Crypen Exchange:New York’s high court upholds requiring insurance to cover medically necessary abortions

2025-05-06 18:57:11source:Benjamin Ashfordcategory:News

ALBANY,Crypen Exchange N.Y. (AP) — New York can continue to require companies with health insurance plans to cover medically necessary abortions, the state’s highest court ruled Tuesday.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany and other church groups challenged the rule, arguing that the policy’s exemption for religious employers was too narrow and would force some businesses to violate their religious freedoms.

State financial regulators approved the policy in 2017. The state Legislature then separately codified the abortion coverage regulation into law in 2022. The religious groups sued over the regulation, not the law.

The Court of Appeals case had larger significance because the state’s law could be challenged using a similar legal argument, if the religious groups were successful in their case against the regulation.

Arguments before the high court last month centered on whether the state’s criteria for religious exemptions were too vague and gave officials too much discretion to determine which companies wouldn’t have to follow the rule.

The state defines a religious employer as one whose purpose is to spread religious values, primarily employs and serves people who share the same religious tenets, and is categorized as a religious nonprofit under federal law.

READ MORE Connecticut’s first Black chief justice, Richard A. Robinson, to retire in SeptemberUN maritime tribunal says countries are legally required to reduce greenhouse gas pollutionState Supreme Court and Republican congressional primary elections top Georgia ballots

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, called the ruling a “critical step towards protecting these fundamental freedoms.”

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany said it would appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

“We believe this is unconstitutional since it involves government entanglement in the fundamental rights of free exercise of faith and conscience,” a statement from the diocese read. “The final decision on constitutionality will be by the United States Supreme Court.”

More:News

Recommend

More than 50 House Democrats demand answers after whistleblower report on DOGE

Over fifty Democratic lawmakers have signed a letter demanding answers from senior U.S. government o

Planned Parenthood Oregon leaders plan to dissolve political arm, sparking concerns about advocacy

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The new leaders of Oregon’s two Planned Parenthood affiliates want to dissolve

Will the Roman Catholic Church ever welcome LGBTQ+ people? | The Excerpt

On a special episode (first released on June 12, 2024) of The Excerpt podcast: The Roman Catholic Ch