Belmont Abbey College Removes Employee Benefits for Abortion, Sterilization and Contraception

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edward_george

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As a student at Belmont Abbey, I feel the need to pass on this little bit of information. A number of us have known about this for a while, but lately it’s all been made public. Per the Curt Jester’s Blog:
Manassas, VA - Belmont Abbey College in North Carolina has amended the health insurance plan provided by its carrier to remove coverage for abortions, voluntary sterilizations and contraception. The provisions allowing these practices were recently discovered. and the college moved quickly to rectify the situation. The college has since been faced with complaints from a few employees to state and federal agencies, but remains undaunted.
President William Thierfelder said, “As a Roman Catholic institution, Belmont Abbey College is not able to and will not offer nor subsidize medical services that contradict the clear teaching of the Catholic Church. There was no other course of action possible if we were to operate in fidelity to our mission and to our identity as a Catholic college.”
According to Cardinal Newman Society (CNS) president Patrick J. Reilly, “Belmont Abbey is a faithful Catholic college, and this action reinforces it. We applaud the steadfastness of President Thierfelder and Abbot Placid Solari, the college chancellor, in keeping fidelity to Catholic teachings a clear priority of the institution.”
Reilly noted that the college was undaunted by complaints filed by a few personnel with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the North Carolina Department of Insurance. He said, “We hope that these few disgruntled employees will be rebuffed in their efforts to use the power of government to intervene in a matter of faith.”
Full post here.

Please pray for the Abbot and President to stand firm for the faith.

-ACEGC
 
Will do – it’s heartening to see a Catholic institution stand up for the faith – let’s hope they inspire other Catholic organizations to do the same!!
 
This is a real problem for Belmont Abbey College.
The Vice President of Administration and Finance then received an e-mail complaining about the changes in insurance coverage. As Davison says, “The next thing we knew our legal counsel received notice from EEOC [Equal Employment Opportunity Commission] that a complaint had been filed that the changes in insurance coverage were discriminatory on the basis of sex and religion."
The charges had been filed by eight Belmont Abbey faculty – six men and two women. In addition, the college found out that one faculty member had complained to the Department of Insurance about the insurance changes and the religious exemption.
On January 16, a letter was mailed by the National Women’s Law Center to the president threatening a lawsuit on behalf of the eight faculty. The letter demanded that the college reinstate the coverage, and pay any damages and out-of pocket costs.
On January 25, the professor who had complained to the Department of Insurance received a letter stating that Belmont Abbey College qualified for the religious exemption. The response of this faculty member was to ask the National Women’s Law Center to contest the decision.
This is where things stand at present: Belmont Abbey College has hired legal counsel to reply to the EEOC complaints. Thus far, no lawsuit has been filed by the National Women’s Law Center, and the decision of the state insurance department has not been reversed.
insidecatholic.com/Joomla/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2734&Itemid=48

Thank you, Edward_George, for letting us know about the situation. Yes, prayers are much in order.
 
lifesite.net/ldn/2008/feb/08021509.html
CHARLOTTE, NC, February 15, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Belmont Abbey College in North Carolina has amended the health insurance plan provided by its carrier to remove coverage for abortions, voluntary sterilizations and contraception. The provisions allowing these practices were recently discovered and the college moved quickly to rectify the situation. The college has since been faced with complaints from a few employees to state and federal agencies, but remains undaunted.

As always please read the full article.
 
Good to hear that there are faithful Catholic institutions that are stoic enough to uphold Catholic teachings! 👍

Makes me wonder a couple of things, though:
  • What affect will the complaints to the NC Dept. of Ins. and the EEOC have on the Abbey’s decision? If the college receives federal funding, will they have less of a leg to stand on for their decision to remove these benefits?
  • When will the federal government start taking seriously the constitutional provisions of separation of church and state?
Nevertheless, it’s a good decision!
 
Good to hear that there are faithful Catholic institutions that are stoic enough to uphold Catholic teachings! 👍

Makes me wonder a couple of things, though:
  • What affect will the complaints to the NC Dept. of Ins. and the EEOC have on the Abbey’s decision? If the college receives federal funding, will they have less of a leg to stand on for their decision to remove these benefits?
  • When will the federal government start taking seriously the constitutional provisions of separation of church and state?
Nevertheless, it’s a good decision!
For them it is a one way street. Religion is to play no part in the government, but the government is allowed to restrict religion. This is just the opposite of what the founding father wanted. :mad:

Of course, that is what you get with liberals (i.e. Socialists and Marxist) :mad:
 
As a student at Belmont Abbey College, I want to thank you all for your prayers and support. Abbot Placid and Dr. Thierfelder are both great men, and because of their leadership, our college is a wonderful place. Please, continue to keep them and our college in your prayers!
 
