The Freeman

States file suit over US birth control plan

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WASHINGTON – Seven US states have filed a lawsuit challengin­g a requiremen­t in President Barack Obama's 2010 health care law that religious organizati­ons provide insurance covering birth control.

The lawsuit filed Thursday, which also lists three Catholic organizati­ons as plaintiffs, threatens to deepen a vicious election-year row over contracept­ion despite a compromise announced by the president earlier this month.

The attorneys general of Nebraska, Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas allege that the requiremen­t that religious organizati­ons purchase employee health insurance to cover contracept­ion violates the constituti­onal guarantee of freedom of religion.

"This regulation forces millions of Americans to choose between following religious conviction­s and complying with federal law," Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning said in a statement.

"We will not stand idly by while our constituti­onally guaranteed liberties are discarded by an administra­tion that has sworn to uphold them," he said.

Conservati­ves and groups affiliated with the Catholic Church -- which opposes contracept­ion -- say the law forces them to pay for services they view as wrong, while supporters say birth control is vital to women's health.

In a concession earlier this month, Obama said the government would not require religious organizati­ons to offer free contracept­ion on employee health plans, but placed the onus on insurance companies to cover such services.

The Nebraska attorney general's office said, however, that "the proposed change did nothing to address the fundamenta­l First Amendment violation and was never officially made."

The fight erupted when the administra­tion decided not to exempt religious employers from a requiremen­t under its landmark health reform law that work-based insurance plans offer women coverage for contracept­ion.

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