82_FR_48035 82 FR 47838 - Moral Exemptions and Accommodations for Coverage of Certain Preventive Services Under the Affordable Care Act

82 FR 47838 - Moral Exemptions and Accommodations for Coverage of Certain Preventive Services Under the Affordable Care Act

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 197 (October 13, 2017)

Page Range47838-47862
FR Document2017-21852

The United States has a long history of providing conscience protections in the regulation of health care for entities and individuals with objections based on religious beliefs or moral convictions. These interim final rules expand exemptions to protect moral convictions for certain entities and individuals whose health plans are subject to a mandate of contraceptive coverage through guidance issued pursuant to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. These rules do not alter the discretion of the Health Resources and Services Administration, a component of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, to maintain the guidelines requiring contraceptive coverage where no regulatorily recognized objection exists. These rules also provide certain morally objecting entities access to the voluntary ``accommodation'' process regarding such coverage. These rules do not alter multiple other Federal programs that provide free or subsidized contraceptives for women at risk of unintended pregnancy.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 197 (Friday, October 13, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 197 (Friday, October 13, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 47838-47862]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-21852]



[[Page 47837]]

Vol. 82

Friday,

No. 197

October 13, 2017

Part III





Department of the Treasury





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 Internal Revenue Service





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26 CFR Part 54





Department of Labor





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 Employee Benefits Security Administration





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29 CFR Part 2590





Department of Health and Human Services





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45 CFR Part 147





 Moral Exemptions and Accommodations for Coverage of Certain Preventive 
Services Under the Affordable Care Act; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 82 , No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / 
Rules and Regulations

[[Page 47838]]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Internal Revenue Service

26 CFR Part 54

[TD-9828]
RIN 1545-BN91

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Employee Benefits Security Administration

29 CFR Part 2590

RIN 1210-AB84

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

45 CFR Part 147

[CMS-9925-IFC]
RIN 0938-AT46


Moral Exemptions and Accommodations for Coverage of Certain 
Preventive Services Under the Affordable Care Act

AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service, Department of the Treasury; Employee 
Benefits Security Administration, Department of Labor; and Centers for 
Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services.

ACTION: Interim final rules with request for comments.

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SUMMARY: The United States has a long history of providing conscience 
protections in the regulation of health care for entities and 
individuals with objections based on religious beliefs or moral 
convictions. These interim final rules expand exemptions to protect 
moral convictions for certain entities and individuals whose health 
plans are subject to a mandate of contraceptive coverage through 
guidance issued pursuant to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care 
Act. These rules do not alter the discretion of the Health Resources 
and Services Administration, a component of the United States 
Department of Health and Human Services, to maintain the guidelines 
requiring contraceptive coverage where no regulatorily recognized 
objection exists. These rules also provide certain morally objecting 
entities access to the voluntary ``accommodation'' process regarding 
such coverage. These rules do not alter multiple other Federal programs 
that provide free or subsidized contraceptives for women at risk of 
unintended pregnancy.

DATES: 
    Effective date: These interim final rules are effective on October 
6, 2017.
    Comment date: Written comments on these interim final rules are 
invited and must be received by December 5, 2017.

ADDRESSES: Written comments may be submitted to the Department of 
Health and Human Services as specified below. Any comment that is 
submitted will be shared with the Department of Labor and the 
Department of the Treasury, and will also be made available to the 
public.
    Warning: Do not include any personally identifiable information 
(such as name, address, or other contact information) or confidential 
business information that you do not want publicly disclosed. All 
comments may be posted on the Internet and can be retrieved by most 
Internet search engines. No deletions, modifications, or redactions 
will be made to the comments received, as they are public records. 
Comments may be submitted anonymously. Comments, identified by 
``Preventive Services,'' may be submitted one of four ways (please 
choose only one of the ways listed)
    1. Electronically. You may submit electronic comments on this 
regulation to http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the ``Submit a 
comment'' instructions.
    2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following 
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of 
Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-9925-IFC, P.O. Box 8016, 
Baltimore, MD 21244-8016.
    Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received 
before the close of the comment period.
    3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments to 
the following address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 
Department of Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-9925-IFC, Mail 
Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
    4. By hand or courier. Alternatively, you may deliver (by hand or 
courier) your written comments ONLY to the following addresses prior to 
the close of the comment period:
    a. For delivery in Washington, DC--Centers for Medicare & Medicaid 
Services, Department of Health and Human Services, Room 445-G, Hubert 
H. Humphrey Building, 200 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 
20201.
    (Because access to the interior of the Hubert H. Humphrey Building 
is not readily available to persons without Federal government 
identification, commenters are encouraged to leave their comments in 
the CMS drop slots located in the main lobby of the building. A stamp-
in clock is available for persons wishing to retain a proof of filing 
by stamping in and retaining an extra copy of the comments being 
filed.)
    b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD--Centers for Medicare & Medicaid 
Services, Department of Health and Human Services, 7500 Security 
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
    If you intend to deliver your comments to the Baltimore address, 
call telephone number (410) 786-9994 in advance to schedule your 
arrival with one of our staff members.
    Comments erroneously mailed to the addresses indicated as 
appropriate for hand or courier delivery may be delayed and received 
after the comment period.
    Comments received will be posted without change to 
www.regulations.gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeff Wu (310) 492-4305 or 
[email protected] for Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services 
(CMS), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Amber Rivers or 
Matthew Litton, Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA), 
Department of Labor, at (202) 693-8335; Karen Levin, Internal Revenue 
Service, Department of the Treasury, at (202) 317-5500.
    Customer Service Information: Individuals interested in obtaining 
information from the Department of Labor concerning employment-based 
health coverage laws may call the EBSA Toll-Free Hotline at 1-866-444-
EBSA (3272) or visit the Department of Labor's Web site (www.dol.gov/ebsa). Information from HHS on private health insurance coverage can be 
found on CMS's Web site (www.cms.gov/cciio), and information on health 
care reform can be found at www.HealthCare.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. Background

    In the context of legal requirements touching on certain sensitive 
health care issues--including health coverage of contraceptives--
Congress has a consistent history of supporting conscience protections 
for moral convictions alongside protections for religious beliefs, 
including as part of its efforts to promote access to health 
services.\1\ Against that backdrop,

[[Page 47839]]

Congress granted the Health Resources and Services Administration 
(HRSA), a component of the United States Department of Health and Human 
Services (HHS), discretion under the Patient Protection and Affordable 
Care Act to specify that certain group health plans and health 
insurance issuers shall cover, ``with respect to women, such additional 
preventive care and screenings . . . as provided for in comprehensive 
guidelines supported by'' HRSA (the ``Guidelines''). Public Health 
Service Act section 2713(a)(4). HRSA exercised that discretion under 
the last Administration to require health coverage for, among other 
things, certain contraceptive services,\2\ while the administering 
agencies--the Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and the 
Treasury (collectively, ``the Departments''),\3\ exercised both the 
discretion granted to HHS through HRSA, its component, in PHS Act 
section 2713(a)(4), and the authority granted to the Departments as 
administering agencies (26 U.S.C. 9833; 29 U.S.C. 1191c; 42 U.S.C. 
300gg-92) to issue regulations to guide HRSA in carrying out that 
provision. Through rulemaking, including three interim final rules, the 
Departments exempted and accommodated certain religious objectors, but 
did not offer an exemption or accommodation to any group possessing 
non-religious moral objections to providing coverage for some or all 
contraceptives. Many individuals and entities challenged the 
contraceptive coverage requirement and regulations (hereinafter, the 
``contraceptive Mandate,'' or the ``Mandate'') as being inconsistent 
with various legal protections. These challenges included lawsuits 
brought by some non-religious organizations with sincerely held moral 
convictions inconsistent with providing coverage for some or all 
contraceptive services, and those cases continue to this day. Various 
public comments were also submitted asking the Departments to protect 
objections based on moral convictions.
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    \1\ See, for example, 42 U.S.C. 300a-7 (protecting individuals 
and health care entities from being required to provide or assist 
sterilizations, abortions, or other lawful health services if it 
would violate their ``religious beliefs or moral convictions''); 42 
U.S.C. 238n (protecting individuals and entities that object to 
abortion); Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2017, Div. H, Title V, 
Sec. 507(d) (Departments of Labor, HHS, and Education, and Related 
Agencies Appropriations Act), Public Law 115-31 (protecting any 
``health care professional, a hospital, a provider-sponsored 
organization, a health maintenance organization, a health insurance 
plan, or any other kind of health care facility, organization, or 
plan'' in objecting to abortion for any reason); Id. at Div. C, 
Title VIII, Sec. 808 (regarding any requirement of ``the provision 
of contraceptive coverage by health insurance plans'' in the 
District of Columbia, ``it is the intent of Congress that any 
legislation enacted on such issue should include a `conscience 
clause' which provides exceptions for religious beliefs and moral 
convictions.''); Id. at Div. C, Title VII, Sec. 726(c) (Financial 
Services and General Government Appropriations Act) (protecting 
individuals who object to prescribing or providing contraceptives 
contrary to their ``religious beliefs or moral convictions''); Id. 
at Div. I, Title III (Department of State, Foreign Operations, and 
Related Programs Appropriations Act) (protecting applicants for 
family planning funds based on their ``religious or conscientious 
commitment to offer only natural family planning''); 42 U.S.C. 
290bb-36 (prohibiting the statutory section from being construed to 
require suicide related treatment services for youth where the 
parents or legal guardians object based on ``religious beliefs or 
moral objections''); 42 U.S.C. 1395w-22(j)(3)(B) (protecting against 
forced counseling or referrals in Medicare Choice, now Medicare 
Advantage, managed care plans with respect to objections based on 
``moral or religious grounds''); 42 U.S.C. 1396a(w)(3) (ensuring 
particular Federal law does not infringe on ``conscience'' as 
protected in State law concerning advance directives); 42 U.S.C. 
1396u-2(b)(3) (protecting against forced counseling or referrals in 
Medicaid managed care plans with respect to objections based on 
``moral or religious grounds''); 42 U.S.C. 2996f(b) (protecting 
objection to abortion funding in legal services assistance grants 
based on ``religious beliefs or moral convictions''); 42 U.S.C. 
14406 (protecting organizations and health providers from being 
required to inform or counsel persons pertaining to assisted 
suicide); 42 U.S.C. 18023 (blocking any requirement that issuers or 
exchanges must cover abortion); 42 U.S.C. 18113 (protecting health 
plans or health providers from being required to provide an item or 
service that helps cause assisted suicide); see also 8 U.S.C. 
1182(g) (protecting vaccination objections by ``aliens'' due to 
``religious beliefs or moral convictions''); 18 U.S.C. 3597 
(protecting objectors to participation in Federal executions based 
on ``moral or religious convictions''); 20 U.S.C. 1688 (prohibiting 
sex discrimination law to be used to require assistance in abortion 
for any reason); 22 U.S.C. 7631(d) (protecting entities from being 
required to use HIV/AIDS funds contrary to their ``religious or 
moral objection'').
    \2\ This document's references to ``contraception,'' 
``contraceptive,'' ``contraceptive coverage,'' or ``contraceptive 
services'' generally includes contraceptives, sterilization, and 
related patient education and counseling, unless otherwise 
indicated.
    \3\ Note, however, that in sections under headings listing only 
two of the three Departments, the term ``Departments'' generally 
refers only to the two Departments listed in the heading.
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    The Departments have recently exercised our discretion to 
reevaluate these exemptions and accommodations. This evaluation 
includes consideration of various factors, such as: The interests 
served by the existing Guidelines, regulations, and accommodation 
process; \4\ the extensive litigation; Executive Order 13798, 
``Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty'' (May 4, 2017); 
Congress' history of providing protections for moral convictions 
alongside religious beliefs regarding certain health services 
(including contraception, sterilization, and items or services believed 
to involve abortion); the discretion afforded under PHS Act section 
2713(a)(4); the structure and intent of that provision in the broader 
context of section 2713 and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care 
Act; and the history of the regulatory process and comments submitted 
in various requests for public comments (including in the Departments' 
2016 Request for Information). Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal 
Register, the Departments published, contemporaneously with these 
interim final rules, companion interim final rules expanding exemptions 
to protect sincerely held religious beliefs in the context of the 
contraceptive Mandate.
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    \4\ In this IFR, we generally use ``accommodation'' and 
``accommodation process'' interchangeably.
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    In light of these considerations, the Departments issue these 
interim final rules to better balance the Government's interest in 
promoting coverage for contraceptive and sterilization services with 
the Government's interests in providing conscience protections for 
individuals and entities with sincerely held moral convictions in 
certain health care contexts, and in minimizing burdens imposed by our 
regulation of the health insurance market.

A. The Affordable Care Act

    Collectively, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub. 
L. 111-148), enacted on March 23, 2010, and the Health Care and 
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152), enacted on 
March 30, 2010, are known as the Affordable Care Act. In signing the 
Affordable Care Act, President Obama issued Executive Order 13535 
(March 24, 2010), which declared that, ``[u]nder the Act, longstanding 
Federal laws to protect conscience (such as the Church Amendment, 42 
U.S.C. 300a-7, and the Weldon Amendment, section 508(d)(1) of Pub. L. 
111-8) remain intact'' and that ``[n]umerous executive agencies have a 
role in ensuring that these restrictions are enforced, including the 
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).'' Those laws protect 
objections based on moral convictions in addition to religious beliefs.
    The Affordable Care Act reorganizes, amends, and adds to the 
provisions of part A of title XXVII of the Public Health Service Act 
(PHS Act) relating to group health plans and health insurance issuers 
in the group and individual markets. In addition, the Affordable Care 
Act adds section 715(a)(1) to the Employee Retirement Income Security 
Act of 1974 (ERISA) and section 9815(a)(1) to the Internal Revenue Code 
(Code) to incorporate the provisions of part A of title XXVII of the 
PHS Act into ERISA and the Code, and thereby make them applicable to 
certain group health plans regulated under ERISA or the Code. The 
sections of the PHS Act incorporated into ERISA and the Code are 
sections 2701 through 2728 of the PHS Act.
    These interim final rules concern section 2713 of the PHS Act. 
Where it applies, section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS

[[Page 47840]]

Act requires coverage without cost sharing for ``such additional'' 
women's preventive care and screenings ``as provided for'' and 
``supported by'' guidelines developed by HRSA/HHS. The Congress did not 
specify any particular additional preventive care and screenings with 
respect to women that HRSA could or should include in its Guidelines, 
nor did Congress indicate whether the Guidelines should include 
contraception and sterilization.
    The Departments have consistently interpreted section 2713(a)(4)'s 
of the PHS Act grant of authority to include broad discretion to decide 
the extent to which HRSA will provide for and support the coverage of 
additional women's preventive care and screenings in the Guidelines. In 
turn, the Departments have interpreted that discretion to include the 
ability to exempt entities from coverage requirements announced in 
HRSA's Guidelines. That interpretation is rooted in the text of section 
2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act, which allows HRSA to decide the extent to 
which the Guidelines will provide for and support the coverage of 
additional women's preventive care and screenings.
    Accordingly, the Departments have consistently interpreted section 
2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act reference to ``comprehensive guidelines 
supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration for 
purposes of this paragraph'' to grant HRSA authority to develop such 
Guidelines. And because the text refers to Guidelines ``supported by 
the Health Resources and Services Administration for purposes of this 
paragraph,'' the Departments have consistently interpreted that 
authority to afford HRSA broad discretion to consider the requirements 
of coverage and cost-sharing in determining the nature and extent of 
preventive care and screenings recommended in the guidelines. (76 FR 
46623). As the Departments have noted, these Guidelines are different 
from ``the other guidelines referenced in section 2713(a), which pre-
dated the Affordable Care Act and were originally issued for purposes 
of identifying the non-binding recommended care that providers should 
provide to patients.'' Id. Guidelines developed as nonbinding 
recommendations for care implicate significantly different legal and 
policy concerns than guidelines developed for a mandatory coverage 
requirement. To guide HRSA in exercising the discretion afforded to it 
in section 2713(a)(4), the Departments have previously promulgated 
regulations defining the scope of permissible religious exemptions and 
accommodations for such guidelines. (45 CFR 147.131). The interim final 
rules set forth herein are a necessary and appropriate exercise of the 
authority delegated to the Departments as administrators of the 
statutes. (26 U.S.C. 9833; 29 U.S.C. 1191c; 42 U.S.C. 300gg-92).
    Our interpretation of section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act is 
confirmed by the Affordable Care Act's statutory structure. The 
Congress did not intend to require entirely uniform coverage of 
preventive services. (76 FR 46623). To the contrary, Congress carved 
out an exemption from section 2713 for grandfathered plans. This 
exemption is not applicable to many of the other provisions in Title I 
of the Affordable Care Act--provisions previously referred to by the 
Departments as providing ``particularly significant protections.'' (75 
FR 34540). Those provisions include: Section 2704, which prohibits 
preexisting condition exclusions or other discrimination based on 
health status in group health coverage; section 2708, which prohibits 
excessive waiting periods (as of January 1, 2014); section 2711, which 
relates to lifetime limits; section 2712, which prohibits rescissions 
of health insurance coverage; section 2714, which extends dependent 
coverage until age 26; and section 2718, which imposes a medical loss 
ratio on health insurance issuers in the individual and group markets 
(for insured coverage), or requires them to provide rebates to 
policyholders. (75 FR 34538, 34540, 34542). Consequently, of the 150 
million nonelderly people in America with employer-sponsored health 
coverage, approximately 25.5 million are estimated to be enrolled in 
grandfathered plans not subject to section 2713 of the PHS Act.\5\ As 
the Supreme Court observed, ``there is no legal requirement that 
grandfathered plans ever be phased out.'' Burwell v. Hobby Lobby 
Stores, Inc., 134 S. Ct. 2751, 2764 n.10 (2014).
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    \5\ Kaiser Family Foundation & Health Research & Educational 
Trust, ``Employer Health Benefits, 2017 Annual Survey,'' available 
at http://files.kff.org/attachment/Report-Employer-Health-Benefits-Annual-Survey-2017.
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    The Departments' interpretation of section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS 
Act to permit HRSA to establish exemptions from the Guidelines, and of 
the Departments' own authority as administering agencies to guide HRSA 
in establishing such exemptions, is also consistent with Executive 
Order 13535. That order, issued upon the signing of the Affordable Care 
Act, specified that ``longstanding Federal laws to protect conscience . 
. . remain intact,'' including laws that protect religious beliefs and 
moral convictions from certain requirements in the health care context. 
Although the text of Executive Order 13535 does not require the 
expanded exemptions issued in these interim final rules, the expanded 
exemptions are, as explained below, consistent with longstanding 
Federal laws to protect conscience regarding certain health matters, 
and are consistent with the intent that the Affordable Care Act would 
be implemented in consideration of the protections set forth in those 
laws.

B. The Regulations Concerning Women's Preventive Services

    On July 19, 2010, the Departments issued interim final rules 
implementing section 2713 of the PHS Act (75 FR 41726). Those interim 
final rules charged HRSA with developing the Guidelines authorized by 
section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act.
1. The Institute of Medicine Report
    In developing the Guidelines, HRSA relied on an independent report 
from the Institute of Medicine (IOM, now known as the National Academy 
of Medicine) on women's preventive services, issued on July 19, 2011, 
``Clinical Preventive Services for Women, Closing the Gaps'' (IOM 
2011). The IOM's report was funded by the HHS Office of the Assistant 
Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, pursuant to a funding 
opportunity that charged the IOM to conduct a review of effective 
preventive services to ensure women's health and well-being.\6\
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    \6\ Because section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act specifies that the 
HRSA Guidelines shall include preventive care and screenings ``with 
respect to women,'' the Guidelines exclude services relating to a 
man's reproductive capacity, such as vasectomies and condoms.
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    The IOM made a number of recommendations with respect to women's 
preventive services. As relevant here, the IOM recommended that the 
Guidelines cover the full range of Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-
approved contraceptive methods, sterilization procedures, and patient 
education and counseling for women with reproductive capacity. Because 
FDA includes in the category of ``contraceptives'' certain drugs and 
devices that may not only prevent conception (fertilization), but may 
also prevent implantation of an embryo,\7\ the IOM's recommendation 
included

[[Page 47841]]

several contraceptive methods that many persons and organizations 
believe are abortifacient--that is, as causing early abortion--and 
which they conscientiously oppose for that reason distinct from whether 
they also oppose contraception or sterilization. One of the 16 members 
of the IOM committee, Dr. Anthony LoSasso, a Professor at the 
University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, wrote a 
formal dissenting opinion. He stated that the IOM committee did not 
have sufficient time to evaluate fully the evidence on whether the use 
of preventive services beyond those encompassed by section 2713(a)(1) 
through (3) of the PHS Act leads to lower rates of disability or 
disease and increased rates of well-being, such that the IOM should 
recommend additional services to be included under Guidelines issued 
under section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act. He further stated that ``the 
recommendations were made without high quality, systematic evidence of 
the preventive nature of the services considered,'' and that ``the 
committee process for evaluation of the evidence lacked transparency 
and was largely subject to the preferences of the committee's 
composition. Troublingly, the process tended to result in a mix of 
objective and subjective determinations filtered through a lens of 
advocacy.'' He also raised concerns that the committee did not have 
time to develop a framework for determining whether coverage of any 
given preventive service leads to a reduction in healthcare 
expenditure.\8\ IOM 2011 at 231-32. In its response to Dr. LoSasso, the 
other 15 committee members stated in part that ``At the first committee 
meeting, it was agreed that cost considerations were outside the scope 
of the charge, and that the committee should not attempt to duplicate 
the disparate review processes used by other bodies, such as the 
USPSTF, ACIP, and Bright Futures. HHS, with input from this committee, 
may consider other factors including cost in its development of 
coverage decisions.''
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    \7\ FDA's guide ``Birth Control: Medicines To Help You,'' 
specifies that various approved contraceptives, including 
Levonorgestrel, Ulipristal Acetate, and IUDs, work mainly by 
preventing fertilization and ``may also work . . . by preventing 
attachment (implantation) to the womb (uterus)'' of a human embryo 
after fertilization. Available at https://www.fda.gov/forconsumers/byaudience/forwomen/freepublications/ucm313215.htm.
    \8\ The Departments do not relay these dissenting remarks as an 
endorsement of the remarks, but to describe the history of the 
Guidelines, which includes this part of the report that IOM provided 
to HRSA.
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2. HRSA's 2011 Guidelines and the Departments' Second Interim Final 
Rules
    On August 1, 2011, HRSA released onto its Web site its Guidelines 
for women's preventive services, adopting the recommendations of the 
IOM. https://www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines/ The Guidelines included 
coverage for all FDA-approved contraceptives, sterilization procedures, 
and related patient education and counseling for women with 
reproductive capacity, as prescribed by a health care provider 
(hereinafter ``the Mandate'').
    In administering this Mandate, on August 1, 2011, the Departments 
promulgated interim final rules amending our 2010 interim final rules. 
(76 FR 46621) (2011 interim final rules). The 2011 interim final rules 
specified that HRSA has the authority to establish exemptions from the 
contraceptive coverage requirement for certain group health plans 
established or maintained by certain religious employers and for health 
insurance coverage provided in connection with such plans.\9\ The 2011 
interim final rules only offered the exemption to a narrow scope of 
employers, and only if they were religious. As the basis for adopting 
that limited definition of religious employer, the 2011 interim final 
rules stated that they relied on the laws of some ``States that exempt 
certain religious employers from having to comply with State law 
requirements to cover contraceptive services.'' (76 FR 46623). Several 
comments were submitted asking that the exemption include those who 
object to contraceptive coverage based on non-religious moral 
convictions, including pro-life, non-profit advocacy organizations.\10\
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    \9\ The 2011 amended interim final rules were issued and 
effective on August 1, 2011, and published in the Federal Register 
on August 3, 2011. (76 FR 46621).
    \10\ See, for example, Americans United for Life (``AUL'') 
Comment on CMA-9992-IFC2 at 10 (Nov. 1, 2011), available at http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=HHS-OS-2011-0023-59496.
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3. The Departments' Subsequent Rulemaking on the Accommodation and 
Third Interim Final Rules
    Final regulations issued on February 10, 2012, adopted the 
definition of ``religious employer'' in the 2011 interim final rules 
without modification (2012 final regulations).\11\ (77 FR 8725). The 
exemption did not require exempt employers to file any certification 
form or comply with any other information collection process.
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    \11\ The 2012 final regulations were published on February 15, 
2012 (77 FR 8725).
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    Contemporaneously with the issuance of the 2012 final regulations, 
HHS--with the agreement of the Department of Labor (DOL) and the 
Department of the Treasury--issued guidance establishing a temporary 
safe harbor from enforcement of the contraceptive coverage requirement 
by the Departments with respect to group health plans established or 
maintained by certain nonprofit organizations with religious objections 
to contraceptive coverage (and the group health insurance coverage 
provided in connection with such plans).\12\ The temporary safe harbor 
did not include nonprofit organizations that had an objection to 
contraceptives based on moral convictions but not religious beliefs, 
nor did it include for-profit entities of any kind. The Departments 
stated that, during the temporary safe harbor, the Departments would 
engage in rulemaking to achieve ``two goals--providing contraceptive 
coverage without cost-sharing to individuals who want it and 
accommodating non-exempted, nonprofit organizations' religious 
objections to covering contraceptive services.'' (77 FR 8727).
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    \12\ Guidance on the Temporary Enforcement Safe Harbor for 
Certain Employers, Group Health Plans, and Group Health Insurance 
Issuers with Respect to the Requirement to Cover Contraceptive 
Services Without Cost Sharing Under section 2713 of the Public 
Health Service Act, Section 715(a)(1) of the Employee Retirement 
Income Security Act, and Section 9815(a)(1) of the Internal Revenue 
Code, issued on February 10, 2012, and reissued on August 15, 2012. 
Available at: http://www.lb7.uscourts.gov/documents/12cv3932.pdf. 
The guidance, as reissued on August 15, 2012, clarified, among other 
things, that plans that took some action before February 10, 2012, 
to try, without success, to exclude or limit contraceptive coverage 
were not precluded from eligibility for the safe harbor. The 
temporary enforcement safe harbor was also available to insured 
student health insurance coverage arranged by nonprofit institutions 
of higher education with religious objections to contraceptive 
coverage that met the conditions set forth in the guidance. See 
final rule entitled ``Student Health Insurance Coverage'' published 
March 21, 2012 (77 FR 16457).
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    On March 21, 2012, the Departments published an advance notice of 
proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) that described possible approaches to 
achieve those goals with respect to religious nonprofit organizations, 
and solicited public comments on the same. (77 FR 16501). Following 
review of the comments on the ANPRM, the Departments published proposed 
regulations on February 6, 2013 (2013 NPRM) (78 FR 8456).
    The 2013 NPRM proposed to expand the definition of ``religious 
employer'' for purposes of the religious employer exemption. 
Specifically, it proposed to require only that the religious employer 
be organized and operate as a nonprofit entity and be referred to in 
section 6033(a)(3)(A)(i) or (iii) of the Code, eliminating the 
requirements that a religious employer--(1) have the inculcation of 
religious values as its purpose; (2) primarily employ persons who share 
its religious tenets; and (3) primarily serve persons who share its 
religious tenets. The proposed expanded