How about dropping the basic health plan? Then replace it with a health savings account or similar thing coupled with a high-deductible major medical plan. That will put the responsibility of spending health-care money on the individual insured person rather than impose a politically correct “umbrella coverage” package on the institution.
 
Don’t believe the Belmont Abbey spin on this healthcare controversy. Consider these facts:
  1. Dr. Thierfelder is in his fourth year as president, but this healthcare benefits plan – in which the college paid for abortions, sterilizations and artificial contraception – was approved and offered in each of his first three years! He wants us to think this problem has just come up – Belmont Abbey College has actually been offering these benefits for years. He admitted as much in a February 12 letter sent out to all members of the Belmont Abbey College community.
  2. He makes it appear that there are just 8 faculty members who want the college to continue including abortions, sterilization and artificial contraception in its benefits package, but someone who is part of the Belmont Abbey community tells me that actually, MOST of the faculty want these items reinstated. It’s not just a small minority – it’s the majority, some of whom have been hired by Dr. Thierfelder!
  3. Why didn’t anyone object to this policy before this year? Dr. Thierfelder, Vice President Ken Davison, etc. all received their healthcare through this policy, that offered abortions, sterilization and artificial contraception, yet none of them objected to it until now. Why not?
  4. Administrators at Belmont Abbey chose not to donate to the local United Way during the years it supported organizations who were pro-abortion. Where was the same due diligence for this health care coverage?
 
I usually sit on the sidelines and just read these posts, but this topic has stirred me enough to finally post something. As someone who is very familiar with Belmont Abbey College, I have to agree with “efcah6” that one should have a healthy dose of skepticism when listening to the marketing rhetoric coming out of that college. In saying this, I ask you to consider these facts:
  • Most of the employees are not Catholic
  • Two-thirds of the students are not Catholic
  • The majority of the faculty actively oppose the stated Catholic mission of the school
  • Many of these “opposition” faculty members are responsible for screening, interviewing and selecting new faculty members, as well as awarding tenure and promotions for new faculty
  • The number of monks at Belmont Abbey is declining
  • Full-time student enrollment in recent years has been well below the college’s projections
  • Administrators admit the college is in serious financial trouble, and it hasn’t improved greatly under President Thierfelder’s leadership
  • President Thierfelder’s “inspirational” speeches are written for him by his highly-paid marketing staff and delivered by a very charismatic man. He has a few speeches he uses over and over – have you heard the one about how he wants to bring in students and staff who will put their hands on the bricks that the old monks made?
The administration wants people to believe the college is “rebounding,” both spiritually and financially, but it isn’t. Don’t be deceived by the people who run this troubled college. Much better alternatives are Christendom College, Fransciscan University, Holy Apostles College, or Wyoming Catholic College.
 
I usually sit on the sidelines and just read these posts, but this topic has stirred me enough to finally post something. As someone who is very familiar with Belmont Abbey College, I have to agree with “efcah6” that one should have a healthy dose of skepticism when listening to the marketing rhetoric coming out of that college. In saying this, I ask you to consider these facts:
  • Most of the employees are not Catholic
  • Two-thirds of the students are not Catholic
  • The majority of the faculty actively oppose the stated Catholic mission of the school
  • Many of these “opposition” faculty members are responsible for screening, interviewing and selecting new faculty members, as well as awarding tenure and promotions for new faculty
  • The number of monks at Belmont Abbey is declining
  • Full-time student enrollment in recent years has been well below the college’s projections
  • Administrators admit the college is in serious financial trouble, and it hasn’t improved greatly under President Thierfelder’s leadership
  • President Thierfelder’s “inspirational” speeches are written for him by his highly-paid marketing staff and delivered by a very charismatic man. He has a few speeches he uses over and over – have you heard the one about how he wants to bring in students and staff who will put their hands on the bricks that the old monks made?
The administration wants people to believe the college is “rebounding,” both spiritually and financially, but it isn’t. Don’t be deceived by the people who run this troubled college. Much better alternatives are Christendom College, Fransciscan University, Holy Apostles College, or Wyoming Catholic College.
The long journey back to being a faithful Catholic Collegs just might have started with this one issue. Pray for the school don’t bash the reasons.
 
  • The number of monks at Belmont Abbey is declining
  • Full-time student enrollment in recent years has been well below the college’s projections
  • President Thierfelder’s “inspirational” speeches are written for him by his highly-paid marketing staff and delivered by a very charismatic man. He has a few speeches he uses over and over – have you heard the one about how he wants to bring in students and staff who will put their hands on the bricks that the old monks made?
The administration wants people to believe the college is “rebounding,” both spiritually and financially, but it isn’t. Don’t be deceived by the people who run this troubled college. Much better alternatives are Christendom College, Fransciscan University, Holy Apostles College, or Wyoming Catholic College.
Actually, there are a handful of men considering joining the monastery currently, not that that really has anything to do with the College or its Catholicity.
Maybe he does say essentially the same thing in his monk/brick story. Why not? Its a good story and part of his wishes, so why not continue to share it with others? I heard the same story on several orientation and welcoming dinners about how he came to be the president of the college and what his goals for the college are. If he changed that story continuously, then I would be concerned.

