| | | As you know, the College has been
deliberating for some time about taking legal action against the HHS
contraceptive mandate. Up to this point in time, many lawsuits have
been dismissed for lack of “ripeness” or timeliness. Now that the
administration has finalized the wording of the mandate, the time has
come for the College to initiate legal action.
Accordingly, on behalf of Thomas Aquinas
College and its co-plaintiffs the Roman Catholic Archbishop of
Washington, The Catholic University of America, and others, the
Washington, D.C., office of the Jones Day law firm today filed a
complaint in the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia against the U. S. government.
The complaint alleges that the
government’s HHS contraceptive mandate of the Affordable Care Act
violates our rights under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the
First Amendment of the U. S. Constitution by substantially burdening our
free exercise of religion without a compelling governmental interest.
It further alleges that the HHS
contraceptive mandate violates the Administrative Procedures Act by
unlawfully requiring employers such as Thomas Aquinas College with
religiously motivated objections to provide coverage for
abortion-producing products, sterilization, contraception, and related
education.
The lawsuit seeks a permanent injunction
against enforcement of the HHS contraceptive mandate on the College and
all those filing suit. It also seeks an order vacating the mandate
itself.
It is important for a Catholic educational
institution such as Thomas Aquinas College to bear witness to its
Catholic character by challenging measures which create a conflict
between its duty to obey the civil law and its duty to remain faithful
to Catholic teaching.
It is also important for Thomas Aquinas
College to work to overturn measures which seriously threaten its
financial stability.
For these reasons, I believe it is
incumbent upon the College to oppose, by any legal means possible, a
government regulation which aims, by imposing substantial financial
penalties, to compel us to cooperate in providing insurance coverage for
medications and procedures which are contrary to Catholic moral
teaching, such as contraception, abortion, and voluntary sterilization.
Rather than file a suit on our own in the
Ninth Circuit, and after consultation with Archbishop Gomez, our Board
of Governors, and the faculty, we have made a prudential judgment to
join the suit being filed in the D.C. district court. We are very
pleased that the other parties have welcomed our participation.
I ask now for your prayers that our efforts might be successful.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Michael F. McLean, Ph.D.
President |
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