[[Page 47842]]

definition still encompassed only religious entities.
    The 2013 NPRM also proposed to create a compliance process, which 
it called an accommodation, for group health plans established, 
maintained, or arranged by certain eligible nonprofit organizations 
that fell outside the houses of worship and integrated auxiliaries 
covered by section 6033(a)(3)(A)(i) or (iii) of the Code (and, thus, 
outside of the religious employer exemption). The 2013 NPRM proposed to 
define such eligible organizations as nonprofit entities that hold 
themselves out as religious, oppose providing coverage for certain 
contraceptive items on account of religious objections, and maintain a 
certification to this effect in their records. The 2013 NPRM stated, 
without citing a supporting source, that employees of eligible 
organizations ``may be less likely than'' employees of exempt houses of 
worship and integrated auxiliaries to share their employer's faith and 
opposition to contraception on religious grounds. (78 FR 8461). The 
2013 NPRM therefore proposed that, in the case of an insured group 
health plan established or maintained by an eligible organization, the 
health insurance issuer providing group health insurance coverage in 
connection with the plan would provide contraceptive coverage to plan 
participants and beneficiaries without cost sharing, premium, fee, or 
other charge to plan participants or beneficiaries enrolled in the 
eligible organization's plan--and without any cost to the eligible 
organization.\13\ In the case of a self-insured group health plan 
established or maintained by an eligible organization, the 2013 NPRM 
presented potential approaches under which the third party 
administrator of the plan would provide or arrange for contraceptive 
coverage to plan participants and beneficiaries. The proposed 
accommodation process was not to be offered to non-religious nonprofit 
organizations, nor to any for-profit entities. Public comments again 
included the request that exemptions encompass objections to 
contraceptive coverage based on moral convictions and not just based on 
religious beliefs.\14\ On August 15, 2012, the Departments extended our 
temporary safe harbor until the first plan year beginning on or after 
August 1, 2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ The NPRM proposed to treat student health insurance 
coverage arranged by eligible organizations that are institutions of 
higher education in a similar manner.
    \14\ See,for example, AUL Comment on CMS-9968-P at 5 (Apr. 8, 
2013), available at http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=CMS-2012-0031-79115.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Departments published final regulations on July 2, 2013 (July 
2013 final regulations) (78 FR 39869). The July 2013 final regulations 
finalized the expansion of the exemption for houses of worship and 
their integrated auxiliaries. Although some commenters had suggested 
that the exemption be further expanded, the Departments declined to 
adopt that approach. The July 2013 regulations stated that, because 
employees of objecting houses of worship and integrated auxiliaries are 
relatively likely to oppose contraception, exempting those 
organizations ``does not undermine the governmental interests furthered 
by the contraceptive coverage requirement.'' (78 FR 39874). However, 
like the 2013 NPRM, the July 2013 regulations assumed that ``[h]ouses 
of worship and their integrated auxiliaries that object to 
contraceptive coverage on religious grounds are more likely than other 
employers to employ people of the same faith who share the same 
objection'' to contraceptives. Id.
    The July 2013 regulation also finalized an accommodation for 
eligible organizations, which were then defined to include solely 
organizations that are religious. Under the accommodation, an eligible 
organization was required to submit a self-certification to its group 
health insurance issuer or third party administrator, as applicable. 
Upon receiving that self-certification, the issuer or third party 
administrator would provide or arrange for payments for the 
contraceptive services to the plan participants and beneficiaries 
enrolled in the eligible organization's plan, without requiring any 
cost sharing on the part of plan participants and beneficiaries and 
without cost to the eligible organization. With respect to self-insured 
plans, the third party administrators (or issuers they contracted with) 
could receive reimbursements by reducing user fee payments (to 
Federally facilitated Exchanges) by the amounts paid out for 
contraceptive services under the accommodation, plus an allowance for 
certain administrative costs, as long as the HHS Secretary requests and 
an authorizing exception under OMB Circular No. A-25R is in effect.\15\ 
With respect to fully insured group health plans, the issuer was 
expected to bear the cost of such payments,\16\ and HHS intended to 
clarify in guidance that the issuer could treat those payments as an 
adjustment to claims costs for purposes of medical loss ratio and risk 
corridor program calculations. The Departments extended the temporary 
safe harbor again on June 20, 2013, to encompass plan years beginning 
on or after August 1, 2013, and before January 1, 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ See also 45 CFR 156.50. Under the regulations, if the third 
party administrator does not participate in a Federally-facilitated 
Exchange as an issuer, it is permitted to contract with an insurer 
which does so participate, in order to obtain such reimbursement. 
The total contraceptive user fee adjustment for the 2015 benefit 
year was $33 million.
    \16\ ``[P]roviding payments for contraceptive services is cost 
neutral for issuers.'' (78 FR 39877).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. Litigation Over the Mandate and the Accommodation Process
    During the period when the Departments were publishing and 
modifying our regulations, organizations and individuals filed dozens 
of lawsuits challenging the Mandate. Plaintiffs included religious 
nonprofit organizations, businesses run by religious families, 
individuals, and others, including several non-religious organizations 
that opposed coverage of certain contraceptives under the Mandate on 
the basis of non-religious moral convictions. Religious for-profit 
entities won various court decisions leading to the Supreme Court's 
ruling in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. 134 S. Ct. 2751 (2014). 
The Supreme Court ruled against the Departments and held that, under 
the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), the Mandate could 
not be applied to the closely held for-profit corporations before the 
Court because their owners had religious objections to providing such 
coverage.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ The Supreme Court did not decide whether RFRA would apply 
to publicly traded for-profit corporations. See 134 S. Ct. at 2774.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On August 27, 2014, the Departments simultaneously issued a third 
set of interim final rules (August 2014 interim final rules) (79 FR 
51092), and a notice of proposed rulemaking (August 2014 proposed 
rules) (79 FR 51118). The August 2014 interim final rules changed the 
accommodation process so that it could be initiated either by self-
certification using EBSA Form 700 or through a notice informing the 
Secretary of HHS that an eligible organization had religious objections 
to coverage of all or a subset of contraceptive services (79 FR 51092). 
In response to Hobby Lobby, the August 2014 proposed rules extended the 
accommodation process to closely held for-profit entities with 
religious objections to contraceptive coverage, by including them in 
the definition of eligible organizations (79 FR 51118). Neither the 
August 2014 interim final rules nor the August 2014 proposed rules 
extended the exemption; neither added a certification requirement for

[[Page 47843]]

exempt entities; and neither encompassed objections based on non-
religious moral convictions.
    On July 14, 2015, the Departments finalized both the August 2014 
interim final rules and the August 2014 proposed rules in a set of 
final regulations (the July 2015 final regulations) (80 FR 41318). (The 
July 2015 final regulations also encompassed issues related to other 
preventive services coverage.) The July 2015 final regulations allowed 
eligible organizations to submit a notice to HHS as an alternative to 
submitting the EBSA Form 700, but specified that such notice must 
include the eligible organization's name and an expression of its 
religious objection, along with the plan name, plan type, and name and 
contact information for any of the plan's third party administrators or 
health insurance issuers. The Departments indicated that such 
information represents the minimum information necessary for us to 
administer the accommodation process.
    Meanwhile, a second series of legal challenges were filed by 
religious nonprofit organizations that stated the accommodation 
impermissibly burdened their religious beliefs because it utilized 
their health plans to provide services to which they objected on 
religious grounds, and it required them to submit a self-certification 
or notice. On November 6, 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court granted 
certiorari in seven similar cases under the title of a filing from the 
Third Circuit, Zubik v. Burwell. On May 16, 2016, the Supreme Court 
issued a per curiam opinion in Zubik, vacating the judgments of the 
Courts of Appeals--most of which had ruled in the Departments' favor--
and remanding the cases ``in light of the substantial clarification and 
refinement in the positions of the parties'' that had been filed in 
supplemental briefs. 136 S. Ct. 1557, 1560 (2016). The Court stated 
that it anticipated that, on remand, the Courts of Appeals would 
``allow the parties sufficient time to resolve any outstanding issues 
between them.'' Id. The Court also specified that ``the Government may 
not impose taxes or penalties on petitioners for failure to provide the 
relevant notice'' while the cases remained pending. Id. at 1561.
    After remand, as indicated by the Departments in court filings, 
meetings were held between attorneys for the Government and for the 
plaintiffs in those cases. The Departments also issued a Request for 
Information (``RFI'') on July 26, 2016, seeking public comment on 
options for modifying the accommodation process in light of the 
supplemental briefing in Zubik and the Supreme Court's remand order. 
(81 FR 47741). Public comments were submitted in response to the RFI, 
during a comment period that closed on September 20, 2016. Those 
comments included the request that the exemption be expanded to include 
those who oppose the Mandate for either religious ``or moral'' reasons, 
consistent with various state laws (such as in Connecticut or Missouri) 
that protect objections to contraceptive coverage based on moral 
convictions.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ See, for example, https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0123-54142; see also https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0123-54218 and https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0123-46220.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Beginning in 2015, lawsuits challenging the Mandate were also filed 
by various non-religious organizations with moral objections to 
contraceptive coverage. These organizations asserted that they believe 
some methods classified by FDA as contraceptives may have an 
abortifacient effect and therefore, in their view, are morally 
equivalent to abortion. These organizations have neither received an 
exemption from the Mandate nor do they qualify for the accommodation. 
For example, the organization that since 1974 has sponsored the annual 
March for Life in Washington, DC (March for Life), filed a complaint 
claiming that the Mandate violated the equal protection component of 
the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, and was arbitrary and 
capricious under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). Citing, for 
example, (77 FR 8727), March for Life argued that the Departments' 
stated interests behind the Mandate were only advanced among women who 
``want'' the coverage so as to prevent ``unintended'' pregnancy. March 
for Life contended that because it only hires employees who publicly 
advocate against abortion, including what they regard as abortifacient 
contraceptive items, the Departments' interests were not rationally 
advanced by imposing the Mandate upon it and its employees. 
Accordingly, March for Life contended that applying the Mandate to it 
(and other similarly situated organizations) lacked a rational basis 
and therefore doing so was arbitrary and capricious in violation of the 
APA. March for Life further contended that because the Departments 
concluded the government's interests were not undermined by exempting 
houses of worship and integrated auxiliaries (based on our assumption 
that such entities are relatively more likely than other religious 
nonprofits to have employees that share their views against 
contraception), applying the Mandate to March for Life or similar 
organizations that definitively hire only employees who oppose certain 
contraceptives lacked a rational basis and therefore violated their 
right of equal protection under the Due Process Clause.
    March for Life's employees, who stated they were personally 
religious (although personal religiosity was not a condition of their 
employment), also sued as co-plaintiffs. They contended that the 
Mandate violates their rights under RFRA by making it impossible for 
them to obtain health insurance consistent with their religious 
beliefs, either from the plan March for Life wanted to offer them, or 
in the individual market, because the Departments offered no exemptions 
in either circumstance. Another non-religious nonprofit organization 
that opposed the Mandate's requirement to provide certain contraceptive 
coverage on moral grounds also filed a lawsuit challenging the Mandate. 
Real Alternatives, Inc. v. Burwell, 150 F. Supp. 3d 419 (M.D. Pa. 
2015).
    Challenges by non-religious nonprofit organizations led to 
conflicting opinions among the Federal courts. A district court agreed 
with the March for Life plaintiffs on the organization's equal 
protection claim and the employees' RFRA claims (not specifically 
ruling on the APA claim), and issued a permanent injunction against the 
Departments that is still in place. March for Life v. Burwell, 128 F. 
Supp. 3d 116 (D.D.C. 2015). The appeal in March for Life is pending and 
has been stayed since early 2016. In another case, Federal district and 
appellate courts in Pennsylvania disagreed with the reasoning from 
March for Life and ruled against claims brought by a similarly non-
religious nonprofit employer and its religious employees. Real 
Alternatives, 150 F. Supp. 3d 419, affirmed by 867 F.3d 338 (3d Cir. 
2017). One member of the appeals court panel in Real Alternatives 
dissented in part, stating he would have ruled in favor of the 
individual employee plaintiffs under RFRA. Id. at *18.
    On December 20, 2016, HRSA updated the Guidelines via its Web site, 
https://www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines2016/index.html. HRSA announced 
that, for plans subject to the Guidelines, the updated Guidelines would 
apply to the first plan year beginning after December 20, 2017. Among 
other changes, the updated Guidelines specified that the required 
contraceptive coverage includes follow-up care (for example, management 
and evaluation, as well as changes to, and removal or discontinuation 
of, the

[[Page 47844]]

contraceptive method). They also specified, for the first time, that 
coverage should include instruction in fertility awareness-based 
methods for women desiring an alternative method of family planning. 
HRSA stated that, with the input of a committee operating under a 
cooperative agreement, HRSA would review and periodically update the 
Women's Preventive Services' Guidelines. The updated Guidelines did not 
alter the religious employer exemption or accommodation process, nor 
did they extend the exemption or accommodation process to organizations 
or individuals that oppose certain forms of contraception (and coverage 
thereof) on moral grounds.
    On January 9, 2017, the Departments issued a document entitled, 
``FAQs About Affordable Care Act Implementation Part 36.'' \19\ The FAQ 
stated that, after reviewing comments submitted in response to the 2016 
RFI and considering various options, the Departments could not find a 
way at that time to amend the accommodation so as to satisfy objecting 
eligible organizations while pursuing the Departments' policy goals. 
The Departments did not adopt the approach requested by certain 
commenters, cited above, to expand the exemption to include those who 
oppose the Mandate for moral reasons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ Available at: https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-center/faqs/aca-part-36.pdf and 
https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/ACA-FAQs-Part36_1-9-17-Final.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On May 4, 2017, the President issued Executive Order 13798, 
``Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty.'' Section 3 of that 
order declares, ``Conscience Protections with Respect to Preventive-
Care Mandate. The Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of Labor, 
and the Secretary of Health and Human Services shall consider issuing 
amended regulations, consistent with applicable law, to address 
conscience-based objections to the preventive-care mandate promulgated 
under section 300gg-13(a)(4) of title 42, United States Code.''

II. Expanded Exemptions and Accommodations for Moral Convictions

    These interim final rules incorporate conscience protections into 
the contraceptive Mandate. They do so in part to bring the Mandate into 
conformity with Congress's long history of providing or supporting 
conscience protections in the regulation of sensitive health-care 
issues, cognizant that Congress neither required the Departments to 
impose the Mandate nor prohibited them from providing conscience 
protections if they did so. Specifically, these interim final rules 
expand exemptions to the contraceptive Mandate to protect certain 
entities and individuals that object to coverage of some or all 
contraceptives based on sincerely held moral convictions but not 
religious beliefs, and these rules make those exempt entities eligible 
for accommodations concerning the same Mandate.

A. Discretion To Provide Exemptions Under Section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS 
Act and the Affordable Care Act

    The Departments have consistently interpreted HRSA's authority 
under section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act to allow for exemptions and 
accommodations to the contraceptive Mandate for certain objecting 
organizations. Section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act gives HRSA discretion 
to decide whether and in what circumstances it will support Guidelines 
providing for additional women's preventive services coverage. That 
authority includes HRSA's discretion to include contraceptive coverage 
in those Guidelines, but the Congress did not specify whether or to 
what extent HRSA should do so. Therefore, section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS 
Act allows HRSA to not apply the Guidelines to certain plans of 
entities or individuals with religious or moral objections to 
contraceptive coverage, and by not applying the Guidelines to them, to 
exempt those entities from the Mandate. These rules are a necessary and 
appropriate exercise of the authority of HHS, of which HRSA is a 
component, and of the authority delegated to the Departments 
collectively as administrators of the statutes. (26 U.S.C. 9833; 29 
U.S.C. 1191c; 42 U.S.C. 300gg-92).
    Our protection of conscience in these interim final rules is 
consistent with the structure and intent of the Affordable Care Act. 
The Affordable Care Act refrains from applying section 2713(a)(4) of 
the PHS Act to millions of women in grandfathered plans. In contrast, 
we anticipate that conscientious exemptions to the Mandate will impact 
a much smaller number of women. President Obama emphasized in signing 
the Affordable Care Act that ``longstanding Federal law to protect 
conscience''--laws with conscience protections encompassing moral (as 
well as religious) objections--specifically including (but not limited 
to) the Church Amendments (42 U.S.C. 300a-7), ``remain intact.'' 
Executive Order 13535. Nothing in the Affordable Care Act suggests 
Congress' intent to deviate from its long history, discussed below, of 
protecting moral convictions in particular health care contexts. The 
Departments' implementation of section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act with 
respect to contraceptive coverage is a context similar to those 
encompassed by many other health care conscience protections provided 
or supported by Congress. This Mandate concerns contraception and 
sterilization services, including items believed by some citizens to 
have an abortifacient effect--that is, to cause the destruction of a 
human life at an early stage of embryonic development. These are highly 
sensitive issues in the history of health care regulation and have long 
been shielded by conscience protections in the laws of the United 
States.

B. Congress' History of Providing Exemptions for Moral Convictions

    In deciding the most appropriate way to exercise our discretion in 
this context, the Departments draw on nearly 50 years of statutory law 
and Supreme Court precedent discussing the protection of moral 
convictions in certain circumstances--particularly in the context of 
health care and health insurance coverage. Congress very recently 
expressed its intent on the matter of Government-mandated contraceptive 
coverage when it declared, with respect to the possibility that the 
District of Columbia would require contraceptive coverage, that ``it is 
the intent of Congress that any legislation enacted on such issue 
should include a `conscience clause' which provides exceptions for 
religious beliefs and moral convictions.'' Consolidated Appropriations 
Act of 2017, Division C, Title VIII, Sec. 808, Public Law 115-31 (May 
5, 2017). In support of these interim final rules, we consider it 
significant that Congress' most recent statement on the prospect of 
Government mandated contraceptive coverage specifically intends that a 
conscience clause be included to protect moral convictions.
    The many statutes listed in Section I-Background under footnote 1, 
which show Congress' consistent protection of moral convictions 
alongside religious beliefs in the Federal regulation of health care, 
includes laws such as the 1973 Church Amendments, which we discuss at 
length below, all the way to the 2017 Consolidated Appropriations Act 
discussed above. Notably among those laws, the Congress has enacted 
protections for health plans or health care organizations in Medicaid 
or Medicare Advantage to object ``on moral or religious grounds'' to 
providing coverage of certain counseling or referral services. 42 
U.S.C. 1395w-

[[Page 47845]]

22(j)(3)(B) (protecting against forced counseling or referrals in 
Medicare Choice, now Medicare Advantage, managed care plans with 
respect to objections based on ``moral or religious grounds''); 42 
U.S.C. 1396u-2(b)(3) (protecting against forced counseling or referrals 
in Medicaid managed care plans with respect to objections based on 
``moral or religious grounds''). The Congress has also protected 
individuals who object to prescribing or providing contraceptives 
contrary to their ``religious beliefs or moral convictions.'' 
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2017, Division C, Title VII, Sec. 
726(c) (Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act), 
Public Law 115-31.