Belmont Abbey is a nice place. For a private college, for a Catholic college, it is actually affordable. I believe this place is rebounding considering the stories I’ve heard from days past. Student mass attendence during weekdays is very promising, and the new adoration chaple is being built…partially because there isn’t enough room in the current one…

-Peace-
 
I usually sit on the sidelines and just read these posts, but this topic has stirred me enough to finally post something. As someone who is very familiar with Belmont Abbey College, I have to agree with “efcah6” that one should have a healthy dose of skepticism when listening to the marketing rhetoric coming out of that college. In saying this, I ask you to consider these facts:
  • Most of the employees are not Catholic
  • Two-thirds of the students are not Catholic
  • The majority of the faculty actively oppose the stated Catholic mission of the school
  • Many of these “opposition” faculty members are responsible for screening, interviewing and selecting new faculty members, as well as awarding tenure and promotions for new faculty
  • The number of monks at Belmont Abbey is declining
  • Full-time student enrollment in recent years has been well below the college’s projections
  • Administrators admit the college is in serious financial trouble, and it hasn’t improved greatly under President Thierfelder’s leadership
  • President Thierfelder’s “inspirational” speeches are written for him by his highly-paid marketing staff and delivered by a very charismatic man. He has a few speeches he uses over and over – have you heard the one about how he wants to bring in students and staff who will put their hands on the bricks that the old monks made?
The administration wants people to believe the college is “rebounding,” both spiritually and financially, but it isn’t. Don’t be deceived by the people who run this troubled college. Much better alternatives are Christendom College, Fransciscan University, Holy Apostles College, or Wyoming Catholic College.
That’s what I understand. The school is in financial trouble and trying to use supposed orthodoxy to buy its way out. Do Google searches and see for yourself.
 
/sigh There does seem to be a community of people who follow threads such as this around the Internet. Like many small colleges, the Abbey has had various struggles going back decades with respect to admissions and finances. Many current issues are related to attempts to grow the school to the next step in order to provide long-term stability.

The reason the insurance plan was only recently discovered has a lot to do with people taking things for granted, as well as turnover in both insurance providers and benefits people in the last ten years. I suggest people read the letter, linked above in this thread, and make up their own minds. The broader issue of Catholic employers and health insurance coverage has been around for a while, and is larger than any one college.

As for some of the invidious comparisons with other Catholic institutions in posts upstream, the college has both an evening and a traditional student program. Being in the Bible Belt, and the only Catholic school for hundreds of miles in any direction, most of those adults aren’t Catholic. The residential student body is around 55-60% Catholic, and growing more so. “Better to light a candle than curse the darkness.”
 
Don’t believe the Belmont Abbey spin on this healthcare controversy. Consider these facts:
  1. Dr. Thierfelder is in his fourth year as president, but this healthcare benefits plan – in which the college paid for abortions, sterilizations and artificial contraception – was approved and offered in each of his first three years! He wants us to think this problem has just come up – Belmont Abbey College has actually been offering these benefits for years. He admitted as much in a February 12 letter sent out to all members of the Belmont Abbey College community.
  2. He makes it appear that there are just 8 faculty members who want the college to continue including abortions, sterilization and artificial contraception in its benefits package, but someone who is part of the Belmont Abbey community tells me that actually, MOST of the faculty want these items reinstated. It’s not just a small minority – it’s the majority, some of whom have been hired by Dr. Thierfelder!
  3. Why didn’t anyone object to this policy before this year? Dr. Thierfelder, Vice President Ken Davison, etc. all received their healthcare through this policy, that offered abortions, sterilization and artificial contraception, yet none of them objected to it until now. Why not?
  4. Administrators at Belmont Abbey chose not to donate to the local United Way during the years it supported organizations who were pro-abortion. Where was the same due diligence for this health care coverage?
Jesus, meek and humble of heart, make my heart like unto thine.

God bless the college admins for taking this stand. It is pathetic that 8 people would choose to sue their employer, a Catholic College, bound by Catholic teaching, over this. If people want to neuter themselves, they can do it without the financial assistance of a Catholic college.
 
We all like stories where there is a “good guy” and a “bad guy.” Some well-meaning Catholic bloggers seem willing to cast the administration in the white hat, and the lawsuit-threatening faculty members in the black hat. However, the truth is much more complex, and we must wake up to this reality. I caution people to remember that there are always two (or more) sides to a story, and not to jump to conclusions based on the side of the story that comes straight from the college’s highly image-conscious administration.

