Faith Leaders Protest Narrow Religious Exemption Print PDF

On December 21, 2011, some sixty leaders of faith-based organizations or who work with faith-based organizations wrote to President Obama and HHS Secretary Sebelius protesting the very narrow exemption to the health insurance contraceptives mandate and asking that the administration not adopt in its place a different definition that would still only protect some faith-based organizations.  An alternative definition has been proposed that would still leave unprotected many faith-based service organizations.

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Maintaining Freedom for Faith-Based Service Print PDF

IRFA President Carlson-Thies’ essay on protecting the ability of faith-based services to maintain their religious character, especially through religious hiring, is featured in Policy in Public a journal from Cardus, a Canadian think tank.  It contrasts Canadian and US practice.

 

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Important Supreme Court "Ministerial" Employment Case Print PDF

The Supreme Court on March 28th agreed to take an employment discrimination case involving the "ministerial exception."  The Court's eventual ruling will be important for churches.  But the case isn't directly relevant for most faith-based groups.  That's because their hiring is protected by a different legal provision: the Title VII "religious exemption."

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IRFA News Print PDF

IRFA President Stanley Carlson-Thies speaks on “The Changing Landscape—Christian Nonprofits and Government” for the April 27th CEO Forum in Dallas, Texas, held in connection with the national conference of the Christian Leadership Alliance.

 

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ADVICE TO THE PRESIDENT

The federal faith-based initiative, extending back into the Clinton administration, has always been about improving the government's relationship with private organizations--secular and faith-based, large and small--that serve needy people and communities. It has involved many program innovations, organizational changes, and reforms of rules. At the center has always been action to ensure that faith-based organizations can collaborate with government programs without having first to suppress or hide their religious identity and faith-shaped practices.

President Barack Obama has promised an expanded and improved faith-based initiative. At a minimum, his initiative must not backtrack on the gains that have been made to ensure equal opportunity for faith-based organizations to participate in federally funded programs.

Equally important, the President should work with Congress to ensure that other federal rules and regulations--in areas that do not necessarily involve government funds, such as accreditation, employment rules, and tax-exempt status--are fair to faith-based organizations, safeguarding their religious identity and characteristics.

For the Coalition to Preserve Religious Freedom's advice to candidate Barack Obama,  go here .