C. The Church Amendments' Protection of Moral Convictions

    One of the most important and well-established federal statutes 
respecting conscientious objections in specific health care contexts 
was enacted over the course of several years beginning in 1973, 
initially as a response to court decisions raising the prospect that 
entities or individuals might be required to facilitate abortions or 
sterilizations. These sections of the United States Code are known as 
the Church Amendments, named after their primary sponsor Senator Frank 
Church (D-Idaho). The Church Amendments specifically provide conscience 
protections based on sincerely held moral convictions. Among other 
things, the amendments protect the recipients of certain Federal health 
funds from being required to perform, assist, or make their facilities 
available for abortions or sterilizations if they object ``on the basis 
of religious beliefs or moral convictions,'' and they prohibit 
recipients of certain Federal health funds from discriminating against 
any personnel ``because he refused to perform or assist in the 
performance of such a procedure or abortion on the grounds that his 
performance or assistance in the performance of the procedure or 
abortion would be contrary to his religious beliefs or moral 
convictions'' (42 U.S.C. 300a-7(b), (c)(1)). Later additions to the 
Church Amendments protect other conscientious objections, including 
some objections on the basis of moral conviction to ``any lawful health 
service,'' or to ``any part of a health service program.'' (42 U.S.C. 
300a-7(c)(2), (d)). In contexts covered by those sections of the Church 
Amendments, the provision or coverage of certain contraceptives, 
depending on the circumstances, could constitute ``any lawful health 
service'' or a ``part of a health service program.'' As such, the 
protections provided by those provisions of the Church Amendments would 
encompass moral objections to contraceptive services or coverage.
    The Church Amendments were enacted in the wake of the Supreme 
Court's decision in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973). Even though the 
Court in Roe required abortion to be legal in certain circumstances, 
Roe did not include, within that right, the requirement that other 
citizens must facilitate its exercise. Thus, Roe favorably quoted the 
proceedings of the American Medical Association House of Delegates 220 
(June 1970), which declared ``Neither physician, hospital, nor hospital 
personnel shall be required to perform any act violative of personally-
held moral principles.'' 410 U.S. at 144 & n.38 (1973). Likewise in 
Roe's companion case, Doe v. Bolton, the Court observed that, under 
State law, ``a physician or any other employee has the right to 
refrain, for moral or religious reasons, from participating in the 
abortion procedure.'' 410 U.S. 179, 197-98 (1973). The Court said that 
these conscience provisions ``obviously . . . afford appropriate 
protection.'' Id. at 198. As an Arizona court later put it, ``a woman's 
right to an abortion or to contraception does not compel a private 
person or entity to facilitate either.'' Planned Parenthood Ariz., Inc. 
v. Am. Ass'n of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists, 257 P.3d 181, 
196 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2011).
    The Congressional Record contains relevant discussions that 
occurred when the protection for moral convictions was first proposed 
in the Church Amendments. When Senator Church introduced the first of 
those amendments in 1973, he cited not only Roe v. Wade but also an 
instance where a Federal court had ordered a Catholic hospital to 
perform sterilizations. 119 Congr. Rec. S5717-18 (Mar. 27, 1973). After 
his opening remarks, Senator Adlai Stevenson III (D-IL) rose to ask 
that the amendment be changed to specify that it also protects 
objections to abortion and sterilization based on moral convictions on 
the same terms as it protects objections based on religious beliefs. 
The following excerpt of the Congressional Record is particularly 
relevant to this discussion:

    Mr. STEVENSON. Mr. President, first of all I commend the Senator 
from Idaho for bringing this matter to the attention of the Senate. 
I ask the Senator a question.
    One need not be of the Catholic faith or any other religious 
faith to feel deeply about the worth of human life. The protections 
afforded by this amendment run only to those whose religious beliefs 
would be offended by the necessity of performing or participating in 
the performance of certain medical procedures; others, for moral 
reasons, not necessarily for any religious belief, can feel equally 
as strong about human life. They too can revere human life.
    As mortals, we cannot with confidence say, when life begins. But 
whether it is life, or the potentiality of life, our moral 
convictions as well as our religious beliefs, warrant protection 
from this intrusion by the Government. Would, therefore, the Senator 
include moral convictions?
    Would the Senator consider an amendment on page 2, line 18 which 
would add to religious beliefs, the words ``or moral''?
    Mr. CHURCH. I would suggest to the Senator that perhaps his 
objective could be more clearly stated if the words ``or moral 
conviction'' were added after ``religious belief.'' I think that the 
Supreme Court in considering the protection we give religious 
beliefs has given comparable treatment to deeply held moral 
convictions. I would not be averse to amending the language of the 
amendment in such a manner. It is consistent with the general 
purpose. I see no reason why a deeply held moral conviction ought 
not be given the same treatment as a religious belief.
    Mr. STEVENSON. The Senator's suggestion is well taken. I thank 
him.

119 Congr. Rec. S5717-18.
    As the debate proceeded, Senator Church went on to quote Doe v. 
Bolton's reliance on a Georgia statute that stated ``a physician or any 
other employee has the right to refrain, for moral or religious 
reasons, from participating in the abortion procedure.'' 119 Congr. 
Rec. at S5722 (quoting 410 U.S. at 197-98). Senator Church added, ``I 
see no reason why the amendment ought not also to cover doctors and 
nurses who have strong moral convictions against these particular 
operations.'' Id. Considering the scope of the protections, Senator 
Gaylord Nelson (D-WI) asked whether, ``if a hospital board, or whatever 
the ruling agency for the hospital was, a governing agency or 
otherwise, just capriciously--and not upon the religious or moral 
questions at all--simply said, `We are not going to bother with this 
kind of procedure in this hospital,' would the pending amendment permit 
that?'' 119 Congr. Rec. at S5723. Senator Church responded that the 
amendment would not encompass such an objection. Id.
    Senator James L. Buckley (C-NY), speaking in support of the 
amendment, added the following perspective:

    Mr. BUCKLEY. Mr. President, I compliment the Senator from Idaho 
for proposing this most important and timely amendment. It is timely 
in the first instance because the attempt has already been made to 
compel the performance of abortion and sterilization operations on 
the part of those who are fundamentally opposed to such procedures. 
And it is timely also because the

[[Page 47846]]

recent Supreme Court decisions will likely unleash a series of court 
actions across the United States to try to impose the personal 
preferences of the majority of the Supreme Court on the totality of 
the Nation.
    I believe it is ironic that we should have this debate at all. 
Who would have predicted a year or two ago that we would have to 
guard against even the possibility that someone might be free [sic] 
\20\ to participate in an abortion or sterilization against his 
will? Such an idea is repugnant to our political tradition. This is 
a Nation which has always been concerned with the right of 
conscience. It is the right of conscience which is protected in our 
draft laws. It is the right of conscience which the Supreme Court 
has quite properly expanded not only to embrace those young men who, 
because of the tenets of a particular faith, believe they cannot 
kill another man, but also those who because of their own deepest 
moral convictions are so persuaded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ The Senator might have meant ``[forced] . . . against his 
will.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    I am delighted that the Senator from Idaho has amended his 
language to include the words ``moral conviction,'' because, of 
course, we know that this is not a matter of concern to any one 
religious body to the exclusion of all others, or even to men who 
believe in a God to the exclusion of all others. It has been a 
traditional concept in our society from the earliest times that the 
right of conscience, like the paramount right to life from which it 
is derived, is sacred.
119 Congr. Rec. at S5723.
    In support of the same protections when they were debated in the 
U.S. House, Representative Margaret Heckler (R-MA) \21\ likewise 
observed that ``the right of conscience has long been recognized in the 
parallel situation in which the individual's right to conscientious 
objector status in our selective service system has been protected'' 
and ``expanded by the Supreme Court to include moral conviction as well 
as formal religious belief.'' 119 Congr. Rec. H4148-49 (May 31, 1973). 
Rep. Heckler added, ``We are concerned here only with the right of 
moral conscience, which has always been a part of our national 
tradition.'' Id. at 4149.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \21\ Rep. Heckler later served as the 15th Secretary of HHS, 
from March 1983 to December 1985.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These first of the Church Amendments, codified at 42 U.S.C. 300a-
7(b) and (c)(1), passed the House 372-1, and were approved by the 
Senate 94-0. 119 Congr. Rec. at H4149; 119 Congr. Rec. S10405 (June 5, 
1973). The subsequently adopted provisions that comprise the Church 
Amendments similarly extend protection to those organizations and 
individuals who object to the provision of certain services on the 
basis of their moral convictions. And, as noted above, subsequent 
statutes add protections for moral objections in many other situations. 
These include, for example:
     Protections for individuals and entities that object to 
abortion: See 42 U.S.C. 238n; 42 U.S.C. 18023; 42 U.S.C. 2996f(b); and 
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2017, Div. H, Title V, Sec. 507(d), 
Public Law 115-31;
     Protections for entities and individuals that object to 
providing or covering contraceptives: See id. at Div. C, Title VIII, 
Sec. 808; id. at Div. C, Title VII, Sec. 726(c) (Financial Services and 
General Government Appropriations Act); and id. at Div. I, Title III; 
and
     Protections for entities and individuals that object to 
performing, assisting, counseling, or referring as pertains to suicide, 
assisted suicide, or advance directives: See 42 U.S.C. 290bb-36; 42 
U.S.C. 14406; 42 U.S.C. 18113; and 42 U.S.C. 1396a(w)(3).
    The Departments believe that the intent behind Congress' protection 
of moral convictions in certain health care contexts, especially to 
protect entities and individuals from governmental coercion, supports 
our decision in these interim final rules to protect sincerely held 
moral convictions from governmental compulsion threatened by the 
contraceptive Mandate.

D. Court Precedents Relevant to These Expanded Exemptions

    The legislative history of the protection of moral convictions in 
the first Church Amendments shows that Members of Congress saw the 
protection as being consistent with Supreme Court decisions. Not only 
did Senator Church cite the abortion case Doe v. Bolton as a parallel 
instance of conscience protection, but he also spoke of the Supreme 
Court generally giving ``comparable treatment to deeply held moral 
convictions.'' Both Senator Buckley and Rep. Heckler specifically cited 
the Supreme Court's protection of moral convictions in laws governing 
military service. Those legislators appear to have been referencing 
cases such as Welsh v. United States, 398 U.S. 333 (1970), which the 
Supreme Court decided just 3 years earlier.
    Welsh involved what is perhaps the Government's paradigmatic 
compelling interest--the need to defend the nation by military force. 
The Court stated that, where the Government protects objections to 
military service based on ``religious training and belief,'' that 
protection would also extend to avowedly non-religious objections to 
war held with the same moral strength. Id. at 343. The Court declared, 
``[i]f an individual deeply and sincerely holds beliefs that are purely 
ethical or moral in source and content but that nevertheless impose 
upon him a duty of conscience to refrain from participating in any war 
at any time, those beliefs certainly occupy in the life of that 
individual `a place parallel to that filled by . . . God' in 
traditionally religious persons. Because his beliefs function as a 
religion in his life, such an individual is as much entitled to a 
`religious' conscientious objector exemption . . . as is someone who 
derives his conscientious opposition to war from traditional religious 
convictions.''
    The Departments look to the description of moral convictions in 
Welsh to help explain the scope of the protection provided in these 
interim final rules. Neither these interim final rules, nor the Church 
Amendments or other Federal health care conscience statutes, define 
``moral convictions'' (nor do they define ``religious beliefs''). But 
in issuing these interim final rules, we seek to use the same 
background understanding of that term that is reflected in the 
Congressional Record in 1973, in which legislators referenced cases 
such as Welsh to support the addition of language protecting moral 
convictions. In protecting moral convictions parallel to religious 
beliefs, Welsh describes moral convictions warranting such protection 
as ones: (1) That the ``individual deeply and sincerely holds''; (2) 
``that are purely ethical or moral in source and content; (3) ``but 
that nevertheless impose upon him a duty''; (4) and that ``certainly 
occupy in the life of that individual a place parallel to that filled 
by . . . God' in traditionally religious persons,'' such that one could 
say ``his beliefs function as a religion in his life.'' (398 U.S. at 
339-40). As recited above, Senators Church and Nelson agreed that 
protections for such moral convictions would not encompass an objection 
that an individual or entity raises ``capriciously.'' Instead, along 
with the requirement that protected moral convictions must be 
``sincerely held,'' this understanding cabins the protection of moral 
convictions in contexts where they occupy a place parallel to that 
filled by sincerely held religious beliefs in religious persons and 
organizations.
    In the context of this particular Mandate, it is also worth noting 
that, in Hobby Lobby, Justice Ginsburg (joined, in this part of the 
opinion, by Justices Breyer, Kagan, and Sotomayor), cited Justice 
Harlan's opinion in Welsh, 398 U.S. at 357-58, in support of her 
statement that ``[s]eparating moral convictions from religious beliefs 
would be of questionable legitimacy.'' 134 S. Ct. at 2789 n.6. In 
quoting this passage, the Departments do not mean to suggest that all 
laws protecting only religious

[[Page 47847]]

beliefs constitute an illegitimate ``separat[ion]'' of moral 
convictions, nor do we assert that moral convictions must always be 
protected alongside religious beliefs; we also do not agree with 
Justice Harlan that distinguishing between religious and moral 
objections would violate the Establishment Clause. Instead, the 
Departments believe that, in the specific health care context 
implicated here, providing respect for moral convictions parallel to 
the respect afforded to religious beliefs is appropriate, draws from 
long-standing Federal Government practice, and shares common ground 
with Congress' intent in the Church Amendments and in later Federal 
conscience statutes that provide protections for moral convictions 
alongside religious beliefs in other health care contexts.

E. Conscience Protections in Regulations and Among the States

    The tradition of protecting moral convictions in certain health 
contexts is not limited to Congress. Multiple federal regulations 
protect objections based on moral convictions in such contexts.\22\ 
Other federal regulations have also applied the principle of respecting 
moral convictions alongside religious beliefs when they have determined 
that it is appropriate to do so in particular circumstances. The Equal 
Employment Opportunity Commission has consistently protected ``moral or 
ethical beliefs as to what is right and wrong which are sincerely held 
with the strength of traditional religious views'' alongside religious 
views under the ``standard [] developed in United States v. Seeger, 380 
U.S. 163 (1965) and [Welsh].'' (29 CFR 1605.1). The Department of 
Justice has declared that, in cases of capital punishment, no officer 
or employee may be required to attend or participate if doing so ``is 
contrary to the moral or religious convictions of the officer or 
employee, or if the employee is a medical professional who considers 
such participation or attendance contrary to medical ethics.'' (28 CFR 
26.5).\23\
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    \22\ See, for example, 42 CFR 422.206 (declaring that the 
general Medicare Advantage rule ``does not require the MA plan to 
cover, furnish, or pay for a particular counseling or referral 
service if the MA organization that offers the plan--(1) Objects to 
the provision of that service on moral or religious grounds.''); 42 
CFR 438.102 (declaring that information requirements do not apply 
``if the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP objects to the service on moral or 
religious grounds''); 48 CFR 1609.7001 (``health plan sponsoring 
organizations are not required to discuss treatment options that 
they would not ordinarily discuss in their customary course of 
practice because such options are inconsistent with their 
professional judgment or ethical, moral or religious beliefs.''); 48 
CFR 352.270-9 (``Non-Discrimination for Conscience'' clause for 
organizations receiving HIV or Malaria relief funds).
    \23\ See also 18 CFR 214.11 (where a law enforcement agency 
(LEA) seeks assistance in the investigation or prosecution of 
trafficking of persons, the reasonableness of the LEA's request will 
depend in part on ``[c]ultural, religious, or moral objections to 
the request'').
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    Forty-five States have health care conscience protections covering 
objections to abortion, and several of those also cover sterilization 
or contraception.\24\ Most of those State laws protect objections based 
on ``moral,'' ``ethical,'' or ``conscientious'' grounds in addition to 
``religious'' grounds. Particularly in the case of abortion, some 
Federal and State conscience laws do not require any specified motive 
for the objection. (42 U.S.C. 238n). These various statutes and 
regulations reflect an important governmental interest in protecting 
moral convictions in appropriate health contexts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \24\ According to the Guttmacher Institute, 45 states have 
conscience statutes pertaining to abortion (43 of which cover 
institutions), 18 have conscience statutes pertaining to 
sterilization (16 of which cover institutions), and 12 have 
conscience statutes pertaining to contraception (8 of which cover 
institutions). ``Refusing to Provide Health Services'' (June 1, 
2017), available at https://www.guttmacher.org/state-policy/explore/refusing-provide-health-services.
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    The contraceptive Mandate implicates that governmental interest. 
Many persons and entities object to this Mandate in part because they 
consider some forms of FDA-approved contraceptives to be abortifacients 
and morally equivalent to abortion due to the possibility that some of 
the items may have the effect of preventing the implantation of a human 
embryo after fertilization. Based on our knowledge from the litigation, 
all of the current litigants asserting purely non-religious objections 
share this view, and most of the religious litigants do as well. The 
Supreme Court, in describing family business owners with religious 
objections, explained that ``[t]he owners of the businesses have 
religious objections to abortion, and according to their religious 
beliefs the four contraceptive methods at issue are abortifacients. If 
the owners comply with the HHS mandate, they believe they will be 
facilitating abortions.'' Hobby Lobby, 134 S. Ct. at 2751. Outside of 
the context of abortion, as cited above, Congress has also provided 
health care conscience protections pertaining to sterilization, 
contraception, and other health care services and practices.

F. Founding Principles

    The Departments also look to guidance from the broader history of 
respect for conscience in the laws and founding principles of the 
United States. Members of Congress specifically relied on the American 
tradition of respect for conscience when they decided to protect moral 
convictions in health care. As quoted above, in supporting protecting 
conscience based on non-religious moral convictions, Senator Buckley 
declared ``[i]t has been a traditional concept in our society from the 
earliest times that the right of conscience, like the paramount right 
to life from which it is derived, is sacred.'' Rep. Heckler similarly 
stated that ``the right of moral conscience . . . has always been a 
part of our national tradition.'' This tradition is reflected, for 
example, in a letter President George Washington wrote saying that 
``[t]he Citizens of the United States of America have a right to 
applaud themselves for having given to mankind examples of an enlarged 
and liberal policy: A policy worthy of imitation. All possess alike 
liberty of conscience and immunities of citizenship.'' \25\ Thomas 
Jefferson similarly declared that ``[n]o provision in our Constitution 
ought to be dearer to man than that which protects the rights of 
conscience against the enterprises of the civil authority.'' \26\ 
Although these statements by Presidents Washington and Jefferson were 
spoken to religious congregations, and although religious and moral 
conscience were tightly intertwined for the Founders, they both reflect 
a broad principle of respect for conscience against government 
coercion. James Madison likewise called conscience ``the most sacred of 
all property,'' and proposed that the Bill of Rights should guarantee, 
in addition to protecting religious belief and worship, that ``the full 
and equal rights of conscience [shall not] be in any manner, or on any 
pretext infringed.'' \27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \25\ From George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation in 
Newport, Rhode Island (Aug. 18, 1790), available at https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0135.
    \26\ Letter to the Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church at 
New London, Connecticut (February 4, 1809), available at https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/99-01-02-9714.
    \27\ James Madison, ``Essay on Property'' (March 29, 1792); 
First draft of the First Amendment, 1 Annals of Congress 434 (June 
8, 1789).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These Founding Era statements of general principle do not specify 
how they would be applied in a particular health care context. We do 
not suggest that the specific protections offered in this rule would 
also be required or necessarily appropriate in any other context that 
does not raise the specific concerns implicated by this Mandate. These 
interim final rules do not address in any way how the Government would 
balance its interests with respect to

[[Page 47848]]

other health services not encompassed by the contraceptive Mandate.\28\ 
Instead we highlight this tradition of respect for conscience from our 
Founding Era to provide background support for the Departments' 
decision to implement section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act, while 
protecting conscience in the exercise of moral convictions. We believe 
that these interim final rules are consistent both with the American 
tradition of respect for conscience and with Congress' history of 
providing conscience protections in the kinds of health care matters 
involved in this Mandate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ As the Supreme Court stated in Hobby Lobby, the Court's 
decision concerns only the contraceptive Mandate, and should not be 
understood to hold that all insurance-coverage mandates, for 
example, for vaccinations or blood transfusions, must necessarily 
fail if they conflict with an employer's religious beliefs. Nor does 
the Court's opinion provide a shield for employers who might cloak 
illegal discrimination as a religious (or moral) practice. 134 S. 
Ct. at 2783.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

G. Executive Orders Relevant to These Expanded Exemptions

    Protecting moral convictions, as set forth in the expanded 
exemptions and accommodations of these rules, is consistent with recent 
executive orders. President Trump's Executive Order concerning this 
Mandate directed the Departments to consider providing protections, not 
specifically for ``religious'' beliefs, but for ``conscience.'' We 
interpret that term to include moral convictions and not just religious 
beliefs. Likewise, President Trump's first Executive Order, EO 13765, 
declared that ``the Secretary of Health and Human Services (Secretary) 
and the heads of all other executive departments and agencies 
(agencies) with authorities and responsibilities under the [ACA] shall 
exercise all authority and discretion available to them to waive, 
defer, grant exemptions from, or delay the implementation of any 
provision or requirement of the Act that would impose a fiscal burden 
on any State or a cost, fee, tax, penalty, or regulatory burden on 
individuals, families, healthcare providers, health insurers, patients, 
recipients of healthcare services, purchasers of health insurance, or 
makers of medical devices, products, or medications.'' This Mandate 
imposes both a cost, fee, tax, or penalty, and a regulatory burden, on 
individuals and purchasers of health insurance that have moral 
convictions opposed to providing contraceptive coverage. These interim 
final rules exercise the Departments' discretion to grant exemptions 
from the Mandate to reduce and relieve regulatory burdens and promote 
freedom in the health care market.

H. Litigation Concerning the Mandate

    The sensitivity of certain health care matters makes it 
particularly important for the Government to tread carefully when 
engaging in regulation concerning those areas, and to respect 
individuals and organizations whose moral convictions are burdened by 
Government regulations. Providing conscience protections advances the 
Affordable Care Act's goal of expanding health coverage among entities 
and individuals that might otherwise be reluctant to participate in the 
market. For example, the Supreme Court in Hobby Lobby declared that, if 
HHS requires owners of businesses to cover procedures that the owners 
``could not in good conscience'' cover, such as abortion, ``HHS would 
effectively exclude these people from full participation in the 
economic life of the Nation.'' 134 S. Ct. at 2783. That would be a 
serious outcome. As demonstrated by litigation and public comments, 
various citizens sincerely hold moral convictions, which are not 
necessarily religious, against providing or participating in coverage 
of contraceptive items included in the Mandate, and some believe that 
some of those items may cause early abortions. The Departments wish to 
implement the contraceptive coverage Guidelines issued under section 
2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act in a way that respects the moral convictions 
of our citizens so that they are more free to engage in ``full 
participation in the economic life of the Nation.'' These expanded 
exemptions do so by removing an obstacle that might otherwise lead 
entities or individuals with moral objections to contraceptive coverage 
to choose not to sponsor or participate in health plans if they include 
such coverage.
    Among the lawsuits challenging the Mandate, two have been filed 
based in part on non-religious moral convictions. In one case, the 
Departments are subject to a permanent injunction requiring us to 
respect the non-religious moral objections of an employer. See March 
for Life v. Burwell, 128 F. Supp. 3d 116 (D.D.C. 2015). In the other 
case, an appeals court recently affirmed a district court ruling that 
allows the previous regulations to be imposed in a way that violates 
the moral convictions of a small nonprofit pro-life organization and 
its employees. See Real Alternatives, 2017 WL 3324690. Our litigation 
of these cases has led to inconsistent court rulings, consumed 
substantial governmental resources, and created uncertainty for 
objecting organizations, issuers, third party administrators, and 
employees and beneficiaries. The organizations that have sued seeking a 
moral exemption have all adopted moral tenets opposed to contraception 
and hire only employees who share this view. It is reasonable to 
conclude that employees of these organizations would therefore not 
benefit from the Mandate. As a result, subjecting this subset of 
organizations to the Mandate does not advance any governmental 
interest. The need to resolve this litigation and the potential 
concerns of similar entities, and our requirement to comply with 
permanent injunctive relief currently imposed in March for Life, 
provide substantial reasons for the Departments to protect moral 
convictions through these interim final rules. Even though, as 
discussed below, we assume the number of entities and individuals that 
may seek exemption from the Mandate on the basis of moral convictions, 
as these two sets of litigants did, will be small, we know from the 
litigation that it will not be zero. As a result, the Departments have 
taken these types of objections into consideration in reviewing our 
regulations. Having done so, we consider it appropriate to issue the 
protections set forth in these interim final rules. Just as Congress, 
in adopting the early provisions of the Church Amendments, viewed it as 
necessary and appropriate to protect those organizations and 
individuals with objections to certain health care services on the 
basis of moral convictions, so we, too, believe that ``our moral 
convictions as well as our religious beliefs, warrant protection from 
this intrusion by the Government'' in this situation.

