requirement for contraception coverage, throwing out a lower court decision favoring President Barack Obama's administration.
The justices asked the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals to reconsider its decision that backed the Obama administration
in light of the Supreme Court's June 2014 ruling that allowed certain
privately owned corporations to seek exemptions from the provision.
Obama's healthcare law, known as Obamacare, requires
employers to provide health insurance policies that cover preventive
services for women including access to contraception and sterilization. Various challengers, including family-owned companies and religious affiliated nonprofits that oppose abortion and sometimes the use of contraceptives, say the requirement infringes on their religious beliefs.
The
high court threw out a June 2014 appeals court ruling that went in favor
of the government. In March, the court took a similar approach in a
case concerning the University of Notre Dame.
The appeals court rulings in both cases pre-dated the
Supreme Court's June 2014 ruling that family-owned Hobby Lobby Stores
Ltd could seek exemptions on religious grounds from the contraception
provision of the 2010 healthcare law.
Courts that have ruled on the issue since the Supreme
Court's Hobby Lobby decision have all decided in favor of the
government, finding the government's compromise does not impose a
substantial burden on the plaintiffs' religious beliefs. Religious
rights are protected under a law called the Religious Freedom
Restoration Act.
Source:Reuters
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