The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Trump birth control coverage rules blocked nationwide

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. >> Trump administra­tion rules that allow more employers to opt out of providing women with no-cost birth control cannot be enforced anywhere in the nation, a federal judge wrote Monday in a decision blocking the rules from taking effect.

U.S. District Judge Wendy Beetleston­e in Philadelph­ia agreed with a lawsuit filed by Pennsylvan­ia, citing the potential harm to states should the rules be enforced.

Numerous citizens could lose contracept­ive coverage, Beetleston­e wrote, resulting in the increased use of statefunde­d contracept­ive services, as well as increased costs associated with unintended pregnancie­s.

The rules would have allowed more employers, including publicly traded companies, to opt out of providing no-cost contracept­ive coverage to women by claiming religious objections. Some private employers could also object on moral grounds.

The rules had been scheduled to take effect Monday. Pennsylvan­ia’s attorney general, Josh Shapiro, called the ruling a “victory for the health and economic independen­ce of women.”

“Women need contracept­ion for their health because contracept­ion is medicine, pure and simple,” Shapiro said in a statement.

On Sunday, a federal judge in California blocked the rules from taking effect in the jurisdicti­ons in the lawsuit before him. Those included California, New York and 11 other states along with Washington, D.C.

At issue is a requiremen­t under Democratic President Barack Obama’s health care law that birth control services be covered at no additional cost.

Obama officials included exemptions for religious organizati­ons. But administra­tion of Republican President Donald Trump expanded those exemptions and added “moral conviction­s” as a basis to opt out of providing birth control services.

The Department of Justice has argued that the new rules “protect a narrow class of sincere religious and moral objectors from being forced to facilitate practices that conflict with their beliefs.”

 ?? CHARLES DHARAPAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Margot Riphagen of New Orleans, La., wears a birth control pills costume during a protest in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington.
CHARLES DHARAPAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Margot Riphagen of New Orleans, La., wears a birth control pills costume during a protest in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington.

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