I. The Departments' Rebalancing of Government Interests

    For additional discussion of the Government's balance of interests 
concerning religious beliefs issued contemporaneously with these 
interim final rules, see the related document published by the 
Department elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register. There, we 
acknowledge that the Departments have changed the policies and 
interpretations we previously adopted with respect to the Mandate and 
the governmental interests that underlying it, and we assert that we 
now believe the Government's legitimate interests in providing for 
contraceptive coverage do not require us to violate sincerely held 
religious beliefs while implementing the Guidelines. For parallel 
reasons, the Departments believe Congress did not set forth--and we do 
not possess--interests that require us to violate sincerely held moral 
convictions in the course of generally requiring contraceptive 
coverage. These changes in policy are

[[Page 47849]]

within the Departments' authority. As the Supreme Court has 
acknowledged, ``[a]gencies are free to change their existing policies 
as long as they provide a reasoned explanation for the change.'' Encino 
Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 136 S. Ct. 2117, 2125 (2016). This 
``reasoned analysis'' requirement does not demand that an agency 
``demonstrate to a court's satisfaction that the reasons for the new 
policy are better than the reasons for the old one; it suffices that 
the new policy is permissible under the statute, that there are good 
reasons for it, and that the agency believes it to be better, which the 
conscious change of course adequately indicates.'' United Student Aid 
Funds, Inc. v. King, 200 F. Supp. 3d 163, 169-70 (D.D.C. 2016) (citing 
FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 515 (2009)); see 
also New Edge Network, Inc. v. FCC, 461 F.3d 1105, 1112-13 (9th Cir. 
2006) (rejecting an argument that ``an agency changing its course by 
rescinding a rule is obligated to supply a reasoned analysis for the 
change beyond that which may be required when an agency does not act in 
the first instance'').\29\
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    \29\ See also Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense 
Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 863-64 (1984) (``The fact that the 
agency has adopted different definitions in different contexts adds 
force to the argument that the definition itself is flexible, 
particularly since Congress has never indicated any disapproval of a 
flexible reading of the statute.'')
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Departments note that the exemptions created here, like the 
exemptions created by the last Administration, do not burden third 
parties to a degree that counsels against providing the exemptions. In 
addition to the apparent fact that many entities with non-religious 
moral objections to the Mandate appear to only hire persons that share 
those objections, Congress did not create a right to receive 
contraceptive coverage, and Congress explicitly chose not to impose the 
section 2713 requirements on grandfathered plans benefitting millions 
of people. Individuals who are unable to obtain contraceptive coverage 
through their employer-sponsored health plans because of the exemptions 
created in these interim final rules, or because of other exemptions to 
the Mandate, have other avenues for obtaining contraception, including 
through various other mechanisms by which the Government advances 
contraceptive coverage, particularly for low-income women, and which 
these interim final rules leave unchanged.\30\ As the Government is 
under no constitutional obligation to fund contraception, cf. Harris v. 
McRae, 448 U.S. 297 (1980), even more so may the Government refrain 
from requiring private citizens to cover contraception for other 
citizens in violation of their moral convictions. Cf. Rust v. Sullivan, 
500 U.S. 173, 192-93 (1991) (``A refusal to fund protected activity, 
without more, cannot be equated with the imposition of a `penalty' on 
that activity.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ See, for example, Family Planning grants in 42 U.S.C. 300, 
et seq.; the Teenage Pregnancy Prevention Program, Public Law 112-74 
(125 Stat 786, 1080); the Healthy Start Program, 42 U.S.C. 254c-8; 
the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program, 42 
U.S.C. 711; Maternal and Child Health Block Grants, 42 U.S.C. 703; 
42 U.S.C. 247b-12; Title XIX of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 
1396, et seq.; the Indian Health Service, 25 U.S.C. 13, 42 U.S.C. 
2001(a), & 25 U.S.C. 1601, et seq.; Health center grants, 42 U.S.C. 
254b(e), (g), (h), & (i); the NIH Clinical Center, 42 U.S.C. 248; 
and the Personal Responsibility Education Program, 42 U.S.C. 713.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Departments acknowledge that coverage of contraception is an 
important and highly controversial issue, implicating many different 
views, as reflected for example in the public comments received on 
multiple rulemakings over the course of implementation of section 
2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act. Our expansion of conscience protections for 
moral convictions, similar to protections contained in numerous 
statutes governing health care regulation, is not taken lightly. 
However, after reconsidering the interests served by the Mandate in 
this particular context, the objections raised, and the relevant 
Federal law, the Departments have determined that expanding the 
exemptions to include protections for moral convictions is a more 
appropriate administrative response than continuing to refuse to extend 
the exemptions and accommodations to certain entities and individuals 
for whom the Mandate violates their sincerely held moral convictions. 
Although the number of organizations and individuals that may seek to 
take advantage of these exemptions and accommodations may be small, we 
believe that it is important formally to codify such protections for 
objections based on moral conviction, given the long-standing 
recognition of such protections in health care and health insurance 
context in law and regulation and the particularly sensitive nature of 
these issues in the health care context. These interim final rules 
leave unchanged HRSA's authority to decide whether to include 
contraceptives in the women's preventive services Guidelines for 
entities that are not exempted by law, regulation, or the Guidelines. 
These rules also do not change the many other mechanisms by which the 
Government advances contraceptive coverage, particularly for low-income 
women.

III. Provisions of the Interim Final Rules With Comment Period

    The Departments are issuing these interim final rules in light of 
the full history of relevant rulemaking (including 3 previous interim 
final rules), public comments, and the long-running litigation from 
non-religious moral objectors to the Mandate, as well as the 
information contained in the companion interim final rules issued 
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register. These interim final 
rules seek to resolve these matters by directing HRSA, to the extent it 
requires coverage for certain contraceptive services in its Guidelines, 
to afford an exemption to certain entities and individuals with 
sincerely held moral convictions by which they object to contraceptive 
or sterilization coverage, and by making the accommodation process 
available for certain organizations with such convictions.
    For all of the reasons discussed and referenced above, the 
Departments have determined that the Government's interest in applying 
contraceptive coverage requirements to the plans of certain entities 
and individuals does not outweigh the sincerely held moral objections 
of those entities and individuals. Thus, these interim final rules 
amend the regulations amended in both the Departments' July 2015 final 
regulations and in the companion interim final rules concerning 
religious beliefs issued contemporaneously with these interim final 
rules and published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register.
    These interim final rules expand those exemptions to include 
additional entities and persons that object based on sincerely held 
moral convictions. These rules leave in place HRSA's discretion to 
continue to require contraceptive and sterilization coverage where no 
objection specified in the regulations exists, and if section 2713 of 
the PHS Act otherwise applies. These interim final rules also maintain 
the existence of an accommodation process as a voluntary option for 
organizations with moral objections to contraceptive coverage, but 
consistent with our expansion of the exemption, we expand eligibility 
for the accommodation to include organizations with sincerely held 
moral convictions concerning contraceptive coverage. HRSA is 
simultaneously updating its Guidelines to reflect the requirements of 
these interim final rules.\31\
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    \31\ See https://www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines/ and https://www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines2016/index.html.

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[[Page 47850]]

1. Exemption for Objecting Entities Based on Moral Convictions
    In the new 45 CFR 147.133 as created by these interim final rules, 
we expand the exemption that was previously located in Sec.  
147.131(a), and that was expanded in Sec.  147.132 by the companion 
interim final rules concerning religious beliefs issued 
contemporaneously with these interim final rules and published 
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register.
    With respect to employers that sponsor group health plans, Sec.  
147.133(a)(1) and (a)(1)(i) provide exemptions for certain employers 
that object to coverage of all or a subset of contraceptives or 
sterilization and related patient education and counseling based on 
sincerely held moral convictions.
    For avoidance of doubt, the Departments wish to make clear that the 
expanded exemption in Sec.  147.133(a) applies to several distinct 
entities involved in the provision of coverage to the objecting 
employer's employees. This explanation is consistent with how prior 
rules have worked by means of similar language. Section 147.133(a)(1) 
and (a)(1)(i), by specifying that ``[a] group health plan and health 
insurance coverage provided in connection with a group health plan'' is 
exempt ``to the extent the plan sponsor objects as specified in 
paragraph (a)(2),'' exempt the group health plans the sponsors of which 
object, and exempt their health insurance issuers in providing the 
coverage in those plans (whether or not the issuers have their own 
objections). Consequently, with respect to Guidelines issued under 
Sec.  147.130(a)(1)(iv), or the parallel provisions in 26 CFR 54.9815-
2713T(a)(1)(iv) and 29 CFR 2590.715-2713(a)(1)(iv), the plan sponsor, 
issuer, and plan covered in the exemption of that paragraph would face 
no penalty as a result of omitting contraceptive coverage from the 
benefits of the plan participants and beneficiaries.
    Consistent with the restated exemption, exempt entities will not be 
required to comply with a self-certification process. Although exempt 
entities do not need to file notices or certifications of their 
exemption, and these interim final rules do not impose any new notice 
requirements on them, existing ERISA rules governing group health plans 
require that, with respect to plans subject to ERISA, a plan document 
must include a comprehensive summary of the benefits covered by the 
plan and a statement of the conditions for eligibility to receive 
benefits. Under ERISA, the plan document provides what benefits are 
provided to participants and beneficiaries under the plan and, 
therefore, if an objecting employer would like to exclude all or a 
subset of contraceptive services, it must ensure that the exclusion is 
clear in the plan document. Moreover, if there is a reduction in a 
covered service or benefit, the plan has to disclose that change to 
plan participants.\32\ Thus, where an exemption applies and all or a 
subset of contraceptive services are omitted from a plan's coverage, 
otherwise applicable ERISA disclosures should reflect the omission of 
coverage in ERISA plans. These existing disclosure requirements serve 
to help provide notice to participants and beneficiaries of what ERISA 
plans do and do not cover. The Departments invite public comment on 
whether exempt entities, or others, would find value either in being 
able to maintain or submit a specific form of certification to claim 
their exemption, or in otherwise receiving guidance on a way to 
document their exemption.
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    \32\ See, for example, 29 U.S.C. 1022, 1024(b), 29 CFR 2520.102-
2, 2520.102-3, & 2520.104b-3(d), and 29 CFR 2590.715-2715. See also 
45 CFR 147.200 (requiring disclosure of the ``exceptions, 
reductions, and limitations of the coverage,'' including group 
health plans and group & individual issuers).
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    The exemptions in Sec.  147.133(a) apply ``to the extent'' of the 
objecting entities' sincerely held moral convictions. Thus, entities 
that hold a requisite objection to covering some, but not all, 
contraceptive items would be exempt with respect to the items to which 
they object, but not with respect to the items to which they do not 
object. Likewise, the requisite objection of a plan sponsor or 
institution of higher education in Sec.  147.133(a)(1)(i) and (ii) 
exempts its group health plan, health insurance coverage offered by a 
health insurance issuer in connection with such plan, and its issuer in 
its offering of such coverage, but that exemption does not extend to 
coverage provided by that issuer to other group health plans where the 
plan sponsors have no qualifying objection. The objection of a health 
insurance issuer in Sec.  147.133(a)(1)(iii) similarly operates only to 
the extent of its objection, and as otherwise limited as described 
below.
2. Exemption of Certain Plan Sponsors
    The rules cover certain kinds of non-governmental employer plan 
sponsors with the requisite objections, and the rules specify which 
kinds of entities qualify for the exemption.
    Under these interim final rules, the Departments do not limit the 
exemption with reference to nonprofit status as previous rules have 
done. Many of the federal health care conscience statutes cited above 
offer protections for the moral convictions of entities without regard 
to whether they operate as nonprofits or for-profit entities. In 
addition, a significant majority of states either impose no 
contraceptive coverage requirement, or offer broader exemptions than 
the exemption contained in the July 2015 final regulations.\33\ States 
also generally protect moral convictions in health care conscience 
laws, and they often offer those protections whether or not an entity 
operates as a nonprofit.\34\ Although the practice of states is by no 
means a limit on the discretion delegated to HRSA by the Affordable 
Care Act, nor is it a statement about what the Federal Government may 
do consistent with other protections or limitations in federal law, 
such state practice can be informative as to the viability of offering 
protections for conscientious objections in particularly sensitive 
health care contexts. In this case, the existence of many instances 
where conscience protections are offered, or no underlying mandate of 
this kind exists that could violate moral convictions, supports the 
Departments' decision to expand the Federal exemption concerning this 
Mandate as set forth in these interim final rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \33\ See Guttmacher Institute, ``Insurance Coverage of 
Contraceptives'' (Aug. 1, 2017), available at https://www.guttmacher.org/state-policy/explore/insurance-coverage-contraceptives.
    \34\ See, for example, Guttmacher Institute, ``Refusing to 
Provide Health Services'' (Aug. 1, 2017), available at https://www.guttmacher.org/state-policy/explore/refusing-provide-health-services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Section 147.133(a)(1)(i)(A) of the rules specifies that the 
exemption includes the plans of a plan sponsor that is a nonprofit 
organization with sincerely held moral convictions.
    Section 147.133(a)(1)(i)(B) of the rules specifies that the 
exemption includes the plans of a plan sponsor that is a for-profit 
entity that has no publicly traded ownership interests (for this 
purpose, a publicly traded ownership interest is any class of common 
equity securities required to be registered under section 12 of the 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934).
    Extending the exemption to certain for-profit entities is 
consistent with the Supreme Court's ruling in Hobby Lobby, which 
declared that a corporate entity is capable of possessing and pursuing 
non-pecuniary goals (in Hobby Lobby, religion), regardless of whether 
the entity operates as a nonprofit organization, and rejecting the

[[Page 47851]]

Departments' argument to the contrary. 134 S. Ct. 2768-75. Some reports 
and industry experts have indicated that not many for-profit entities 
beyond those that had originally brought suit have sought relief from 
the Mandate after Hobby Lobby.\35\ The mechanisms for determining 
whether a company has adopted and holds certain principles or views, 
such as sincerely held moral convictions, is a matter of well-
established State law with respect to corporate decision-making,\36\ 
and the Departments expect that application of such laws would cabin 
the scope of this exemption.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \35\ See Jennifer Haberkorn, ``Two years later, few Hobby Lobby 
copycats emerge,'' Politico (Oct. 11, 2016), available at http://www.politico.com/story/2016/10/obamacare-birth-control-mandate-employers-229627.
    \36\ Although the Departments do not prescribe any form or 
notification, they would expect that such principles or views would 
have been adopted and documented in accordance with the laws of the 
jurisdiction under which they are incorporated or organized.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The July 2015 final regulations extended the accommodation to for-
profit entities only if they are closely held, by positively defining 
what constitutes a closely held entity. Any such positive definition 
runs up against the myriad state differences in defining such entities, 
and potentially intrudes into a traditional area of state regulation of 
business organizations. The Departments implicitly recognized the 
difficulty of defining closely held entities in the July 2015 final 
regulations when we adopted a definition that included entities that 
are merely ``substantially similar'' to certain specified parameters, 
and we allowed entities that were not sure if they met the definition 
to inquire with HHS; HHS was permitted to decline to answer the 
inquiry, at which time the entity would be deemed to qualify as an 
eligible organization. Instead of attempting to positively define 
closely held businesses for the purpose of this rule, the Departments 
consider it much more clear, effective, and preferable to define the 
category negatively by reference to one element of our previous 
definition, namely, that the entity has no publicly traded ownership 
interest (that is, any class of common equity securities required to be 
registered under section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934).
    In this way, these interim final rules differ from the exemption 
provided to plan sponsors with objections based on sincerely held 
religious beliefs set forth in Sec.  147.132(a)(1)--those extend to 
for-profit entities whether or not they are closely held or publicly 
traded. The Departments seek public comment on whether the exemption in 
Sec.  147.133(a)(1)(i) for plan sponsors with moral objections to the 
Mandate should be finalized to encompass all of the types of plan 
sponsors covered by Sec.  147.132(a)(1)(i), including publicly traded 
corporations with objections based on sincerely held moral convictions, 
and also non-federal governmental plan sponsors that may have 
objections based on sincerely held moral convictions.
    In the case of particularly sensitive health care matters, several 
significant federal health care conscience statutes protect entities' 
moral objections without precluding publicly traded and governmental 
entities from using those protections. For example, the first paragraph 
of the Church Amendments provides certain protections for entities that 
object based on moral convictions to making their facilities or 
personnel available to assist in the performance of abortions or 
sterilizations, and the statute does not limit those protections based 
on whether the entities are publicly traded or governmental. (42 U.S.C. 
300a-7(b)). Thus, under section 300a-7(b), a hospital in a publicly 
traded health system, or a local governmental hospital, could adopt 
sincerely held moral convictions by which it objects to providing 
facilities or personnel for abortions or sterilizations, and if the 
entity receives relevant funds from HHS specified by section 300a-7(b), 
the protections of that section would apply. The Coats-Snowe Amendment 
likewise provides certain protections for health care entities and 
postgraduate physician training programs that choose not to perform, 
refer for, or provide training for abortions, and the statute does not 
limit those protections based on whether the entities are publicly 
traded or governmental. (42 U.S.C. 238n).
    The Weldon Amendment \37\ provides certain protections for health 
care entities, hospitals, provider-sponsored organizations, health 
maintenance organizations, and health insurance plans that do not 
provide, pay for, provide coverage of, or refer for abortions, and the 
statute does not limit those protections based on whether the entity is 
publicly traded or governmental. The Affordable Care Act provides 
certain protections for any institutional health care entity, hospital, 
provider-sponsored organization, health maintenance organization, 
health insurance plan, or any other kind of health care facility, that 
does not provide any health care item or service furnished for the 
purpose of causing or assisting in causing assisted suicide, 
euthanasia, or mercy killing, and the statute similarly does not limit 
those protections based on whether the entity is publicly traded or 
governmental. (42 U.S.C. 18113).\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \37\ Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2017, Div. H, Title V, 
Sec. 507(d), Pub. L. 115-31.
    \38\ The lack of the limitation in this provision may be 
particularly relevant since it is contained in the same statute, the 
ACA, as the provision under which the Mandate--and these exemptions 
to the Mandate--are promulgated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Sections 1395w-22(j)(3)(B) and 1396u-2(b)(3) of 42 U.S.C. protect 
organizations that offer Medicaid and Medicare Advantage managed care 
plans from being required to provide, reimburse for, or provide 
coverage of a counseling or referral service if they object to doing so 
on moral grounds, and those paragraphs do not further specify that 
publicly traded entities do not qualify for the protections. Congress' 
most recent statement on Government requirements of contraceptive 
coverage specified that, if the District of Columbia requires ``the 
provision of contraceptive coverage by health insurance plans,'' ``it 
is the intent of Congress that any legislation enacted on such issue 
should include a `conscience clause' which provides exceptions for 
religious beliefs and moral convictions.'' Consolidated Appropriations 
Act of 2017, Division C, Title VIII, Sec. 808. Congress expressed no 
intent that such a conscience should be limited based on whether the 
entity is publicly traded.
    At the same time, the Departments lack significant information 
about the need to extend the expanded exemption further. We have been 
subjected to litigation by nonprofit entities expressing objections to 
the Mandate based on non-religious moral convictions, and we have been 
sued by closely held for-profit entities expressing religious 
objections. This combination of different types of plaintiffs leads us 
to believe that there may be a small number of closely held for-profit 
entities that would seek to use an exemption to the contraceptive 
Mandate based on moral convictions. The fact that many closely held 
for-profit entities brought challenges to the Mandate has led us to 
offer protections that would include publicly traded entities with 
religious objections to the Mandate if such entities exist. But the 
combined lack of any lawsuits challenging the Mandate by for-profit 
entities with non-religious moral convictions, and of any lawsuits by 
any kind of publicly traded entity, leads us to not extend the expanded 
exemption in these interim final rules to publicly traded entities, but 
rather to invite public comment on whether to do so in

[[Page 47852]]

a way parallel to the protections set forth in Sec.  147.132(a)(1)(i). 
We agree with the Supreme Court that it is improbable that many 
publicly traded companies with numerous ``unrelated shareholders--
including institutional investors with their own set of stakeholders--
would agree to run a corporation under the same religious beliefs'' (or 
moral convictions) and thereby qualify for the exemption. Hobby Lobby, 
134 S. Ct. at 2774. We are also not aware of other types of plan 
sponsors (such as non-Federal governmental entities) that might possess 
moral objections to compliance with the Mandate, including whether some 
might consider certain contraceptive methods as having a possible 
abortifacient effect. Nevertheless, we would welcome any comments on 
whether such corporations or other plan sponsors exist and would 
benefit from such an exemption.
    Despite our a lack of complete information, the Departments know 
that nonprofit entities have challenged the Mandate, and we assume that 
a closely held business might wish to assert non-religious moral 
convictions in objecting to the Mandate (although we anticipate very 
few if any will do so). Thus we have chosen in these interim final 
rules to include them in the expanded exemption and thereby remove an 
obstacle preventing such entities from claiming an exemption based on 
non-religious moral convictions. But we are less certain that we need 
to use these interim final rules to extend the expanded exemption for 
moral convictions to encompass other kinds of plan sponsors not 
included in the protections of these interim final rules. Therefore, 
with respect to plan sponsors not included in the expanded exemptions 
of Sec.  147.133(a)(1)(i), and non-federal governmental plan sponsors 
that might have moral objections to the Mandate, we invite public 
comment on whether to include such entities when we finalize these 
rules at a later date.
    The Departments further conclude that it would be inadequate to 
merely provide entities access to the accommodation process instead of 
to the exemption where those entities object to the Mandate based on 
sincerely held moral convictions. The Departments have stated in our 
regulations and court briefings that the existing accommodation with 
respect to self-insured plans requires contraceptive coverage as part 
of the same plan as the coverage provided by the employer, and operates 
in a way ``seamless'' to those plans. As a result, in significant 
respects, the accommodation process does not actually accommodate the 
objections of many entities. This has led many religious groups to 
challenge the accommodation in court, and we expect similar challenges 
would come from organizations objecting to the accommodation based on 
moral convictions if we offered them the accommodation but not an 
exemption. When we took that narrow approach with religious nonprofit 
entities it led to multiple cases in many courts that we needed to 
litigate to the Supreme Court various times. Although objections to the 
accommodation were not specifically litigated in the two cases brought 
by nonprofit non-religious organizations (because we have not even made 
them eligible for the accommodation), those organizations made it clear 
that they and their employees strongly oppose coverage of certain 
contraceptives in their plans and in connection with their plans.
3. Exemption for Institutions of Higher Education
    The plans of institutions of higher education that arrange student 
health insurance coverage will be treated similarly to the way that 
plans of employers are treated for the purposes of such plans being 
exempt or accommodated based on moral convictions. These interim final 
rules specify, in Sec.  147.133(a)(1)(ii), that the exemption is 
extended, in the case of institutions of higher education (as defined 
in 20 U.S.C. 1002), to their arrangement of student health insurance 
coverage, in a manner comparable to the applicability of the exemption 
for group health insurance coverage provided in connection with a group 
health plan established or maintained by a plan sponsor.
    The Departments are not aware of institutions of higher education 
that arrange student coverage and object to the Mandate based on non-
religious moral convictions. We have been sued by several institutions 
of higher education that arrange student coverage and object to the 
Mandate based on religious beliefs. We believe the existence of such 
entities with non-religious moral objections, or the possible formation 
of such entities in the future, is sufficiently possible so that we 
should provide protections for them in these interim final rules. But 
based on a lack of information about such entities, we assume that none 
will use the exemption concerning student coverage at this time.
4. Exemption for Issuers
    These interim final rules extend the exemption, in Sec.  
147.133(a)(1)(iii), to health insurance issuers offering group or 
individual health insurance coverage that sincerely hold their own 
moral convictions opposed to providing coverage for contraceptive 
services.
    As discussed above, where the exemption for plan sponsors or 
institutions of higher education applies, issuers are exempt under 
those sections with respect to providing coverage in those plans. The 
issuer exemption in Sec.  147.133(a)(1)(iii) adds to that protection, 
but the additional protection operates in a different way than the plan 
sponsor exemption operates. The only plan sponsors, or in the case of 
individual insurance coverage, individuals, who are eligible to 
purchase or enroll in health insurance coverage offered by an exempt 
issuer that does not cover some or all contraceptive services are plan 
sponsors or individuals who themselves object and are otherwise exempt 
based on their objection (whether the objection is based on moral 
convictions, as set forth in these rules, or on religious beliefs, as 
set forth in exemptions created by the companion interim final rules 
published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register). Thus, the 
issuer exemption specifies that where a health insurance issuer 
providing group health insurance coverage is exempt under paragraph 
(a)(1)(iii), the plan remains subject to any requirement to provide 
coverage for contraceptive services under Guidelines issued under Sec.  
147.130(a)(1)(iv) unless the plan is otherwise exempt from that 
requirement. Accordingly, the only plan sponsors, or in the case of 
individual insurance coverage, individuals, who are eligible to 
purchase or enroll in health insurance coverage offered by an issuer 
that is exempt under this paragraph (a)(1)(iii) that does not include 
some or all contraceptive services are plan sponsors or individuals who 
themselves object and are exempt.
    Under the rules as amended, issuers with objections based on 
sincerely held moral convictions could issue policies that omit 
contraception to plan sponsors or individuals that are otherwise exempt 
based on either their religious beliefs or their moral convictions, and 
issuers with sincerely held religious beliefs could likewise issue 
policies that omit contraception to plan sponsors or individuals that 
are otherwise exempt based on either their religious beliefs or their 
moral convictions.
    Issuers that hold moral objections should identify to plan sponsors 
the

