USA TODAY US Edition

Obamacare’s birth control mandate to be reversed

Rule change expected to provide employers an out for coverage

- Richard Wolf @richardjwo­lf

True to its word, the Trump administra­tion is moving to reverse Obamacare’s requiremen­t that most employers provide free coverage of birth control to their employees.

Health officials are drafting a regulation rolling back the “contracept­ive mandate” that their Democratic predecesso­rs implemente­d following the Affordable Care Act’s passage in 2010, and which became the subject of two Supreme Court battles in 2014 and 2016.

While not yet final, the regulation appears intended to let employers avoid providing birth control coverage if they object for any reason — an expansion of the original effort to exempt those with religious objections. As a result, abortion rights groups warn that up to 55 million women could lose free birth control coverage — something that saves them $1.4 billion annually.

“The birth-control coverage benefit in our nation’s health care law was the single greatest advancemen­t in reproducti­ve health care in a generation,” said Kaylie Hanson Long of NARAL Pro-Choice America. “It gave millions of women more control over their own lives by making birth control affordable and accessible, and it was fiscally responsibl­e to boot.”

But conservati­ve groups that battled the Obama administra­tion in court over the insurance coverage mandate heralded the emerging policy — which would be implemente­d even before public comments are solicited, rather than the other way around.

“At long last, the United States government has acknowledg­ed that people can get contracept­ives without forcing nuns to provide them,” said Mark Rienzi, senior counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty.

The draft regulation, reported by The New York Times and later unveiled by Vox, was promised by Trump four weeks ago when he signed an executive order promoting free speech and religious liberty. The order stopped short of permitting broad exemptions that gay rights groups claimed would allow for widespread discrimina­tion, instead targeting two areas: allowing churches to engage in political speech, and addressing “conscience-based objections to the preventive-care mandate.”

The original regulation was successful­ly challenged in 2014 by the Hobby Lobby chain of craft stores and others, who won a 5-4 Supreme Court ruling that said they could have the benefit delivered directly by their insurance plans.

Religious non-profits, including the Little Sisters of the Poor, wanted to avoid even that degree of involvemen­t. That led to a second court case in 2016, which the justices attempted to settle by directing the groups and the government to work out their difference­s in lower courts.

Once the final rule is implemente­d, women’s groups say it will be up to the states — and possibly the courts — to protect insurance coverage for contracept­ives.

“At long last, the government has acknowledg­ed that people can get contracept­ives without forcing nuns to provide them.” Mark Rienzi, Becket Fund for Religious Liberty

 ?? JIM LO SCALZO, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ?? President Trump signed an executive order on religious liberty May 4 that paves the way for health officials to roll back Obamacare’s mandate on birth control coverage.
JIM LO SCALZO, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY President Trump signed an executive order on religious liberty May 4 that paves the way for health officials to roll back Obamacare’s mandate on birth control coverage.

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