Isn't Catholic Charities still 'religious'? The California Supreme Court says NO

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Marialis_Cultus

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24 September 2004

Catholic Charities ruled not ‘religious’ by California Supreme Court


Looks like the jig is up. Catholic Charities just took another one in the gut. In a near-unanimous decision the California Supreme Court affirmed, in a 6-1 vote, the constitutionality of the Women’s Contraceptive Equity Act and declared that Catholic Charities must abide by that law. The Women’s Contraceptive Equity Act (WCEA) requires that any business in California that provides health insurance to its employees must include coverage for prescription contraceptives for its female employees. (The law was written to combat “discrimination” — here perceived to be the “unfair” burden on women of paying for contraception.)

The Supreme Court’s decision came about because Catholic Charities had appealed an identical decision issued by the California Appellate Court in 2001. The Appellate Court’s decision was the result of a complaint brought by Catholic Charities of Sacramento, a West Coast wing of Catholic Charities USA, declaring that the WCEA violates its “religious freedom” and is therefore unconstitutional.

Basically, the California Supreme Court seconded the Appellate Court’s decision rejecting Catholic Charities’ motion for an injunction against the WCEA, handing Catholic Charities its second straight court defeat.

When the WCEA was winding its way through the legislature in 1999 (it was introduced by Democratic State Senator Jackie Speier, a self-proclaimed “Catholic”), the California Catholic Conference lobbied for the inclusion of an addendum to that bill that would exempt “religious employers” from providing such coverage, if to do so would be “contrary to the religious employer’s religious tenets.” When the WCEA was signed into law, by then-Governor Gray Davis (another self-proclaimed “Catholic”), the addendum was included. The addendum defined a “religious employer” as “an entity for which each of the following is true: (A) The inculcation of religious values is the purpose of the entity. (B) The entity primarily employs persons who share the religious tenets of the entity. (C) The entity serves primarily persons who share the religious tenets of the entity. (D) The entity is a nonprofit organization as described in…the Internal Revenue Service Code of 1986…,” which reads, “churches, their auxiliaries, and conventions or associations of churches…and the exclusively religious activities of any religious order.”

Catholic Charities, in its corporate code, describes itself as “an organ of the Roman Catholic Church” operating “in connection with the Roman Catholic Bishop of Sacramento,” that “offers a multitude of social services and private welfare programs to the general public, as part of the social justice ministry of the Roman Catholic Church.” These services and programs include “providing immigrant resettlement programs, elder care, counseling, food, clothing and affordable housing for the poor and needy, housing and vocational training of the developmentally disabled and the like.” Good and necessary activities all — noble, even. But compare Catholic Charities’ description of itself with the WCEA’s definition of a religious employer, points (A) through (D) above. Doesn’t jibe, does it?

READ MORE-

http://www.cruxnews.com/NORNotes/nor-24sept04.html
 
The finding may well be the result of a few articles lately calling Catholic Charities to account for some of its programs and as columnist Jan Herron recently pointed out:

"…Most people believe Catholic Charities is funded entirely by voluntary donations, but they couldn’t be more wrong. In FY 2002, over 60% of CCUSA funding came from government grants and contracts, another term for “taxpayers’ money!”…

As her column also pointed out some of this money is being spent on specific projects and agendas which many Catholics and other taxpayers are not aware of.

So perhaps that may play into the decision.
 
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HagiaSophia:
The finding may well be the result of a few articles lately calling Catholic Charities to account for some of its programs and as columnist Jan Herron recently pointed out:

"…Most people believe Catholic Charities is funded entirely by voluntary donations, but they couldn’t be more wrong. In FY 2002, over 60% of CCUSA funding came from government grants and contracts, another term for “taxpayers’ money!”…

As her column also pointed out some of this money is being spent on specific projects and agendas which many Catholics and other taxpayers are not aware of.

So perhaps that may play into the decision.
In a nutshell, government funding = government control.
 
So, they should drop health insurance for their employees. Problem solved.
 
Then CC needs to reject any govt. funds. I hope they take this to the Supreme Court. I think they’ll win and anyway, I’d love to hear Justice Scalia heap scorn on the twinkies trying to diddle the Church into buying contraceptives for her employees.
 
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JKirkLVNV:
Then CC needs to reject any govt. funds. I hope they take this to the Supreme Court. I think they’ll win and anyway, I’d love to hear Justice Scalia heap scorn on the twinkies trying to diddle the Church into buying contraceptives for her employees.
It’s not just the headline grabber of “buying contraceptives for employees” - when you take fed and state funding you make contractual obigations for yourself in a variety of ways. IOW ya takes the money, ya takes the govt in with ya.

But if you check out the links I’ve listed in another post here, you might be somewhat surprised as to where this money goes and for what.

That being what it is, for years a number of Catholics have been very critical of CC because they have involved themselves with all kinds of government grants and funding - once you do that it is a matter of time before the government’s rules and regs conflict with your religion, it’s simply a matter of over what and when.
 
What’s wrong with CC simply allocating a monthly amount to each employee so that each employee can purchase their own health insurance…seems like that would fix the problem.

If CC follows the ruling and allows for contraceptives…they are no longer Catholic.
 
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HagiaSophia:
It’s not just the headline grabber of “buying contraceptives for employees” - when you take fed and state funding you make contractual obigations for yourself in a variety of ways. IOW ya takes the money, ya takes the govt in with ya.

But if you check out the links I’ve listed in another post here, you might be somewhat surprised as to where this money goes and for what.

That being what it is, for years a number of Catholics have been very critical of CC because they have involved themselves with all kinds of government grants and funding - once you do that it is a matter of time before the government’s rules and regs conflict with your religion, it’s simply a matter of over what and when.
Oh, I know! I teach and it’s astonishing the amount of control that the feds expect in return for a relatively small amount of our school budget.
 
Hagia: Read the links. Amazing…I contribute monthly to Catholic Charities of Southern Nevada. I may look at this again. And the “Campaign for Human Development” sent a rep. to speak at our parish several months ago. Hmmmmm…
 
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