[[Page 47853]]

lack of contraceptive coverage in any health insurance coverage being 
offered that is based on the issuer's exemption, and communicate the 
group health plan's independent obligation to provide contraceptive 
coverage, unless the group health plan itself is exempt under 
regulations governing the Mandate.
    In this way, the issuer exemption serves to protect objecting 
issuers both from being asked or required to issue policies that cover 
contraception in violation of the issuers' sincerely held moral 
convictions, and from being asked or required to issue policies that 
omit contraceptive coverage to non-exempt entities or individuals, thus 
subjecting the issuers to potential liability if those plans are not 
exempt from the Guidelines. At the same time, the issuer exemption will 
not serve to remove contraceptive coverage obligations from any plan or 
plan sponsor that is not also exempt, nor will it prevent other issuers 
from being required to provide contraceptive coverage in individual 
insurance coverage. Protecting issuers that object to offering 
contraceptive coverage based on sincerely held moral convictions will 
help preserve space in the health insurance market for certain issuers 
so that exempt plan sponsors and individuals will be able to obtain 
coverage.
    The Departments are not currently aware of health insurance issuers 
that possess their own religious or moral objections to offering 
contraceptive coverage. Nevertheless, many Federal health care 
conscience laws and regulations protect issuers or plans specifically. 
For example, as discussed above, 42 U.S.C. 1395w-22(j)(3)(B) and 1396u-
2(b)(3) protect plans or managed care organizations in Medicaid or 
Medicare Advantage. The Weldon Amendment protects HMOs, health 
insurance plans, and any other health care organizations from being 
required to provide coverage or pay for abortions. See, for example, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2017, Div. H, Title V, Sec. 507(d), 
Public Law 115-31. The most recently enacted Consolidated 
Appropriations Act declares that Congress supports a ``conscience 
clause'' to protect moral convictions concerning ``the provision of 
contraceptive coverage by health insurance plans.'' See id. at Div. C, 
Title VIII, Sec. 808.
    The issuer exemption does not specifically include third party 
administrators, for the reasons discussed in the companion interim 
final rules concerning religious beliefs issued contemporaneously with 
these interim final rules and published elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register. The Departments solicit public comment; however, on 
whether there are situations where there may be an additional need to 
provide distinct protections for third party administrators that may 
have moral convictions implicated by the Mandate.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ The exemption for issuers, as outlined here, does not make 
a distinction among issuers based on whether they are publicly 
traded, unlike the plan sponsor exemption for business entities. 
Because the issuer exemption operates more narrowly than the 
exemption for business plan sponsors operates, in the ways described 
here, and exists in part to help preserve market options for 
objecting plan sponsors, the Departments consider it appropriate to 
not draw such a distinction among issuers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. Scope of Objections Needed for the Objecting Entity Exemption
    Exemptions for objecting entities specify that they apply where the 
entities object as specified in Sec.  147.133(a)(2). That section 
specifies that exemptions for objecting entities will apply to the 
extent that an entity described in Sec.  147.133(a)(1) objects to its 
establishing, maintaining, providing, offering, or arranging (as 
applicable) for coverage, payments, or a plan that provides coverage or 
payments for some or all contraceptive services, based on its sincerely 
held moral convictions.
6. Individual Exemption
    These interim final rules include a special rule pertaining to 
individuals (referred to here as the ``individual exemption''). Section 
147.133(b) provides that nothing in Sec.  147.130(a)(1)(iv), 26 CFR 
54.9815-2713T(a)(1)(iv) and 29 CFR 2590.715-2713(a)(1)(iv), may be 
construed to prevent a willing plan sponsor of a group health plan and/
or a willing health insurance issuer offering group or individual 
health insurance coverage, from offering a separate benefit package 
option, or a separate policy, certificate, or contract of insurance, to 
any individual who objects to coverage or payments for some or all 
contraceptive services based on the individual's sincerely held moral 
convictions. The individual exemption extends to the coverage unit in 
which the plan participant, or subscriber in the individual market, is 
enrolled (for instance, to family coverage covering the participant and 
his or her beneficiaries enrolled under the plan), but does not relieve 
the plan's or issuer's obligation to comply with the Mandate with 
respect to the group health plan at large or, as applicable, to any 
other individual policies the issuer offers.
    This individual exemption allows plan sponsors and issuers that do 
not specifically object to contraceptive coverage to offer morally 
acceptable coverage to their participants or subscribers who do object, 
while offering coverage that includes contraception to participants or 
subscribers who do not object. This individual exemption can apply with 
respect to individuals in plans sponsored by private employers or 
governmental employers. For example, in one case brought against the 
Departments, the State of Missouri enacted a law under which the State 
is not permitted to discriminate against insurance issuers that offer 
health plans without coverage for contraception based on employees' 
moral convictions, or against the individual employees who accept such 
offers. See Wieland, 196 F. Supp. 3d at 1015-16 (quoting Mo. Rev. Stat. 
191.724). Under the individual exemption of these interim final rules, 
employers sponsoring governmental plans would be free to honor the 
sincerely held moral objections of individual employees by offering 
them plans that omit contraception, even if those governmental entities 
do not object to offering contraceptive coverage in general.
    This ``individual exemption'' cannot be used to force a plan (or 
its sponsor) or an issuer to provide coverage omitting contraception, 
or, with respect to health insurance coverage, to prevent the 
application of state law that requires coverage of such contraceptives 
or sterilization. Nor can the individual exemption be construed to 
require the guaranteed availability of coverage omitting contraception 
to a plan sponsor or individual who does not have a sincerely held 
moral objection. This individual exemption is limited to the 
requirement to provide contraceptive coverage under section 2713(a)(4) 
of the PHS Act, and does not affect any other federal or state law 
governing the plan or coverage. Thus, if there are other applicable 
laws or plan terms governing the benefits, these interim final rules do 
not affect such other laws or terms.
    The Departments believe the individual exemption will help to meet 
the Affordable Care Act's goal of increasing health coverage because it 
will reduce the incidence of certain individuals choosing to forego 
health coverage because the only coverage available would violate their 
sincerely held moral convictions.\40\ At the same

[[Page 47854]]

time, this individual exemption ``does not undermine the governmental 
interests furthered by the contraceptive coverage requirement,'' \41\ 
because, when the exemption is applicable, the individual does not want 
the coverage, and therefore would not use the objectionable items even 
if they were covered. In addition, because the individual exemption 
only operates when the employer and/or issuer, as applicable, are 
willing, the exemption will not undermine any governmental interest in 
the workability of the insurance market, because we expect that any 
workability concerns will be taken into account in the decision of 
whether to be willing to offer the individual morally acceptable 
coverage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ This prospect has been raised in cases of religious 
individuals--see, for example, Wieland, 196 F. Supp. 3d at 1017, and 
March for Life, 128 F. Supp. 3d at 130--where the courts noted that 
the individual employee plaintiffs indicated that they viewed the 
Mandate as pressuring them to ``forgo health insurance altogether.''
    \41\ 78 FR 39874.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For similar reasons, we have changed our position and now believe 
the individual exemption will not undermine any Government interest in 
uniformity in the health insurance market. At the level of plan 
offerings, the extent to which plans cover contraception under the 
prior rules is already far from uniform. The Congress did not require 
compliance with section 2713 of the PHS Act by all entities--in 
particular by grandfathered plans. The Departments' previous exemption 
for houses of worship and integrated auxiliaries, and our accommodation 
of self-insured church plans, show that the importance of a uniform 
health insurance system is not significantly harmed by allowing plans 
to omit contraception in many contexts.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ See also Real Alternatives, 2017 WL 3324690 at *36 (3d Cir. 
Aug. 4, 2017) (Jordan, J., concurring in part and dissenting in 
part) (``Because insurance companies would offer such plans as a 
result of market forces, doing so would not undermine the 
government's interest in a sustainable and functioning market. . . . 
Because the government has failed to demonstrate why allowing such a 
system (not unlike the one that allowed wider choice before the ACA) 
would be unworkable, it has not satisfied strict scrutiny.'' 
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With respect to operationalizing this provision of these rules, as 
well as the similar provision protecting individuals with religious 
objections to purchasing insurance that covers some or all 
contraceptives, in the interim final rules published elsewhere in this 
issue of the Federal Register, the Departments note that a plan sponsor 
or health insurance issuer is not required to offer separate and 
different benefit package options, or separate and different forms of 
policy, certificate, or contract of insurance with respect to those 
individuals who object on moral bases from those who object on 
religious bases. That is, a willing employer or issuer may offer the 
same benefit package option or policy, certificate, or contract of 
insurance--which excludes the same scope of some or all contraceptive 
coverage--to individuals who are exempt from the Mandate because of 
their moral convictions (under these rules) or their religious beliefs 
(under the regulations as amended by the interim final rules pertaining 
to religious beliefs).
7. Optional Accommodation
    In addition to expanding the exemption to those with sincerely held 
moral convictions, these rules also expand eligibility for the optional 
accommodation process to include employers with objections based on 
sincerely held moral convictions. This is accomplished by inserting 
references to the newly added exemption for moral convictions, 45 CFR 
147.133, into the regulatory sections where the accommodation process 
is codified, 45 CFR 147.131, 26 CFR 54.9815-2713AT, and 29 CFR 
2590.715-2713A. In all other respects the accommodation process works 
the same as it does for entities with objections based on sincerely 
held religious beliefs, as described in the companion interim final 
rules concerning religious beliefs issued contemporaneously with these 
interim final rules and published elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register.
    The Departments are not aware of entities with objections to the 
Mandate based on sincerely held moral convictions that wish to make use 
of the optional accommodation, and our present assumption is that no 
such entities will seek to use the accommodation rather than the 
exemption. But if such entities do wish to use the accommodation, 
making it available to them will both provide contraceptive coverage to 
their plan participants and respect those entities' objections. Because 
entities with objections to the Mandate based on sincerely held non-
religious moral convictions have not previously had access to the 
accommodation, they would not be in a position to revoke their use of 
the accommodation at the time these interim final rules are issued, but 
could do so in the future under the same parameters set forth in the 
accommodation regulations.
8. Regulatory Restatements of Section 2713(a) and (a)(4) of the PHS Act
    These interim final rules insert references to 45 CFR 147.133 into 
the restatements of the requirements of section 2713(a) and (a)(4) of 
the PHS Act, contained in 26 CFR 54.9815-2713T(a)(1) introductory text 
and (a)(1)(iv), 29 CFR 2590.715-2713(a)(1) introductory text and 
(a)(1)(iv), and 45 CFR 147.130(a)(1) and (a)(1)(iv).
9. Conclusion
    The Departments believe that the Guidelines, and the expanded 
exemptions and accommodations set forth in these interim final rules, 
will advance the legitimate but limited purposes for which Congress 
imposed section 2713 of the PHS Act, while acting consistently with 
Congress' well-established record of allowing for moral exemptions with 
respect to various health care matters. These interim final rules 
maintain HRSA's discretion to decide whether to continue to require 
contraceptive coverage under the Guidelines if no regulatorily 
recognized exemption exists (and in plans where Congress applied 
section 2713 of the PHS Act). As cited above, these interim final rules 
also leave fully in place over a dozen Federal programs that provide, 
or subsidize, contraceptives for women, including for low income women 
based on financial need. The Departments believe this array of programs 
and requirements better serves the interests of providing contraceptive 
coverage while protecting the moral convictions of entities and 
individuals concerning coverage of some or all contraceptive or 
sterilization services.
    The Departments request and encourage public comments on all 
matters addressed in these interim final rules.

IV. Interim Final Rules, Request for Comments and Waiver of Delay of 
Effective Date

    Section 9833 of the Code, section 734 of ERISA, and section 2792 of 
the PHS Act authorize the Secretaries of the Treasury, Labor, and HHS 
(collectively, the Secretaries) to promulgate any interim final rules 
that they determine are appropriate to carry out the provisions of 
chapter 100 of the Code, part 7 of subtitle B of title I of ERISA, and 
part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act, which include sections 2701 
through 2728 of the PHS Act and the incorporation of those sections 
into section 715 of ERISA and section 9815 of the Code. These interim 
final rules fall under those statutory authorized justifications, as 
did previous rules on this matter (75 FR 41726; 76 FR 46621; and 79 FR 
51092).
    Section 553(b) of the APA requires notice and comment rulemaking, 
involving a notice of proposed rulemaking and a comment period prior

[[Page 47855]]

to finalization of regulatory requirements--except when an agency, for 
good cause, finds that notice and public comment thereon are 
impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest. These 
provisions of the APA do not apply here because of the specific 
authority granted to the Secretaries by section 9833 of the Code, 
section 734 of ERISA, and section 2792 of the PHS Act.
    Even if these provisions of the APA applied, they would be 
satisfied: The Departments have determined that it would be 
impracticable and contrary to the public interest to delay putting 
these provisions in place until a full public notice-and-comment 
process is completed. As discussed earlier, the Departments have issued 
three interim final rules implementing this section of the PHS Act 
because of the immediate needs of covered entities and the weighty 
matters implicated by the HRSA Guidelines. As recently as December 20, 
2016, HRSA updated those Guidelines without engaging in the regulatory 
process (because doing so is not a legal requirement), and announced 
that it plans to so continue to update the Guidelines.
    Two lawsuits have been pending for several years by entities 
raising non-religious moral objections to the Mandate.\43\ In one of 
those cases, the Departments are subject to a permanent injunction and 
the appeal of that case has been stayed since February 2016. In the 
other case, Federal district and appeals courts ruled in favor of the 
Departments, denying injunctive relief to the plaintiffs, and that case 
is also still pending. Based on the public comments the Departments 
have received, we have reason to believe that some similar nonprofit 
entities might exist, even if it is likely a small number.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \43\ March for Life, 128 F. Supp. 3d 116; Real Alternatives, 867 
F.3d 338.
    \44\ See, for example, Americans United for Life (``AUL'') 
Comment on CMA-9992-IFC2 at 10 (Nov. 1, 2011), available at http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=HHS-OS-2011-0023-59496, and 
AUL Comment on CMS-9968-P at 5 (Apr. 8, 2013), available at http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=CMS-2012-0031-79115.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For entities and individuals facing a burden on their sincerely 
held moral convictions, providing them relief from Government 
regulations that impose such a burden is an important and urgent 
matter, and delay in doing so injures those entities in ways that 
cannot be repaired retroactively. The burdens of the existing rules 
undermine these entities' and individuals' participation in the health 
care market because they provide them with a serious disincentive--
indeed a crisis of conscience--between participating in or providing 
quality and affordable health insurance coverage and being forced to 
violate their sincerely held moral convictions. The existence of 
inconsistent court rulings in multiple proceedings has also caused 
confusion and uncertainty that has extended for several years, with 
different federal courts taking different positions on whether entities 
with moral objections are entitled to relief from the Mandate. Delaying 
the availability of the expanded exemption would require entities to 
bear these burdens for many more months. Continuing to apply the 
Mandate's regulatory burden on individuals and organizations with moral 
convictions objecting to compliance with the Mandate also serves as a 
deterrent for citizens who might consider forming new entities 
consistent with their moral convictions and offering health insurance 
through those entities.
    Moreover, we separately expanded exemptions to protect religious 
beliefs in the companion interim final rules issued contemporaneously 
with these interim final rules and published elsewhere in this issue of 
the Federal Register. Because Congress has provided many statutes that 
protect religious beliefs and moral convictions similarly in certain 
health care contexts, it is important not to delay the expansion of 
exemptions for moral convictions set forth in these rules, since the 
companion rules provide protections for religious beliefs on an interim 
final basis. Otherwise, our regulations would simultaneously provide 
and deny relief to entities and individuals that are, in the 
Departments' view, similarly deserving of exemptions and accommodations 
consistent, with similar protections in other federal laws. This could 
cause similarly situated entities and individuals to be burdened 
unequally.
    In response to several of the previous rules on this issue--
including three issued as interim final rules under the statutory 
authority cited above--the Departments received more than 100,000 
public comments on multiple occasions. Those comments included 
extensive discussion about whether and to what extent to expand the 
exemption. Most recently, on July 26, 2016, the Departments issued a 
request for information (81 FR 47741) and received over 54,000 public 
comments about different possible ways to resolve these issues. As 
noted above, the public comments in response to both the RFI and 
various prior rulemaking proceedings included specific requests that 
the exemptions be expanded to include those who oppose the Mandate for 
either religious or ``moral'' reasons.\45\ In connection with past 
regulations, the Departments have offered or expanded a temporary safe 
harbor allowing organizations that were not exempt from the HRSA 
Guidelines to operate out of compliance with the Guidelines. The 
Departments will fully consider comments submitted in response to these 
interim final rules, but believe that good cause exists to issue the 
rules on an interim final basis before the comments are submitted and 
reviewed. Issuing interim final rules with a comment period provides 
the public with an opportunity to comment on whether these regulations 
expanding the exemption should be made permanent or subject to 
modification without delaying the effective date of the regulations.
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    \45\ See, for example, http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=HHS-OS-2011-0023-59496, http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=CMS-2012-0031-79115, https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0123-54142, https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0123-54218, and https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0123-46220.
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    As the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit stated with 
respect to an earlier IFR promulgated with respect to this issue in 
Priests for Life v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 772 
F.3d 229, 276 (D.C. Cir. 2014), vacated on other grounds, Zubik v. 
Burwell, 136 S. Ct. 1557 (2016), ``[S]everal reasons support HHS's 
decision not to engage in notice and comment here.'' Among other 
things, the Court noted that ``the agency made a good cause finding in 
the rule it issued''; that ``the regulations the interim final rule 
modifies were recently enacted pursuant to notice and comment 
rulemaking, and presented virtually identical issues''; that ``HHS will 
expose its interim rule to notice and comment before its permanent 
implementation''; and that not proceeding under interim final rules 
would ``delay the implementation of the alternative opt-out for 
religious objectors.'' Id. at 277. Similarly, not proceeding with 
exemptions and accommodations for moral objectors here would delay the 
implementation of those alternative opt-outs for moral objectors.
    Delaying the availability of the expanded exemption could also 
increase the costs of health insurance for some entities. As reflected 
in litigation pertaining to the Mandate, some entities are in 
grandfathered health plans that do not cover

[[Page 47856]]

contraception. As such, they may wish to make changes to their health 
plans that will reduce the costs of insurance coverage for their 
beneficiaries or policyholders, but which would cause the plans to lose 
grandfathered status. To the extent that entities with objections to 
the Mandate based on moral convictions but not religious beliefs fall 
into this category, they may be refraining from making those changes--
and therefore may be continuing to incur and pass on higher insurance 
costs--to prevent the Mandate from applying to their plans in violation 
of their consciences. We are not aware of the extent to which such 
entities exist, but 17 percent of all covered workers are in 
grandfathered health plans, encompassing tens of millions of 
people.\46\ Issuing these rules on an interim final basis reduces the 
costs of health insurance and regulatory burdens for such entities and 
their plan participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ Kaiser Family Foundation & Health Research & Educational 
Trust, ``Employer Health Benefits, 2017 Annual Survey,'' available 
at http://files.kff.org/attachment/Report-Employer-Health-Benefits-Annual-Survey-2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These interim final rules also expand access to the optional 
accommodation process for certain entities with objections to the 
Mandate based on moral convictions. If entities exist that wish to use 
that process, the Departments believe they should be able to do so 
without the delay that would be involved by not offering them the 
optional accommodation process by use of interim final rules. 
Proceeding otherwise could delay the provision of contraceptive 
coverage to those entities' employees.
    For the foregoing reasons, the Departments have determined that it 
would be impracticable and contrary to the public interest to engage in 
full notice and comment rulemaking before putting these interim final 
rules into effect, and that it is in the public interest to promulgate 
interim final rules. For the same reasons, the Departments have 
determined, consistent with section 553(d) of the APA (5 U.S.C. 
553(d)), that there is good cause to make these interim final rules 
effective immediately upon filing for public inspection at the Office 
of the Federal Register.

V. Economic Impact and Paperwork Burden

    We have examined the impacts of the interim final rules as required 
by Executive Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 
30, 1993), Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory 
Review (January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) 
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96-354, section 1102(b) of the Social 
Security Act, section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 
(March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4), Executive Order 13132 on Federalism 
(August 4, 1999), the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2) and 
Executive Order 13771 on Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory 
Costs (January 30, 2017).