I certainly applaud President Thierfelder and Abbot Solari for standing firm in the Faith when faced with such strident opposition. Had they been doing their duty, though, they would have noticed this immoral healthcare policy years earlier. I also applaud the lone faculty member who had the courage to speak up for the truth and bring this immoral health care coverage to their notice, at the risk of being persecuted by his/her colleagues. This person is unnamed, probably for his/her own protection, but I want him/her to know that some of us recognize the courage it took.

Like many of you, I felt hopeful after Dr. Thierfelder took over at Belmont Abbey – I liked his vision and thought this college might be added to a regrettably small number of truly faithful Catholic colleges. However, shortly after he arrived, serious problems developed between the new administration, faculty and even some students. President Thierfelder and most of the Vice Presidents he’s hired (including the newest VP of Academic Affairs) come from a business background, with little to no understanding of how to run a college. They have implemented a business model, where the CEO (president) makes unilateral decisions and pushes them down to the labor force (faculty and staff), to better serve the clients (students). This is foreign to many in higher ed who are familiar with the “shared governance” model normally used at colleges and universities, but this is exactly what Dr. Thierfelder has done since he first arrived.

As each year passes and more top-down authoritarian decisions are made, it has caused the faculty (including even some of the Catholic members) to feel abandoned and ignored, resulting in a loss of respect and confidence in the administration. (One professor summed up this frustration nicely in an article found at crusader.bac.edu/english/crusader/archive/opinion/logo.html.) After several years of this, the faculty has finally reached a breaking point. Unfortunately, their “line in the sand” was poorly chosen, using the one issue that deals with a higher moral issue.

I’m certainly no fan of some faculty there and I wouldn’t be sorry to see them go. I also agree it is VERY wrong for the 8 complainers and the many others who support them to insist on bringing back immoral and anti-Catholic health benefits. However, to be fair and just, I also understand their growing frustration with the administration’s ill will, incompetence or both. What has surfaced in this controversy is only the tip of an iceberg that has been forming for several years. If President Thierfelder had taken the time in his first year to review all the policies and procedures (including health care) already in place, to learn about higher education processes, to treat the faculty with more respect, and to allow them more (name removed by moderator)ut into some of the decisions that affect them, then there might be less hostility today. This is a case where BOTH sides (administration and faculty) share responsibility in the many underlying problems that led up to this controversial “explosion.”

I am grateful that Belmont Abbey students like xsuasox and edward_george have so far not seen the ugliness behind the scenes at the college, and I hope they will keep the fire in their faith as more of this seeps out. However, college-bound students and their parents would do well to look into better alternatives such as Christendom College, Franciscan University, Holy Apostles College, or Wyoming Catholic College.
 
Mr. Carter,

In your post from yesterday, you seem to agree with the decision by the administrators at the Abbey, while at the same time criticizing them for the manner in which they acted.

They do not collaborate enough with faculty when making decisions. Yet, at the same time, you suggest Dr. Thierfelder should have known every aspect of every policy when he first started at the Abbey, and put his foot down immediately.

You commend the administration’s attempts at enforcing orthodoxy, and at the same time, urge parents to send their children to other Catholic colleges-those on your list which you have repeated.

You speak as though you know the faculty and/or are intimate with the behind the scenes hostility of the faculty, and yet you do not say you are a member of the Abbey community.

You intimate that you are familiar with the Abbey’s finances and again urge people to send their children elsewhere-as if the colleges you recommend are more financially sound. Most Catholic colleges struggle financially, including the ones you mentioned.

You seem to have a particular objection to the college allowing half of its students to be on campus while remaining protestant. Are we not called to evangelize?

I suspect you do know that the area in which the Abbey resides is marginally Catholic. You surely must know that North Carolina’s Catholic population is about 2%, but growing. You might be interested in knowing that there are protestants who do convert while at the Abbey. You probably do know that there are more and more professors coming who are orthodox Catholics, and there is a growing number of faithful Catholic students arriving on campus.

I will point out, to those who are unfamiliar with the Abbey, that the growing presence of faithful students and professors on campus is in itself causing some discomfort on the part of professors of bad will. They are being confronted by orthodox students and know they cannot publicly push anti-Catholic policies. They are growing nervous, and some are leaving.

Yet, there are many professors of good will who are surprised by these students. In fact, some are very impressed by the personal and academic qualities of some of them.

My question to you is: What is your issue? Why are you here? Why are you seeking to malign the reputation of Dr. Thierfelder and the Abbey, while claiming you are in agreement with the decision?

btw, I am not an employee of the Abbey.
 
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