement on the Hobby Lobby website reads, adding that one outgrowth of that
is the store is closed on Sundays to give its employees a day of rest. Each
year the company also takes out full-page ads in numerous newspapers
proclaiming its faith at Christmastime and on Independence Day.
The store is not formally connected to any
denomination, but the Green family supports
numerous Christian ministries and is behind the Green Collection, one of the
largest private collections of biblical antiquities in the world. The family
plans to permanently house the collection in Washington at a museum set to open
in 2016.
On Friday, attorneys for Hobby Lobby petitioned
the Supreme Court to intervene and provide temporary relief from the the fines
until the case was decided by the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver.
Wednesday evening, Justice Sonia
Sotomayor, who handles emergency appeals from the 10th Circuit
Court, said the company failed to meet "the demanding standard for the
extraordinary relief," and that it could continue to pursue its challenge
in lower courts and return to the higher court, if necessary, after a final
judgment.
"Hobby Lobby will continue their appeal
before the 10th Circuit. The Supreme Court merely decided not to get involved
in the case at this time," Duncan said in a statement.
A spokesperson for the Justice Department
declined to comment on the high court's move.
White House officials have long said they
believe they have struck an appropriate compromise between religious exemptions
and women's health. The White House has not commented specifically on the Hobby
Lobby case.
"It's just so sad that Hobby Lobby is
facing this choice. What company, even a successful family owned business like
Hobby Lobby, how can they afford the government $1.3 million in fines every
day? It's just really absurd that government is not giving on this," said
Maureen Ferguson, a senior policy adviser for the Catholic Association.
Religious liberty groups like hers are watching the Hobby Lobby case closely.
"I am optimistic that these cases will
eventually snake their way back up to the Supreme Court and given a full
hearing on the merits of the case, I am confident that the Supreme Court will
rule in favor of religious liberty," Ferguson said. "But in the
meantime there is serious damage being done to businesses like Hobby Lobby and
nonprofit charitable organizations."
The Hobby Lobby case is just one of many
before the courts over the religious exemption aspects of the law. The case
represents by far the biggest for-profit group challenging the health care
mandate.
After this piece of the law went into effect
in August, religious nonprofits were given "safe harbor" of one year
from implementing the law. "In effect, the president is saying we have a
year to figure out how to violate our consciences," Cardinal Timothy
Dolan, the Archbishop of New York, said in January when the administration announced
the move.
Dolan's New York Archdiocese won a victory
this month in its legal battle
against the administration and the mandate. In May it sued the government in
federal court in Brooklyn over the mandate, saying it "unconstitutionally
attempts to define the nature of the church's religious ministry and would
force religious employers to violate their consciences."
The government moved to have the case dismissed.
On December 4, Judge Brian M. Cogan denied the government's motion to dismiss
the case, saying the government's promise of changes to how it will implement
the law were not enough to merit dismissal. "There is no, 'Trust us,
changes are coming' clause in the Constitution," Cogan wrote in in his
decision to let the case proceed.
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