A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563--Department of HHS and Department 
of Labor

    Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all 
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if 
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize 
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, and public 
health and safety effects; distributive impacts; and equity). Executive 
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and 
benefits, reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and promoting flexibility.
    Section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 defines a ``significant 
regulatory action'' as an action that is likely to result in a 
regulation: (1) Having an annual effect on the economy of $100 million 
or more in any 1 year, or adversely and materially affecting a sector 
of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, 
public health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or 
communities (also referred to as ``economically significant''); (2) 
creating a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an 
action taken or planned by another agency; (3) materially altering the 
budgetary impacts of entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs or 
the rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raising novel 
legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's 
priorities, or the principles set forth in the Executive Order.
    A regulatory impact analysis must be prepared for major rules with 
economically significant effects ($100 million or more in any one 
year), and an ``economically significant'' regulatory action is subject 
to review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). As discussed 
below regarding anticipated effects of these rules and the Paperwork 
Reduction Act, these interim final rules are not likely to have 
economic impacts of $100 million or more in any one year, and therefore 
do not meet the definition of ``economically significant'' under 
Executive Order 12866. However, OMB has determined that the actions are 
significant within the meaning of section 3(f)(4) of the Executive 
Order. Therefore, OMB has reviewed these final regulations and the 
Departments have provided the following assessment of their impact.
1. Need for Regulatory Action
    These interim final rules amend the Departments' July 2015 final 
regulations and do so in conjunction with the amendments made in the 
companion interim final rules concerning religious beliefs issued 
contemporaneously with these interim final rules and published 
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register. These interim final 
rules expand the exemption from the requirement to provide coverage for 
contraceptives and sterilization, established under the HRSA 
Guidelines, promulgated under section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act, 
section 715(a)(1) of the ERISA, and section 9815(a)(1) of the Code, to 
include certain entities and individuals with objections to compliance 
with the Mandate based on sincerely held moral convictions, and they 
revise the accommodation process to make entities with such convictions 
eligible to use it. The expanded exemption would apply to certain 
individuals, nonprofit entities, institutions of higher education, 
issuers, and for-profit entities that do not have publicly traded 
ownership interests, that have a moral objection to providing coverage 
for some (or all) of the contraceptive and/or sterilization services 
covered by the Guidelines. Such action is taken, among other reasons, 
to provide for conscientious participation in the health insurance 
market free from penalties for violating sincerely held moral 
convictions opposed to providing or receiving coverage of contraceptive 
services, to resolve lawsuits that have been filed against the 
Departments by some such entities, and to avoid similar legal 
challenges.
2. Anticipated Effects
    The Departments acknowledge that expanding the exemption to include 
objections based on moral convictions might result in less insurance 
coverage of contraception for some women who may want the coverage. 
Although the Departments do not know the exact scope of that effect 
attributable to the moral exemption in these interim final rules, they 
believe it to be small.
    With respect to the expanded exemption for nonprofit organizations, 
as noted above the Departments are aware of two small nonprofit

[[Page 47857]]

organizations that have filed lawsuits raising non-religious moral 
objections to coverage of some contraceptives. Both of those entities 
have fewer than five employees enrolled in health coverage, and both 
require all of their employees to agree with their opposition to the 
coverage.\47\ Based on comments submitted in response to prior 
rulemakings on this subject, we believe that at least one other similar 
entity exists. However, we do not know how many similar entities exist. 
Lacking other information we assume that the number is small. Without 
data to estimate the number of such entities, we believe it to be less 
than 10, and assume the exemption will be used by nine nonprofit 
entities.
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    \47\ Non-religious nonprofit organizations that engage in 
expressive activity generally have a First Amendment right to hire 
only people who share their moral convictions or will be respectful 
of them--including their convictions on whether the organization or 
others provide health coverage of contraception, or of certain items 
they view as being abortifacient.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We also assume that those nine entities will operate in a fashion 
similar to the two similar entities of which we are aware, so that 
their employees will likely share their views against coverage of 
certain contraceptives. This is consistent with our conclusion in 
previous rules that no significant burden or costs would result from 
exempting houses of worship and integrated auxiliaries. (See 76 FR 
46625 and 78 FR 39889). We reached that conclusion without ultimately 
requiring that houses of worship and integrated auxiliaries only hire 
persons who agree with their views against contraception, and without 
even requiring that such entities actually oppose contraception in 
order to be exempt (in contrast, the expanded exemption here requires 
the exempt entity to actually possess sincerely held moral convictions 
objecting to the coverage). In concluding that the exemption for houses 
of worship and integrated auxiliaries would result in no significant 
burden or costs, we relied on our assumption that the employees of 
exempt houses of worship and integrated auxiliaries likely share their 
employers' opposition to contraceptive coverage.
    A similar assumption is supported with respect to the expanded 
exemption for nonprofit organizations. To our knowledge, the vast 
majority of organizations objecting to the Mandate assert religious 
beliefs. The only nonprofit organizations of which we are aware that 
possess non-religious moral convictions against some or all 
contraceptive methods only hire persons who share their convictions. It 
is possible that the exemption for nonprofit organizations with moral 
convictions in these interim final rules could be used by a nonprofit 
organization that employs persons who do not share the organization's 
views on contraception, but it was also possible under our previous 
rules that a house of worship or integrated auxiliary could employ 
persons who do not share their views on contraception.\48\ Although we 
are unable to find sufficient data on this issue, we believe that there 
are far fewer non-religious moral nonprofit organizations opposed to 
contraceptive coverage than there are churches with religious 
objections to such coverage. Based on our limited data, we believe the 
most likely effect of the expanded exemption for nonprofit entities is 
that it will be used by entities similar to the two entities that have 
sought an exemption through litigation, and whose employees also oppose 
the coverage. Therefore, we expect that the expanded exemption for 
nonprofit entities will have no effect of reducing contraceptive 
coverage to employees who want that coverage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ Cf., for example, Gallup, ``Americans, Including Catholics, 
Say Birth Control Is Morally OK,'' (May 22, 2012) (``Eighty-two 
percent of U.S. Catholics say birth control is morally 
acceptable''), available at http://www.gallup.com/poll/154799/americans-including-catholics-say-birth-control-morally.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These interim final rules expand the exemption to include 
institutions of higher education that arrange student coverage and have 
non-religious moral objections to the Mandate, and they make exempt 
entities with moral objections eligible to use the accommodation. The 
Departments are not aware of either kind of entity. We believe the 
number of entities that object to the Mandate based on non-religious 
moral convictions is already very small. The only entities of which we 
are aware that have raised such objections are not institutions of 
higher education, and appear to hold objections that we assume would 
likely lead them to reject the accommodation process. Therefore, for 
the purposes of estimating the anticipated effect of these interim 
final rules on contraceptive coverage of women who wish to receive such 
coverage, we assume that--at this time--no entities with non-religious 
moral objections to the Mandate will be institutions of higher 
education that arrange student coverage, and no entities with non-
religious moral objections will opt into the accommodation. We wish to 
make the expanded exemption and accommodation available to such 
entities in case they do exist or might come into existence, based on 
similar reasons to those given above for why the exemptions and 
accommodations are extended to other entities. We invite public comment 
on whether and how many such entities will make use of these interim 
final rules.
    The expanded exemption for issuers will not result in a distinct 
effect on contraceptive coverage for women who wish to receive it 
because that exemption only applies in cases where plan sponsors or 
individuals are also otherwise exempt, and the effect of those 
exemptions is discussed elsewhere herein. The expanded exemption for 
individuals that oppose contraceptive coverage based on sincerely held 
moral convictions will provide coverage that omits contraception for 
individuals that object to contraceptive coverage.
    The expanded moral exemption would also cover for-profit entities 
that do not have publicly traded ownership interests, and that have 
non-religious moral objections to the Mandate. The Departments are not 
aware of any for-profit entities that possess non-religious moral 
objections to the Mandate. However, scores of for-profit entities have 
filed suit challenging the Mandate. Among the over 200 entities that 
brought legal challenges, only two entities (less than 1 percent) 
raised non-religious moral objections--both were nonprofit. Among the 
general public polls vary about religious beliefs, but one prominent 
poll shows that 89 percent of Americans say they believe in God.\49\ 
Among non-religious persons, only a very small percentage appears to 
hold moral objections to contraception. A recent study found that only 
2 percent of religiously unaffiliated persons believed using 
contraceptives is morally wrong.\50\ Combined, this suggests that 0.2 
percent of Americans at most \51\ might believe contraceptives are 
morally wrong based on moral convictions but not religious beliefs. We 
have no information about how many of those persons run closely held 
businesses, offer employer sponsored health insurance, and would make 
use of the expanded exemption for moral

[[Page 47858]]

convictions set forth in these interim final rules. Given the large 
number of closely held entities that challenged the Mandate based on 
religious objections, we assume that some similar for-profit entities 
with non-religious moral objections exist. But we expect that it will 
be a comparatively small number of entities, since among the nonprofit 
litigants, only two were non-religious. Without data available to 
estimate the actual number of entities that will make use of the 
expanded exemption for for-profit entities that do not have publicly 
traded ownership interests and that have objections to the Mandate 
based on sincerely held moral convictions, we expect that fewer than 10 
entities, if any, will do so--we assume nine for-profit entities will 
use the exemption in these interim final rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \49\ Gallup, ``Most Americans Still Believe in God'' (June 14-
23, 2016), available at http://www.gallup.com/poll/193271/americans-believe-god.aspx.
    \50\ Pew Research Center, ``Where the Public Stands on Religious 
Liberty vs. Nondiscrimination'' at page 26 (Sept. 28, 2016), 
available at http://assets.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/11/2016/09/Religious-Liberty-full-for-web.pdf.
    \51\ The study defined religiously ``unaffiliated'' as agnostic, 
atheist or ``nothing in particular'' (id. at 8), as distinct from 
several versions of Protestants, or Catholics. ``Nothing in 
particular'' might have included some theists.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The expanded exemption encompassing certain for-profit entities 
could result in the removal of contraceptive coverage from women who do 
not share their employers' views. The Departments used data from the 
Current Population Survey (CPS) and the Medical Expenditure Panel 
Survey-Insurance Component (MEPS-IC) to obtain an estimate of the 
number of policyholders that will be covered by the plans of the nine 
for-profit entities we assume may make use of these expanded 
exemptions.\52\ The average number of policyholders (9) in plans with 
under 100 employees was obtained. It is not known what size the for-
profit employers will be that might claim this exemption, but as 
discussed above these interim final rules do not include publicly 
traded companies (and we invite public comments on whether to do so in 
the final rules), and both of the two nonprofit entities that 
challenged the Mandate included fewer than five policyholders in each 
entity. Therefore we assume the for-profit entities that may claim this 
expanded exemption will have fewer than 100 employees and an average of 
9 policyholders. For nine entities, the total number of policyholders 
would be 81. DOL estimates that for each policyholder, there is 
approximately one dependent.\53\ This amounts to 162 covered persons. 
Census data indicate that women of childbearing age--that is, women 
aged 15-44--comprise 20.2 percent of the general population.\54\ This 
amounts to approximately 33 women of childbearing age for this group of 
individuals covered by group plans sponsored by for-profit moral 
objectors. Approximately 44.3 percent of women currently use 
contraceptives covered by the Guidelines.\55\ Thus we estimate that 15 
women may incur contraceptive costs due to for-profit entities using 
the expanded exemption provided in these interim final rules.\56\ In 
the companion interim final rules concerning religious beliefs issued 
contemporaneously with these interim final rules and published 
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, we estimate that the 
average cost of contraception per year per woman of childbearing age 
that use contraception covered by the Guidelines, within health plans 
that cover contraception, is $584. Consequently, we estimate that the 
anticipated effects attributable to the cost of contraception from for-
profit entities using the expanded exemption in these interim final 
rules is approximately $8,760.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ ``Health Insurance Coverage Bulletin'' Table 4, page 21. 
Using March 2015 Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the 
Current Population Survey. https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/researchers/data/health-and-welfare/health-insurance-coverage-bulletin-2015.pdfEstimates of the number of ERISA Plans based on 
2015 Medical Expenditure Survey--Insurance
    \53\ ``Health Insurance Coverage Bulletin'' Table 4, page 21. 
Using March 2015 Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the 
Current Population Survey. https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/researchers/data/health-and-welfare/health-insurance-coverage-bulletin-2015.pdf.
    \54\ U.S. Census Bureau, ``Age and Sex Composition: 2010'' (May 
2011), available at https://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-03.pdf. The Guidelines' requirement of contraceptive 
coverage only applies ``for all women with reproductive capacity.'' 
https://www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines/; see also 80 FR 40318. In 
addition, studies commonly consider the 15-44 age range to assess 
contraceptive use by women of childbearing age. See, Guttmacher 
Institute, ``Contraceptive Use in the United States'' (Sept. 2016), 
available at https://www.guttmacher.org/fact-sheet/contraceptive-use-united-states.
    \55\ See https://www.guttmacher.org/fact-sheet/contraceptive-use-united-states.
    \56\ We note that many non-religious for-profit entities which 
sued the Departments challenging the Mandate, including some of the 
largest employers, only objected to coverage of 4 of the 18 types of 
contraceptives required to be covered by the Mandate--namely, those 
contraceptives which they viewed as abortifacients, and akin to 
abortion --and they were willing to provide coverage for other types 
of contraception. It is reasonable to assume that this would also be 
the case with respect to some for-profits that object to the Mandate 
on the basis of sincerely held moral convictions. Accordingly, it is 
possible that even fewer women beneficiaries under such plans would 
bear out-of-pocket expenses in order to obtain contraceptives, and 
that those who might do so would bear lower costs due to many 
contraceptive items being covered.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Departments estimate that these interim final rules will not 
result in any additional burden or costs on issuers or third party 
administrators. As discussed above, we assume that no entities with 
non-religious moral convictions will use the accommodation, although we 
wish to make it available in case an entity voluntarily opts into it in 
order to allow contraceptive coverage to be provided to its plan 
participants and beneficiaries. Finally, because the accommodation 
process was not previously available to entities that possess non-
religious moral objections to the Mandate, we do not anticipate that 
these interim final rules will result in any burden from such entities 
revoking their accommodated status.
    The Departments believe the foregoing analysis represents a 
reasonable estimate of the likely impact under the rules expanded 
exemptions. The Departments acknowledge uncertainty in the estimate and 
therefore conducted a second analysis using an alternative framework, 
which is set forth in the companion interim final rule concerning 
religious beliefs issued contemporaneously with this interim final rule 
and published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register. Under 
either estimate, this interim final rule is not economically 
significant.
    We reiterate the rareness of instances in which we are aware that 
employers assert non-religious objections to contraceptive coverage 
based on sincerely held moral convictions, as discussed above, and also 
that in the few instances where such an objection has been raised, 
employees of such employers also opposed contraception.
    We request comment on all aspects of the preceding regulatory 
impact analysis.

B. Special Analyses--Department of the Treasury

    For purposes of the Department of the Treasury, certain Internal 
Revenue Service (IRS) regulations, including this one, are exempt from 
the requirements in Executive Order 12866, as supplemented by Executive 
Order 13563. The Departments estimate that the likely effect of these 
interim final rules will be that entities will use the exemption and 
not the accommodation. Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not 
required.

C. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes 
certain requirements with respect to Federal rules that are subject to 
the notice and comment requirements of section 553(b) of the APA (5 
U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and that are likely to have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities. Under Section 553(b) 
of the APA, a general notice of proposed rulemaking is not required 
when an agency, for good cause, finds that notice and public comment 
thereon are impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public

[[Page 47859]]

interest. The interim final rules are exempt from the APA, both because 
the PHS Act, ERISA, and the Code contain specific provisions under 
which the Secretaries may adopt regulations by interim final rule and 
because the Departments have made a good cause finding that a general 
notice of proposed rulemaking is not necessary earlier in this 
preamble. Therefore, the RFA does not apply and the Departments are not 
required to either certify that the regulations or this amendment would 
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities or conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis.
    Nevertheless, the Departments carefully considered the likely 
impact of the rule on small entities in connection with their 
assessment under Executive Order 12866. The Departments do not expect 
that these interim final rules will have a significant economic effect 
on a substantial number of small entities, because they will not result 
in any additional costs to affected entities. Instead, by exempting 
from the Mandate small businesses and nonprofit organizations with 
moral objections to some or all contraceptives and/or sterilization, 
the Departments have reduced regulatory burden on small entities. 
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, these regulations have been 
submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business 
Administration for comment on their impact on small business.

D. Paperwork Reduction Act--Department of Health and Human Services

    Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (the PRA), federal 
agencies are required to publish notice in the Federal Register 
concerning each proposed collection of information. Interested persons 
are invited to send comments regarding our burden estimates or any 
other aspect of this collection of information, including any of the 
following subjects: (1) The necessity and utility of the proposed 
information collection for the proper performance of the agency's 
functions; (2) the accuracy of the estimated burden; (3) ways to 
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be 
collected; and (4) the use of automated collection techniques or other 
forms of information technology to minimize the information collection 
burden.
    We estimate that these interim final rules will not result in 
additional burdens not accounted for as set forth in the companion 
interim final rules concerning religious beliefs issued 
contemporaneously with these interim final rules and published 
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register. As discussed there, 
regulations covering the accommodation include provisions regarding 
self-certification or notices to HHS from eligible organizations (Sec.  
147.131(c)(3)), notice of availability of separate payments for 
contraceptive services (Sec.  147.131(f)), and notice of revocation of 
accommodation (Sec.  147.131(c)(4)). The burdens related to those ICRs 
are currently approved under OMB Control Numbers 0938-1248 and 0938-
1292. These interim final rules amend the accommodation regulations to 
make entities with moral objections to the Mandate eligible to use the 
same accommodation processes. The Departments will update the forms and 
model notices regarding these processes to reflect that entities with 
sincerely held moral convictions are eligible organizations.
    As discussed above, however, we assume that no entities with non-
religious moral objections to the Mandate will use the accommodation, 
and we know that no such entities were eligible for it until now, so 
that they do not possess accommodated status to revoke. Therefore we 
believe that the burden for these ICRs is accounted for in the 
collection approved under OMB Control Numbers 0938-1248 and 0938-1292, 
as described in the interim final rules concerning religious beliefs 
issued contemporaneously with these interim final rules.
    We are soliciting comments on all of the possible information 
collection requirements contained in these interim final rules, 
including those discussed in the companion interim final rules 
concerning religious beliefs issued contemporaneously with these 
interim final rules and published elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register, for which these interim final rules provide 
eligibility to entities with objections based on moral convictions. In 
addition, we are also soliciting comments on all of the related 
information collection requirements currently approved under 0938-1292 
and 0938-1248.
    To obtain copies of a supporting statement and any related forms 
for the proposed collection(s) summarized in this notice, you may make 
your request using one of following:
    1. Access CMS' Web site address at https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Legislation/PaperworkReductionActof1995/PRA-Listing.html.
    2. Email your request, including your address, phone number, OMB 
number, and CMS document identifier, to [email protected].
    3. Call the Reports Clearance Office at (410) 786-1326.
    If you comment on these information collections, that is, 
reporting, recordkeeping or third-party disclosure requirements, please 
submit your comments electronically as specified in the ADDRESSES 
section of these interim final rules with comment period.

E. Paperwork Reduction Act--Department of Labor

    Under the Paperwork Reduction Act, an agency may not conduct or 
sponsor, and an individual is not required to respond to, a collection 
of information unless it displays a valid OMB control number. In 
accordance with the requirements of the PRA, the ICR for the EBSA Form 
700 and alternative notice have previously been approved by OMB under 
control numbers 1210-0150 and 1210-0152. A copy of the ICR may be 
obtained by contacting the PRA addressee shown below or at http://www.RegInfo.gov. PRA ADDRESSEE: G. Christopher Cosby, Office of Policy 
and Research, U.S. Department of Labor, Employee Benefits Security 
Administration, 200 Constitution Avenue NW., Room N-5718, Washington, 
DC 20210. Telephone: 202-693-8410; Fax: 202-219-4745. These are not 
toll-free numbers.
    Consistent with the analysis in the HHS PRA section above, although 
these interim final rules make entities with certain moral convictions 
eligible for the accommodation, we assume that no entities will use it 
rather than the exemption, and such entities were not previously 
eligible for the accommodation so as to revoke it. Therefore we believe 
these interim final rules do not involve additional burden not 
accounted for under OMB control number 1210-0150.
    Regarding the ICRs discussed in the companion interim final rules 
concerning religious beliefs issued contemporaneously with these 
interim final rules and published elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register, the forms for which would be used if any entities 
with moral objections used the accommodation process in the future, DOL 
submitted those ICRs in order to obtain OMB approval under the PRA for 
the regulatory revision. The request was made under emergency clearance 
procedures specified in regulations at 5 CFR 1320.13. OMB approved the 
ICRs under the emergency clearance process. In an effort to consolidate 
the number of information collection requests, DOL indicated it will 
combine the ICR related to the OMB control number 1210-0152 with the 
ICR related to the OMB control number 1210-0150. Once

[[Page 47860]]

the ICR is approved, DOL indicated it will discontinue 1210-0152. OMB 
approved the ICR under control number 1210-0150 through [DATE]. A copy 
of the information collection request may be obtained free of charge on 
the RegInfo.gov Web site at http://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAViewICR?ref_nbr=201705-1210-001. This approval allows respondents 
temporarily to utilize the additional flexibility these interim final 
regulations provide, while DOL seeks public comment on the collection 
methods--including their utility and burden. Contemporaneously with the 
publication of these interim final rules, DOL will publish a notice in 
the Federal Register informing the public of its intention to extend 
the OMB approval.

F. Regulatory Reform Executive Orders 13765, 13771 and 13777

    Executive Order 13765 (January 20, 2017) directs that, ``[t]o the 
maximum extent permitted by law, the Secretary of Health and Human 
Services (Secretary) and the heads of all other executive departments 
and agencies (agencies) with authorities and responsibilities under the 
Act shall exercise all authority and discretion available to them to 
waive, defer, grant exemptions from, or delay the implementation of any 
provision or requirement of the Act that would impose a fiscal burden 
on any State or a cost, fee, tax, penalty, or regulatory burden on 
individuals, families, healthcare providers, health insurers, patients, 
recipients of healthcare services, purchasers of health insurance, or 
makers of medical devices, products, or medications.'' In addition, 
agencies are directed to ``take all actions consistent with law to 
minimize the unwarranted economic and regulatory burdens of the 
[Affordable Care Act], and prepare to afford the States more 
flexibility and control to create a more free and open healthcare 
market.'' These interim final rules exercise the discretion provided to 
the Departments under the Affordable Care Act and other laws to grant 
exemptions and thereby minimize regulatory burdens of the Affordable 
Care Act on the affected entities and recipients of health care 
services.
    Consistent with Executive Order 13771 (82 FR 9339, February 3, 
2017), we have estimated the costs and cost savings attributable to 
this interim final rule. As discussed in more detail in the preceding 
analysis, this interim final rule lessens incremental reporting 
costs.\57\ Therefore, this interim final rule is considered an EO 13771 
deregulatory action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ Other noteworthy potential impacts encompass potential 
changes in medical expenditures, including potential decreased 
expenditures on contraceptive devices and drugs and potential 
increased expenditures on pregnancy-related medical services. OMB's 
guidance on E.O. 13771 implementation (https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2017/04/05/memorandum-implementing-executive-order-13771-titled-reducing-regulation) states that impacts should be 
categorized as consistently as possible within Departments. The Food 
and Drug Administration, within HHS, and the Occupational Safety and 
Health Administration (OSHA) and Mine Safety and Health 
Administration (MSHA), within DOL, regularly estimate medical 
expenditure impacts in the analyses that accompany their 
regulations, with the results being categorized as benefits 
(positive benefits if expenditures are reduced, negative benefits if 
expenditures are raised). Following the FDA, OSHA and MSHA 
accounting convention leads to this interim final rule's medical 
expenditure impacts being categorized as (positive or negative) 
benefits, rather than as costs, thus placing them outside of 
consideration for E.O. 13771 designation purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (section 202(a) of Pub. L. 
104-4), requires the Departments to prepare a written statement, which 
includes an assessment of anticipated costs and benefits, before 
issuing ``any rule that includes any Federal mandate that may result in 
the expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in the 
aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100,000,000 or more (adjusted 
annually for inflation) in any one year.'' The current threshold after 
adjustment for inflation is $148 million, using the most current (2016) 
Implicit Price Deflator for the Gross Domestic Product. For purposes of 
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, these interim final rules do not 
include any Federal mandate that may result in expenditures by State, 
local, or tribal governments, nor do they include any Federal mandates 
that may impose an annual burden of $100 million, adjusted for 
inflation, or more on the private sector.

H. Federalism

    Executive Order 13132 outlines fundamental principles of 
federalism, and requires the adherence to specific criteria by Federal 
agencies in the process of their formulation and implementation of 
policies that have ``substantial direct effects'' on States, the 
relationship between the Federal Government and States, or the 
distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of 
Government. Federal agencies promulgating regulations that have these 
federalism implications must consult with state and local officials, 
and describe the extent of their consultation and the nature of the 
concerns of state and local officials in the preamble to the 
regulation.
    These interim final rules do not have any Federalism implications, 
since they only provide exemptions from the contraceptive and 
sterilization coverage requirement in HRSA Guidelines supplied under 
section 2713 of the PHS Act.

VI. Statutory Authority

    The Department of the Treasury temporary regulations are adopted 
pursuant to the authority contained in sections 7805 and 9833 of the 
Code.
    The Department of Labor regulations are adopted pursuant to the 
authority contained in 29 U.S.C. 1002(16), 1027, 1059, 1135, 1161-1168, 
1169, 1181-1183, 1181 note, 1185, 1185a, 1185b, 1185d, 1191, 1191a, 
1191b, and 1191c; sec. 101(g), Public Law 104-191, 110 Stat. 1936; sec. 
401(b), Public Law 105-200, 112 Stat. 645 (42 U.S.C. 651 note); sec. 
512(d), Public Law 110-343, 122 Stat. 3881; sec. 1001, 1201, and 
1562(e), Public Law 111-148, 124 Stat. 119, as amended by Public Law 
111-152, 124 Stat. 1029; Secretary of Labor's Order 1-2011, 77 FR 1088 
(Jan. 9, 2012).
    The Department of Health and Human Services regulations are adopted 
pursuant to the authority contained in sections 2701 through 2763, 
2791, and 2792 of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg-63, 300gg-
91, and 300gg-92), as amended; and Title I of the Affordable Care Act, 
sections 1301-1304, 1311-1312, 1321-1322, 1324, 1334, 1342-1343, 1401-
1402, and 1412, Pub. L. 111-148, 124 Stat. 119 (42 U.S.C. 18021-18024, 
18031-18032, 18041-18042, 18044, 18054, 18061, 18063, 18071, 18082, 26 
U.S.C. 36B, and 31 U.S.C. 9701).

