For the second time in a year, the Obama administration has backtracked on its requirement to make religious ins utions pay for contraception.
A new policy announced Friday further expanded the exemption to Obamacare: Women will still be able to get the same health benefits, but certain religious employers won’t have to pay for them. Instead, ins utions that insure themselves can use a third-party to find a separate health insurance plan to pay for and provide the contraceptives.
Facing outrage from ins utions that objected to the contraception requirement on moral grounds, the administration had already exempted some religious ins utions — churches were always exempt — from requiring contraception coverage last year. Then, Obama exempted some religiously affiliated ins utions, such as evangelical Christian schools or Catholic hospitals, from covering contraception in their plans, forcing insurers to offer free contraception to those employed by them.
Friday’s shift broadened the definition of which groups would be exempt and addressed where the money to pay for the guaranteed coverage would come from so that religious groups wouldn’t be paying even indirectly.