List of Subjects

26 CFR Part 54

    Excise taxes, Health care, Health insurance, Pensions, Reporting 
and recordkeeping requirements.

29 CFR Part 2590

    Continuation coverage, Disclosure, Employee benefit plans, Group 
health plans, Health care, Health insurance, Medical child support, 
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

45 CFR Part 147

    Health care, Health insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping

[[Page 47861]]

requirements, State regulation of health insurance.

Kirsten B. Wielobob,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
    Approved: October 2, 2017.
David J. Kautter,
Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy.

    Signed this 4th day of October, 2017.
Timothy D. Hauser,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program Operations, Employee Benefits 
Security Administration, Department of Labor.

    Dated: October 4, 2017.
Seema Verma,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

    Approved: October 4, 2017.
Donald Wright,
Acting Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Internal Revenue Service

    For the reasons set forth in this preamble, 26 CFR part 54 is 
amended as follows:

PART 54--PENSION EXCISE TAXES

0
1. The authority citation for part 54 continues to read, in part, as 
follows:

    Authority:  26 U.S.C. 7805. * * *


Sec.  54.9815-2713T  [Amended]

0
2. Section 54.9815-2713T, as added elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register, is amended in paragraph (a)(1)(iv) by removing the 
reference ``147.131 and 147.132'' and adding in its place the reference 
``147.131, 147.132, and 147.133''.


Sec.  54.9815-2713AT   [Amended]

0
3. Section 54.9815-2713AT, as added elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register], is amended--
0
a. In paragraph (a)(1) by removing ``or (ii)'' and adding in its place 
``or (ii), or 45 CFR 147.133(a)(1)(i) or (ii)'';
0
b. In paragraph (a)(2) by removing the reference ``147.132(a)'' and 
adding in its place the reference ``147.132(a) or 147.133(a)'';
0
c. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii) introductory text by removing the reference 
``147.132'' and adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 
147.133'';
0
d. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(B) by removing the reference ``147.132'' and 
adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 147.133'';
0
e. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii) introductory text by removing the reference 
``147.132'' and adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 
147.133'';
0
f. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) by removing the reference ``147.132'' and 
adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 147.133''; and
0
g. In paragraph (c)(2) introductory text by removing the reference 
``147.132'' and adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 
147.133''.

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Employee Benefits Security Administration

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of Labor 
amends 29 CFR part 2590 as follows:

PART 2590--RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR GROUP HEALTH PLANS

0
3. The authority citation for part 2590 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  29 U.S.C. 1027, 1059, 1135, 1161-1168, 1169, 1181-
1183, 1181 note, 1185, 1185a, 1185b, 1191, 1191a, 1191b, and 1191c; 
sec. 101(g), Pub. L. 104-191, 110 Stat. 1936; sec. 401(b), Pub. L. 
105-200, 112 Stat. 645 (42 U.S.C. 651 note); sec. 512(d), Pub. L. 
110-343, 122 Stat. 3881; sec. 1001, 1201, and 1562(e), Pub. L. 111-
148, 124 Stat. 119, as amended by Pub. L. 111-152, 124 Stat. 1029; 
Division M, Pub. L. 113-235, 128 Stat. 2130; Secretary of Labor's 
Order 1-2011, 77 FR 1088 (Jan. 9, 2012).


Sec.  2590.715-2713   [Amended]

0
4. Section 2590.715-2713, as amended elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register], is further amended in paragraph (a)(1)(iv) by 
removing the reference ``147.131 and 147.132'' and adding in its place 
the reference ``147.131, 147.132, and 147.133''.


Sec.  2590.715-2713A  [Amended]

0
5. Section 2590.715-2713A, as revised elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register], is further amended--
0
a. In paragraph (a)(1) by removing ``(ii)'' and adding in its place 
``(ii), or 45 CFR 147.133(a)(1)(i) or (ii)'';
0
b. In paragraph (a)(2) by removing the reference ``147.132(a)'' and 
adding in its place the reference ``147.132(a) or 147.133(a)'';
0
c. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii) introductory text by removing the reference 
``147.132'' and adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 
147.133'';
0
d. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(B) by removing the reference ``147.132'' and 
adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 147.133'';
0
e. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii) introductory text by removing the reference 
``147.132'' and adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 
147.133'';
0
f. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) by removing the reference ``147.132'' and 
adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 147.133''; and
0
g. In paragraph (c)(2) introductory text by removing the reference 
``147.132'' and adding in its place the reference ``147.132 or 
147.133''.

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of Health 
and Human Services amends 45 CFR part 147 as follows:

PART 147--HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE GROUP AND 
INDIVIDUAL HEALTH INSURANCE MARKETS

0
6. The authority citation for part 147 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  Secs 2701 through 2763, 2791, and 2792 of the Public 
Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg-63, 300gg-91, and 
300gg-92), as amended.


Sec.  147.130  [Amended]

0
7. Section 147.130, as amended elsewhere in this issue of the Federal 
Register, is further amended in paragraphs (a)(1) introductory text and 
(a)(1)(iv) by removing the reference ``Sec. Sec.  147.131 and 147.132'' 
and adding in its place the reference ``Sec. Sec.  147.131, 147.132, 
and 147.133''.


Sec.  147.131   [Amended]

0
8. Section 147.131, as revised elsewhere in this issue of the Federal 
Register, is further amended--
0
a. In paragraph (c)(1) by removing the reference ``(ii)'' and adding in 
its place the reference ``(ii), or 45 CFR 147.133(a)(1)(i) or (ii)''.
0
b. In paragraph (c)(2) by removing the reference ``Sec.  147.132(a)'' 
and adding in its place the reference ``Sec.  147.132(a) or 147.133''; 
and
0
c. In paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) introductory text, (d)(1)(ii)(B) and (d)(2) 
by removing the reference ``Sec.  147.132'' and to adding in its place 
the reference ``Sec.  147.132 or 147.133''.

0
9. Add Sec.  147.133 to read as follows:


Sec.  147.133   Moral exemptions in connection with coverage of certain 
preventive health services.

    (a) Objecting entities. (1) Guidelines issued under Sec.  
147.130(a)(1)(iv) by the Health Resources and Services Administration 
must not provide for or support the requirement of coverage or payments 
for contraceptive services with respect to a group health plan 
established or maintained by an objecting organization, or health 
insurance coverage offered or arranged by an objecting organization, 
and thus

[[Page 47862]]

the Health Resources and Service Administration will exempt from any 
guidelines' requirements that relate to the provision of contraceptive 
services:
    (i) A group health plan and health insurance coverage provided in 
connection with a group health plan to the extent one of the following 
non-governmental plan sponsors object as specified in paragraph (a)(2) 
of this section:
    (A) A nonprofit organization; or
    (B) A for-profit entity that has no publicly traded ownership 
interests (for this purpose, a publicly traded ownership interest is 
any class of common equity securities required to be registered under 
section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934);
    (ii) An institution of higher education as defined in 20 U.S.C. 
1002 in its arrangement of student health insurance coverage, to the 
extent that institution objects as specified in paragraph (a)(2) of 
this section. In the case of student health insurance coverage, this 
section is applicable in a manner comparable to its applicability to 
group health insurance coverage provided in connection with a group 
health plan established or maintained by a plan sponsor that is an 
employer, and references to ``plan participants and beneficiaries'' 
will be interpreted as references to student enrollees and their 
covered dependents; and
    (iii) A health insurance issuer offering group or individual 
insurance coverage to the extent the issuer objects as specified in 
paragraph (a)(2) of this section. Where a health insurance issuer 
providing group health insurance coverage is exempt under paragraph 
(a)(1)(iii) of this section, the group health plan established or 
maintained by the plan sponsor with which the health insurance issuer 
contracts remains subject to any requirement to provide coverage for 
contraceptive services under Guidelines issued under Sec.  
147.130(a)(1)(iv) unless it is also exempt from that requirement.
    (2) The exemption of this paragraph (a) will apply to the extent 
that an entity described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section objects to 
its establishing, maintaining, providing, offering, or arranging (as 
applicable) coverage or payments for some or all contraceptive 
services, or for a plan, issuer, or third party administrator that 
provides or arranges such coverage or payments, based on its sincerely 
held moral convictions.
    (b) Objecting individuals. Guidelines issued under Sec.  
147.130(a)(1)(iv) by the Health Resources and Services Administration 
must not provide for or support the requirement of coverage or payments 
for contraceptive services with respect to individuals who object as 
specified in this paragraph (b), and nothing in Sec.  
147.130(a)(1)(iv), 26 CFR 54.9815-2713(a)(1)(iv), or 29 CFR 2590.715-
2713(a)(1)(iv) may be construed to prevent a willing health insurance 
issuer offering group or individual health insurance coverage, and as 
applicable, a willing plan sponsor of a group health plan, from 
offering a separate policy, certificate or contract of insurance or a 
separate group health plan or benefit package option, to any individual 
who objects to coverage or payments for some or all contraceptive 
services based on sincerely held moral convictions.
    (c) Definition. For the purposes of this section, reference to 
``contraceptive'' services, benefits, or coverage includes 
contraceptive or sterilization items, procedures, or services, or 
related patient education or counseling, to the extent specified for 
purposes of Sec.  147.130(a)(1)(iv).
    (d) Severability. Any provision of this section held to be invalid 
or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any person or 
circumstance, shall be construed so as to continue to give maximum 
effect to the provision permitted by law, unless such holding shall be 
one of utter invalidity or unenforceability, in which event the 
provision shall be severable from this section and shall not affect the 
remainder thereof or the application of the provision to persons not 
similarly situated or to dissimilar circumstances.

[FR Doc. 2017-21852 Filed 10-6-17; 11:15 am]
 BILLING CODE 4830-01-P; 4510-029-P; 4120-01-P; 6325-64-P



                                                  47838             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY                                 Effective date: These interim final                their comments in the CMS drop slots
                                                                                                          rules are effective on October 6, 2017.               located in the main lobby of the
                                                  Internal Revenue Service                                   Comment date: Written comments on                  building. A stamp-in clock is available
                                                                                                          these interim final rules are invited and             for persons wishing to retain a proof of
                                                  26 CFR Part 54                                          must be received by December 5, 2017.                 filing by stamping in and retaining an
                                                  [TD–9828]                                               ADDRESSES: Written comments may be                    extra copy of the comments being filed.)
                                                                                                          submitted to the Department of Health                    b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD—
                                                  RIN 1545–BN91                                                                                                 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
                                                                                                          and Human Services as specified below.
                                                                                                          Any comment that is submitted will be                 Services, Department of Health and
                                                  DEPARTMENT OF LABOR                                                                                           Human Services, 7500 Security
                                                                                                          shared with the Department of Labor
                                                                                                          and the Department of the Treasury, and               Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
                                                  Employee Benefits Security                                                                                       If you intend to deliver your
                                                  Administration                                          will also be made available to the
                                                                                                          public.                                               comments to the Baltimore address, call
                                                                                                             Warning: Do not include any                        telephone number (410) 786–9994 in
                                                  29 CFR Part 2590                                                                                              advance to schedule your arrival with
                                                                                                          personally identifiable information
                                                  RIN 1210–AB84                                           (such as name, address, or other contact              one of our staff members.
                                                                                                          information) or confidential business                    Comments erroneously mailed to the
                                                  DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND                                information that you do not want                      addresses indicated as appropriate for
                                                  HUMAN SERVICES                                          publicly disclosed. All comments may                  hand or courier delivery may be delayed
                                                                                                          be posted on the Internet and can be                  and received after the comment period.
                                                  45 CFR Part 147                                         retrieved by most Internet search                        Comments received will be posted
                                                                                                          engines. No deletions, modifications, or              without change to www.regulations.gov.
                                                  [CMS–9925–IFC]
                                                                                                          redactions will be made to the                        FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeff
                                                  RIN 0938–AT46                                                                                                 Wu (310) 492–4305 or
                                                                                                          comments received, as they are public
                                                                                                          records. Comments may be submitted                    marketreform@cms.hhs.gov for Centers
                                                  Moral Exemptions and                                                                                          for Medicare & Medicaid Services
                                                  Accommodations for Coverage of                          anonymously. Comments, identified by
                                                                                                          ‘‘Preventive Services,’’ may be                       (CMS), Department of Health and
                                                  Certain Preventive Services Under the                                                                         Human Services (HHS), Amber Rivers or
                                                  Affordable Care Act                                     submitted one of four ways (please
                                                                                                          choose only one of the ways listed)                   Matthew Litton, Employee Benefits
                                                  AGENCY:  Internal Revenue Service,                         1. Electronically. You may submit                  Security Administration (EBSA),
                                                  Department of the Treasury; Employee                    electronic comments on this regulation                Department of Labor, at (202) 693–8335;
                                                  Benefits Security Administration,                       to http://www.regulations.gov. Follow                 Karen Levin, Internal Revenue Service,
                                                  Department of Labor; and Centers for                    the ‘‘Submit a comment’’ instructions.                Department of the Treasury, at (202)
                                                  Medicare & Medicaid Services,                              2. By regular mail. You may mail                   317–5500.
                                                  Department of Health and Human                          written comments to the following                        Customer Service Information:
                                                  Services.                                               address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &                  Individuals interested in obtaining
                                                  ACTION: Interim final rules with request                Medicaid Services, Department of                      information from the Department of
                                                  for comments.                                           Health and Human Services, Attention:                 Labor concerning employment-based
                                                                                                          CMS–9925–IFC, P.O. Box 8016,                          health coverage laws may call the EBSA
                                                  SUMMARY:   The United States has a long                 Baltimore, MD 21244–8016.                             Toll-Free Hotline at 1–866–444–EBSA
                                                  history of providing conscience                            Please allow sufficient time for mailed            (3272) or visit the Department of Labor’s
                                                  protections in the regulation of health                 comments to be received before the                    Web site (www.dol.gov/ebsa).
                                                  care for entities and individuals with                  close of the comment period.                          Information from HHS on private health
                                                  objections based on religious beliefs or                   3. By express or overnight mail. You               insurance coverage can be found on
                                                  moral convictions. These interim final                  may send written comments to the                      CMS’s Web site (www.cms.gov/cciio),
                                                  rules expand exemptions to protect                      following address ONLY: Centers for                   and information on health care reform
                                                  moral convictions for certain entities                  Medicare & Medicaid Services,                         can be found at www.HealthCare.gov.
                                                  and individuals whose health plans are                  Department of Health and Human                        SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                  subject to a mandate of contraceptive                   Services, Attention: CMS–9925–IFC,
                                                  coverage through guidance issued                                                                              I. Background
                                                                                                          Mail Stop C4–26–05, 7500 Security
                                                  pursuant to the Patient Protection and                  Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.                     In the context of legal requirements
                                                  Affordable Care Act. These rules do not                    4. By hand or courier. Alternatively,              touching on certain sensitive health care
                                                  alter the discretion of the Health                      you may deliver (by hand or courier)                  issues—including health coverage of
                                                  Resources and Services Administration,                  your written comments ONLY to the                     contraceptives—Congress has a
                                                  a component of the United States                        following addresses prior to the close of             consistent history of supporting
                                                  Department of Health and Human                          the comment period:                                   conscience protections for moral
                                                  Services, to maintain the guidelines                       a. For delivery in Washington, DC—                 convictions alongside protections for
                                                  requiring contraceptive coverage where                  Centers for Medicare & Medicaid                       religious beliefs, including as part of its
                                                  no regulatorily recognized objection                    Services, Department of Health and                    efforts to promote access to health
                                                  exists. These rules also provide certain                Human Services, Room 445–G, Hubert                    services.1 Against that backdrop,
asabaliauskas on DSKBBXCHB2PROD with RULES




                                                  morally objecting entities access to the                H. Humphrey Building, 200                               1 See, for example, 42 U.S.C. 300a–7 (protecting
                                                  voluntary ‘‘accommodation’’ process                     Independence Avenue SW.,                              individuals and health care entities from being
                                                  regarding such coverage. These rules do                 Washington, DC 20201.                                 required to provide or assist sterilizations,
                                                  not alter multiple other Federal                           (Because access to the interior of the             abortions, or other lawful health services if it would
                                                  programs that provide free or subsidized                Hubert H. Humphrey Building is not                    violate their ‘‘religious beliefs or moral
                                                  contraceptives for women at risk of                                                                           convictions’’); 42 U.S.C. 238n (protecting
                                                                                                          readily available to persons without                  individuals and entities that object to abortion);
                                                  unintended pregnancy.                                   Federal government identification,                    Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2017, Div. H,
                                                  DATES:                                                  commenters are encouraged to leave                    Title V, Sec. 507(d) (Departments of Labor, HHS,



                                             VerDate Sep<11>2014   00:09 Oct 13, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00002   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\13OCR3.SGM   13OCR3


                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                        47839

                                                  Congress granted the Health Resources                     administering agencies—the                             Departments’ 2016 Request for
                                                  and Services Administration (HRSA), a                     Departments of Health and Human                        Information). Elsewhere in this issue of
                                                  component of the United States                            Services, Labor, and the Treasury                      the Federal Register, the Departments
                                                  Department of Health and Human                            (collectively, ‘‘the Departments’’),3                  published, contemporaneously with
                                                  Services (HHS), discretion under the                      exercised both the discretion granted to               these interim final rules, companion
                                                  Patient Protection and Affordable Care                    HHS through HRSA, its component, in                    interim final rules expanding
                                                  Act to specify that certain group health                  PHS Act section 2713(a)(4), and the                    exemptions to protect sincerely held
                                                  plans and health insurance issuers shall                  authority granted to the Departments as                religious beliefs in the context of the
                                                  cover, ‘‘with respect to women, such                      administering agencies (26 U.S.C. 9833;                contraceptive Mandate.
                                                  additional preventive care and                            29 U.S.C. 1191c; 42 U.S.C. 300gg–92) to                  In light of these considerations, the
                                                  screenings . . . as provided for in                       issue regulations to guide HRSA in                     Departments issue these interim final
                                                  comprehensive guidelines supported                        carrying out that provision. Through                   rules to better balance the Government’s
                                                  by’’ HRSA (the ‘‘Guidelines’’). Public                    rulemaking, including three interim                    interest in promoting coverage for
                                                  Health Service Act section 2713(a)(4).                    final rules, the Departments exempted                  contraceptive and sterilization services
                                                  HRSA exercised that discretion under                      and accommodated certain religious                     with the Government’s interests in
                                                  the last Administration to require health                 objectors, but did not offer an                        providing conscience protections for
                                                  coverage for, among other things, certain                 exemption or accommodation to any                      individuals and entities with sincerely
                                                  contraceptive services,2 while the                        group possessing non-religious moral                   held moral convictions in certain health
                                                                                                            objections to providing coverage for                   care contexts, and in minimizing
                                                  and Education, and Related Agencies                       some or all contraceptives. Many                       burdens imposed by our regulation of
                                                  Appropriations Act), Public Law 115–31 (protecting                                                               the health insurance market.
                                                  any ‘‘health care professional, a hospital, a
                                                                                                            individuals and entities challenged the
                                                  provider-sponsored organization, a health                 contraceptive coverage requirement and                 A. The Affordable Care Act
                                                  maintenance organization, a health insurance plan,        regulations (hereinafter, the
                                                  or any other kind of health care facility,                ‘‘contraceptive Mandate,’’ or the                         Collectively, the Patient Protection
                                                  organization, or plan’’ in objecting to abortion for
                                                                                                            ‘‘Mandate’’) as being inconsistent with                and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–
                                                  any reason); Id. at Div. C, Title VIII, Sec. 808                                                                 148), enacted on March 23, 2010, and
                                                  (regarding any requirement of ‘‘the provision of          various legal protections. These
                                                  contraceptive coverage by health insurance plans’’        challenges included lawsuits brought by                the Health Care and Education
                                                  in the District of Columbia, ‘‘it is the intent of
                                                                                                            some non-religious organizations with                  Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–
                                                  Congress that any legislation enacted on such issue                                                              152), enacted on March 30, 2010, are
                                                  should include a ‘conscience clause’ which                sincerely held moral convictions
                                                                                                                                                                   known as the Affordable Care Act. In
                                                  provides exceptions for religious beliefs and moral       inconsistent with providing coverage for
                                                  convictions.’’); Id. at Div. C, Title VII, Sec. 726(c)                                                           signing the Affordable Care Act,
                                                                                                            some or all contraceptive services, and
                                                  (Financial Services and General Government                                                                       President Obama issued Executive
                                                  Appropriations Act) (protecting individuals who           those cases continue to this day. Various
                                                                                                                                                                   Order 13535 (March 24, 2010), which
                                                  object to prescribing or providing contraceptives         public comments were also submitted
                                                  contrary to their ‘‘religious beliefs or moral                                                                   declared that, ‘‘[u]nder the Act,
                                                                                                            asking the Departments to protect
                                                  convictions’’); Id. at Div. I, Title III (Department of                                                          longstanding Federal laws to protect
                                                                                                            objections based on moral convictions.
                                                  State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs
                                                                                                               The Departments have recently                       conscience (such as the Church
                                                  Appropriations Act) (protecting applicants for                                                                   Amendment, 42 U.S.C. 300a–7, and the
                                                  family planning funds based on their ‘‘religious or       exercised our discretion to reevaluate
                                                  conscientious commitment to offer only natural                                                                   Weldon Amendment, section 508(d)(1)
                                                                                                            these exemptions and accommodations.
                                                  family planning’’); 42 U.S.C. 290bb–36 (prohibiting                                                              of Pub. L. 111–8) remain intact’’ and
                                                                                                            This evaluation includes consideration
                                                  the statutory section from being construed to                                                                    that ‘‘[n]umerous executive agencies
                                                  require suicide related treatment services for youth      of various factors, such as: The interests
                                                                                                                                                                   have a role in ensuring that these
                                                  where the parents or legal guardians object based         served by the existing Guidelines,
                                                  on ‘‘religious beliefs or moral objections’’); 42                                                                restrictions are enforced, including the
                                                                                                            regulations, and accommodation
                                                  U.S.C. 1395w–22(j)(3)(B) (protecting against forced                                                              Department of Health and Human
                                                  counseling or referrals in Medicare Choice, now           process; 4 the extensive litigation;
                                                                                                                                                                   Services (HHS).’’ Those laws protect
                                                  Medicare Advantage, managed care plans with               Executive Order 13798, ‘‘Promoting Free
                                                  respect to objections based on ‘‘moral or religious                                                              objections based on moral convictions
                                                                                                            Speech and Religious Liberty’’ (May 4,
                                                  grounds’’); 42 U.S.C. 1396a(w)(3) (ensuring                                                                      in addition to religious beliefs.
                                                  particular Federal law does not infringe on
                                                                                                            2017); Congress’ history of providing                     The Affordable Care Act reorganizes,
                                                  ‘‘conscience’’ as protected in State law concerning       protections for moral convictions                      amends, and adds to the provisions of
                                                  advance directives); 42 U.S.C. 1396u–2(b)(3)              alongside religious beliefs regarding                  part A of title XXVII of the Public
                                                  (protecting against forced counseling or referrals in     certain health services (including
                                                  Medicaid managed care plans with respect to                                                                      Health Service Act (PHS Act) relating to
                                                  objections based on ‘‘moral or religious grounds’’);      contraception, sterilization, and items or             group health plans and health insurance
                                                  42 U.S.C. 2996f(b) (protecting objection to abortion      services believed to involve abortion);                issuers in the group and individual
                                                  funding in legal services assistance grants based on      the discretion afforded under PHS Act                  markets. In addition, the Affordable
                                                  ‘‘religious beliefs or moral convictions’’); 42 U.S.C.
                                                  14406 (protecting organizations and health
                                                                                                            section 2713(a)(4); the structure and                  Care Act adds section 715(a)(1) to the
                                                  providers from being required to inform or counsel        intent of that provision in the broader                Employee Retirement Income Security
                                                  persons pertaining to assisted suicide); 42 U.S.C.        context of section 2713 and the Patient                Act of 1974 (ERISA) and section
                                                  18023 (blocking any requirement that issuers or           Protection and Affordable Care Act; and
                                                  exchanges must cover abortion); 42 U.S.C. 18113                                                                  9815(a)(1) to the Internal Revenue Code
                                                  (protecting health plans or health providers from         the history of the regulatory process and              (Code) to incorporate the provisions of
                                                  being required to provide an item or service that         comments submitted in various requests                 part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act into
                                                  helps cause assisted suicide); see also 8 U.S.C.          for public comments (including in the                  ERISA and the Code, and thereby make
                                                  1182(g) (protecting vaccination objections by
                                                  ‘‘aliens’’ due to ‘‘religious beliefs or moral                                                                   them applicable to certain group health
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                                                  convictions’’); 18 U.S.C. 3597 (protecting objectors      ‘‘contraceptive services’’ generally includes
                                                                                                            contraceptives, sterilization, and related patient     plans regulated under ERISA or the
                                                  to participation in Federal executions based on
                                                  ‘‘moral or religious convictions’’); 20 U.S.C. 1688       education and counseling, unless otherwise             Code. The sections of the PHS Act
                                                  (prohibiting sex discrimination law to be used to         indicated.                                             incorporated into ERISA and the Code
                                                                                                               3 Note, however, that in sections under headings
                                                  require assistance in abortion for any reason); 22                                                               are sections 2701 through 2728 of the
                                                  U.S.C. 7631(d) (protecting entities from being            listing only two of the three Departments, the term
                                                                                                            ‘‘Departments’’ generally refers only to the two
                                                                                                                                                                   PHS Act.
                                                  required to use HIV/AIDS funds contrary to their
                                                  ‘‘religious or moral objection’’).                        Departments listed in the heading.                        These interim final rules concern
                                                     2 This document’s references to ‘‘contraception,’’        4 In this IFR, we generally use ‘‘accommodation’’   section 2713 of the PHS Act. Where it
                                                  ‘‘contraceptive,’’ ‘‘contraceptive coverage,’’ or         and ‘‘accommodation process’’ interchangeably.         applies, section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS


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                                                  47840             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  Act requires coverage without cost                      such guidelines. (45 CFR 147.131). The                certain requirements in the health care
                                                  sharing for ‘‘such additional’’ women’s                 interim final rules set forth herein are a            context. Although the text of Executive
                                                  preventive care and screenings ‘‘as                     necessary and appropriate exercise of                 Order 13535 does not require the
                                                  provided for’’ and ‘‘supported by’’                     the authority delegated to the                        expanded exemptions issued in these
                                                  guidelines developed by HRSA/HHS.                       Departments as administrators of the                  interim final rules, the expanded
                                                  The Congress did not specify any                        statutes. (26 U.S.C. 9833; 29 U.S.C.                  exemptions are, as explained below,
                                                  particular additional preventive care                   1191c; 42 U.S.C. 300gg–92).                           consistent with longstanding Federal
                                                  and screenings with respect to women                       Our interpretation of section                      laws to protect conscience regarding
                                                  that HRSA could or should include in                    2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act is confirmed                certain health matters, and are
                                                  its Guidelines, nor did Congress                        by the Affordable Care Act’s statutory                consistent with the intent that the
                                                  indicate whether the Guidelines should                  structure. The Congress did not intend                Affordable Care Act would be
                                                  include contraception and sterilization.                to require entirely uniform coverage of               implemented in consideration of the
                                                     The Departments have consistently                    preventive services. (76 FR 46623). To                protections set forth in those laws.
                                                  interpreted section 2713(a)(4)’s of the                 the contrary, Congress carved out an
                                                  PHS Act grant of authority to include                   exemption from section 2713 for                       B. The Regulations Concerning
                                                  broad discretion to decide the extent to                grandfathered plans. This exemption is                Women’s Preventive Services
                                                  which HRSA will provide for and                         not applicable to many of the other                      On July 19, 2010, the Departments
                                                  support the coverage of additional                      provisions in Title I of the Affordable               issued interim final rules implementing
                                                  women’s preventive care and screenings                  Care Act—provisions previously                        section 2713 of the PHS Act (75 FR
                                                  in the Guidelines. In turn, the                         referred to by the Departments as                     41726). Those interim final rules
                                                  Departments have interpreted that                       providing ‘‘particularly significant                  charged HRSA with developing the
                                                  discretion to include the ability to                    protections.’’ (75 FR 34540). Those                   Guidelines authorized by section
                                                  exempt entities from coverage                           provisions include: Section 2704, which               2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act.
                                                  requirements announced in HRSA’s                        prohibits preexisting condition                       1. The Institute of Medicine Report
                                                  Guidelines. That interpretation is rooted               exclusions or other discrimination
                                                  in the text of section 2713(a)(4) of the                based on health status in group health                   In developing the Guidelines, HRSA
                                                  PHS Act, which allows HRSA to decide                    coverage; section 2708, which prohibits               relied on an independent report from
                                                  the extent to which the Guidelines will                 excessive waiting periods (as of January              the Institute of Medicine (IOM, now
                                                  provide for and support the coverage of                 1, 2014); section 2711, which relates to              known as the National Academy of
                                                  additional women’s preventive care and                  lifetime limits; section 2712, which                  Medicine) on women’s preventive
                                                  screenings.                                             prohibits rescissions of health insurance             services, issued on July 19, 2011,
                                                     Accordingly, the Departments have                    coverage; section 2714, which extends                 ‘‘Clinical Preventive Services for
                                                  consistently interpreted section                        dependent coverage until age 26; and                  Women, Closing the Gaps’’ (IOM 2011).
                                                  2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act reference to                  section 2718, which imposes a medical                 The IOM’s report was funded by the
                                                  ‘‘comprehensive guidelines supported                    loss ratio on health insurance issuers in             HHS Office of the Assistant Secretary
                                                  by the Health Resources and Services                    the individual and group markets (for                 for Planning and Evaluation, pursuant
                                                  Administration for purposes of this                     insured coverage), or requires them to                to a funding opportunity that charged
                                                  paragraph’’ to grant HRSA authority to                  provide rebates to policyholders. (75 FR              the IOM to conduct a review of effective
                                                  develop such Guidelines. And because                    34538, 34540, 34542). Consequently, of                preventive services to ensure women’s
                                                  the text refers to Guidelines ‘‘supported               the 150 million nonelderly people in                  health and well-being.6
                                                  by the Health Resources and Services                    America with employer-sponsored                          The IOM made a number of
                                                  Administration for purposes of this                     health coverage, approximately 25.5                   recommendations with respect to
                                                  paragraph,’’ the Departments have                       million are estimated to be enrolled in               women’s preventive services. As
                                                  consistently interpreted that authority to              grandfathered plans not subject to                    relevant here, the IOM recommended
                                                  afford HRSA broad discretion to                         section 2713 of the PHS Act.5 As the                  that the Guidelines cover the full range
                                                  consider the requirements of coverage                   Supreme Court observed, ‘‘there is no                 of Food and Drug Administration
                                                  and cost-sharing in determining the                     legal requirement that grandfathered                  (FDA)-approved contraceptive methods,
                                                  nature and extent of preventive care and                plans ever be phased out.’’ Burwell v.                sterilization procedures, and patient
                                                  screenings recommended in the                           Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., 134 S. Ct.                  education and counseling for women
                                                  guidelines. (76 FR 46623). As the                       2751, 2764 n.10 (2014).                               with reproductive capacity. Because
                                                  Departments have noted, these                              The Departments’ interpretation of                 FDA includes in the category of
                                                  Guidelines are different from ‘‘the other               section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act to                  ‘‘contraceptives’’ certain drugs and
                                                  guidelines referenced in section 2713(a),               permit HRSA to establish exemptions                   devices that may not only prevent
                                                  which pre-dated the Affordable Care Act                 from the Guidelines, and of the                       conception (fertilization), but may also
                                                  and were originally issued for purposes                 Departments’ own authority as                         prevent implantation of an embryo,7 the
                                                  of identifying the non-binding                          administering agencies to guide HRSA                  IOM’s recommendation included
                                                  recommended care that providers                         in establishing such exemptions, is also
                                                                                                                                                                   6 Because section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act
                                                  should provide to patients.’’ Id.                       consistent with Executive Order 13535.
                                                                                                                                                                specifies that the HRSA Guidelines shall include
                                                  Guidelines developed as nonbinding                      That order, issued upon the signing of                preventive care and screenings ‘‘with respect to
                                                  recommendations for care implicate                      the Affordable Care Act, specified that               women,’’ the Guidelines exclude services relating to
                                                  significantly different legal and policy                ‘‘longstanding Federal laws to protect                a man’s reproductive capacity, such as vasectomies
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                                                  concerns than guidelines developed for                  conscience . . . remain intact,’’                     and condoms.
                                                                                                                                                                   7 FDA’s guide ‘‘Birth Control: Medicines To Help
                                                  a mandatory coverage requirement. To                    including laws that protect religious                 You,’’ specifies that various approved
                                                  guide HRSA in exercising the discretion                 beliefs and moral convictions from                    contraceptives, including Levonorgestrel, Ulipristal
                                                  afforded to it in section 2713(a)(4), the                                                                     Acetate, and IUDs, work mainly by preventing
                                                  Departments have previously                               5 Kaiser Family Foundation & Health Research &      fertilization and ‘‘may also work . . . by preventing
                                                                                                          Educational Trust, ‘‘Employer Health Benefits, 2017   attachment (implantation) to the womb (uterus)’’ of
                                                  promulgated regulations defining the                    Annual Survey,’’ available at http://files.kff.org/   a human embryo after fertilization. Available at
                                                  scope of permissible religious                          attachment/Report-Employer-Health-Benefits-           https://www.fda.gov/forconsumers/byaudience/
                                                  exemptions and accommodations for                       Annual-Survey-2017.                                   forwomen/freepublications/ucm313215.htm.



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                               47841

                                                  several contraceptive methods that                      included coverage for all FDA-approved                health plans established or maintained
                                                  many persons and organizations believe                  contraceptives, sterilization procedures,             by certain nonprofit organizations with
                                                  are abortifacient—that is, as causing                   and related patient education and                     religious objections to contraceptive
                                                  early abortion—and which they                           counseling for women with                             coverage (and the group health
                                                  conscientiously oppose for that reason                  reproductive capacity, as prescribed by               insurance coverage provided in
                                                  distinct from whether they also oppose                  a health care provider (hereinafter ‘‘the             connection with such plans).12 The
                                                  contraception or sterilization. One of the              Mandate’’).                                           temporary safe harbor did not include
                                                  16 members of the IOM committee, Dr.                       In administering this Mandate, on                  nonprofit organizations that had an
                                                  Anthony LoSasso, a Professor at the                     August 1, 2011, the Departments                       objection to contraceptives based on
                                                  University of Illinois at Chicago School                promulgated interim final rules                       moral convictions but not religious
                                                  of Public Health, wrote a formal                        amending our 2010 interim final rules.                beliefs, nor did it include for-profit
                                                  dissenting opinion. He stated that the                  (76 FR 46621) (2011 interim final rules).             entities of any kind. The Departments
                                                  IOM committee did not have sufficient                   The 2011 interim final rules specified                stated that, during the temporary safe
                                                  time to evaluate fully the evidence on                  that HRSA has the authority to establish              harbor, the Departments would engage
                                                  whether the use of preventive services                  exemptions from the contraceptive                     in rulemaking to achieve ‘‘two goals—
                                                  beyond those encompassed by section                     coverage requirement for certain group                providing contraceptive coverage
                                                  2713(a)(1) through (3) of the PHS Act                   health plans established or maintained                without cost-sharing to individuals who
                                                  leads to lower rates of disability or                   by certain religious employers and for                want it and accommodating non-
                                                  disease and increased rates of well-                    health insurance coverage provided in                 exempted, nonprofit organizations’
                                                  being, such that the IOM should                         connection with such plans.9 The 2011                 religious objections to covering
                                                  recommend additional services to be                     interim final rules only offered the                  contraceptive services.’’ (77 FR 8727).
                                                  included under Guidelines issued under                  exemption to a narrow scope of                           On March 21, 2012, the Departments
                                                  section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act. He                   employers, and only if they were                      published an advance notice of
                                                  further stated that ‘‘the                               religious. As the basis for adopting that             proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) that
                                                  recommendations were made without                       limited definition of religious employer,             described possible approaches to
                                                  high quality, systematic evidence of the                the 2011 interim final rules stated that              achieve those goals with respect to
                                                  preventive nature of the services                       they relied on the laws of some ‘‘States              religious nonprofit organizations, and
                                                  considered,’’ and that ‘‘the committee                  that exempt certain religious employers               solicited public comments on the same.
                                                  process for evaluation of the evidence                  from having to comply with State law                  (77 FR 16501). Following review of the
                                                  lacked transparency and was largely                     requirements to cover contraceptive                   comments on the ANPRM, the
                                                  subject to the preferences of the                       services.’’ (76 FR 46623). Several                    Departments published proposed
                                                  committee’s composition. Troublingly,                   comments were submitted asking that                   regulations on February 6, 2013 (2013
                                                  the process tended to result in a mix of                the exemption include those who object                NPRM) (78 FR 8456).
                                                  objective and subjective determinations                 to contraceptive coverage based on non-                  The 2013 NPRM proposed to expand
                                                  filtered through a lens of advocacy.’’ He               religious moral convictions, including                the definition of ‘‘religious employer’’
                                                  also raised concerns that the committee                 pro-life, non-profit advocacy                         for purposes of the religious employer
                                                  did not have time to develop a                          organizations.10                                      exemption. Specifically, it proposed to
                                                  framework for determining whether                                                                             require only that the religious employer
                                                  coverage of any given preventive service                3. The Departments’ Subsequent                        be organized and operate as a nonprofit
                                                  leads to a reduction in healthcare                      Rulemaking on the Accommodation and                   entity and be referred to in section
                                                  expenditure.8 IOM 2011 at 231–32. In                    Third Interim Final Rules                             6033(a)(3)(A)(i) or (iii) of the Code,
                                                  its response to Dr. LoSasso, the other 15                  Final regulations issued on February               eliminating the requirements that a
                                                  committee members stated in part that                   10, 2012, adopted the definition of                   religious employer—(1) have the
                                                  ‘‘At the first committee meeting, it was                ‘‘religious employer’’ in the 2011                    inculcation of religious values as its
                                                  agreed that cost considerations were                    interim final rules without modification              purpose; (2) primarily employ persons
                                                  outside the scope of the charge, and that               (2012 final regulations).11 (77 FR 8725).             who share its religious tenets; and (3)
                                                  the committee should not attempt to                     The exemption did not require exempt                  primarily serve persons who share its
                                                  duplicate the disparate review processes                employers to file any certification form              religious tenets. The proposed expanded
                                                  used by other bodies, such as the                       or comply with any other information
                                                  USPSTF, ACIP, and Bright Futures.                       collection process.                                      12 Guidance on the Temporary Enforcement Safe
                                                  HHS, with input from this committee,                       Contemporaneously with the issuance                Harbor for Certain Employers, Group Health Plans,
                                                  may consider other factors including                    of the 2012 final regulations, HHS—
                                                                                                                                                                and Group Health Insurance Issuers with Respect to
                                                  cost in its development of coverage                                                                           the Requirement to Cover Contraceptive Services
                                                                                                          with the agreement of the Department of               Without Cost Sharing Under section 2713 of the
                                                  decisions.’’                                            Labor (DOL) and the Department of the                 Public Health Service Act, Section 715(a)(1) of the
                                                                                                          Treasury—issued guidance establishing                 Employee Retirement Income Security Act, and
                                                  2. HRSA’s 2011 Guidelines and the                                                                             Section 9815(a)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code,
                                                  Departments’ Second Interim Final                       a temporary safe harbor from                          issued on February 10, 2012, and reissued on
                                                  Rules                                                   enforcement of the contraceptive                      August 15, 2012. Available at: http://
                                                     On August 1, 2011, HRSA released                     coverage requirement by the                           www.lb7.uscourts.gov/documents/12cv3932.pdf.
                                                                                                          Departments with respect to group                     The guidance, as reissued on August 15, 2012,
                                                  onto its Web site its Guidelines for                                                                          clarified, among other things, that plans that took
                                                  women’s preventive services, adopting                                                                         some action before February 10, 2012, to try,
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                                                                                                             9 The 2011 amended interim final rules were
                                                  the recommendations of the IOM.                                                                               without success, to exclude or limit contraceptive
                                                                                                          issued and effective on August 1, 2011, and           coverage were not precluded from eligibility for the
                                                  https://www.hrsa.gov/                                   published in the Federal Register on August 3,        safe harbor. The temporary enforcement safe harbor
                                                  womensguidelines/ The Guidelines                        2011. (76 FR 46621).                                  was also available to insured student health
                                                                                                             10 See, for example, Americans United for Life
                                                                                                                                                                insurance coverage arranged by nonprofit
                                                    8 The Departments do not relay these dissenting       (‘‘AUL’’) Comment on CMA–9992–IFC2 at 10 (Nov.        institutions of higher education with religious
                                                  remarks as an endorsement of the remarks, but to        1, 2011), available at http://www.regulations.gov/    objections to contraceptive coverage that met the
                                                  describe the history of the Guidelines, which           #!documentDetail;D=HHS-OS-2011-0023-59496.            conditions set forth in the guidance. See final rule
                                                  includes this part of the report that IOM provided         11 The 2012 final regulations were published on    entitled ‘‘Student Health Insurance Coverage’’
                                                  to HRSA.                                                February 15, 2012 (77 FR 8725).                       published March 21, 2012 (77 FR 16457).



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                                                  47842             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  definition still encompassed only                       until the first plan year beginning on or               plans, the issuer was expected to bear
                                                  religious entities.                                     after August 1, 2013.                                   the cost of such payments,16 and HHS
                                                    The 2013 NPRM also proposed to                           The Departments published final                      intended to clarify in guidance that the
                                                                                                          regulations on July 2, 2013 (July 2013                  issuer could treat those payments as an
                                                  create a compliance process, which it
                                                                                                          final regulations) (78 FR 39869). The                   adjustment to claims costs for purposes
                                                  called an accommodation, for group
                                                                                                          July 2013 final regulations finalized the               of medical loss ratio and risk corridor
                                                  health plans established, maintained, or
                                                                                                          expansion of the exemption for houses                   program calculations. The Departments
                                                  arranged by certain eligible nonprofit                  of worship and their integrated                         extended the temporary safe harbor
                                                  organizations that fell outside the                     auxiliaries. Although some commenters                   again on June 20, 2013, to encompass
                                                  houses of worship and integrated                        had suggested that the exemption be                     plan years beginning on or after August
                                                  auxiliaries covered by section                          further expanded, the Departments                       1, 2013, and before January 1, 2014.
                                                  6033(a)(3)(A)(i) or (iii) of the Code (and,             declined to adopt that approach. The
                                                  thus, outside of the religious employer                 July 2013 regulations stated that,                      4. Litigation Over the Mandate and the
                                                  exemption). The 2013 NPRM proposed                      because employees of objecting houses                   Accommodation Process
                                                  to define such eligible organizations as                of worship and integrated auxiliaries are                  During the period when the
                                                  nonprofit entities that hold themselves                 relatively likely to oppose                             Departments were publishing and
                                                  out as religious, oppose providing                      contraception, exempting those                          modifying our regulations, organizations
                                                  coverage for certain contraceptive items                organizations ‘‘does not undermine the                  and individuals filed dozens of lawsuits
                                                  on account of religious objections, and                 governmental interests furthered by the                 challenging the Mandate. Plaintiffs
                                                  maintain a certification to this effect in              contraceptive coverage requirement.’’                   included religious nonprofit
                                                  their records. The 2013 NPRM stated,                    (78 FR 39874). However, like the 2013                   organizations, businesses run by
                                                  without citing a supporting source, that                NPRM, the July 2013 regulations                         religious families, individuals, and
                                                  employees of eligible organizations                     assumed that ‘‘[h]ouses of worship and                  others, including several non-religious
                                                  ‘‘may be less likely than’’ employees of                their integrated auxiliaries that object to             organizations that opposed coverage of
                                                  exempt houses of worship and                            contraceptive coverage on religious                     certain contraceptives under the
                                                  integrated auxiliaries to share their                   grounds are more likely than other                      Mandate on the basis of non-religious
                                                  employer’s faith and opposition to                      employers to employ people of the same                  moral convictions. Religious for-profit
                                                  contraception on religious grounds. (78                 faith who share the same objection’’ to                 entities won various court decisions
                                                  FR 8461). The 2013 NPRM therefore                       contraceptives. Id.                                     leading to the Supreme Court’s ruling in
                                                  proposed that, in the case of an insured                   The July 2013 regulation also                        Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. 134
                                                  group health plan established or                        finalized an accommodation for eligible                 S. Ct. 2751 (2014). The Supreme Court
                                                  maintained by an eligible organization,                 organizations, which were then defined                  ruled against the Departments and held
                                                  the health insurance issuer providing                   to include solely organizations that are                that, under the Religious Freedom
                                                  group health insurance coverage in                      religious. Under the accommodation, an                  Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), the
                                                                                                          eligible organization was required to                   Mandate could not be applied to the
                                                  connection with the plan would provide
                                                                                                          submit a self-certification to its group                closely held for-profit corporations
                                                  contraceptive coverage to plan
                                                                                                          health insurance issuer or third party                  before the Court because their owners
                                                  participants and beneficiaries without
                                                                                                          administrator, as applicable. Upon                      had religious objections to providing
                                                  cost sharing, premium, fee, or other                                                                            such coverage.17
                                                  charge to plan participants or                          receiving that self-certification, the
                                                                                                          issuer or third party administrator                        On August 27, 2014, the Departments
                                                  beneficiaries enrolled in the eligible                                                                          simultaneously issued a third set of
                                                  organization’s plan—and without any                     would provide or arrange for payments
                                                                                                          for the contraceptive services to the plan              interim final rules (August 2014 interim
                                                  cost to the eligible organization.13 In the                                                                     final rules) (79 FR 51092), and a notice
                                                                                                          participants and beneficiaries enrolled
                                                  case of a self-insured group health plan                                                                        of proposed rulemaking (August 2014
                                                                                                          in the eligible organization’s plan,
                                                  established or maintained by an eligible                                                                        proposed rules) (79 FR 51118). The
                                                                                                          without requiring any cost sharing on
                                                  organization, the 2013 NPRM presented                                                                           August 2014 interim final rules changed
                                                                                                          the part of plan participants and
                                                  potential approaches under which the                                                                            the accommodation process so that it
                                                                                                          beneficiaries and without cost to the
                                                  third party administrator of the plan                   eligible organization. With respect to                  could be initiated either by self-
                                                  would provide or arrange for                            self-insured plans, the third party                     certification using EBSA Form 700 or
                                                  contraceptive coverage to plan                          administrators (or issuers they                         through a notice informing the Secretary
                                                  participants and beneficiaries. The                     contracted with) could receive                          of HHS that an eligible organization had
                                                  proposed accommodation process was                      reimbursements by reducing user fee                     religious objections to coverage of all or
                                                  not to be offered to non-religious                      payments (to Federally facilitated                      a subset of contraceptive services (79 FR
                                                  nonprofit organizations, nor to any for-                Exchanges) by the amounts paid out for                  51092). In response to Hobby Lobby, the
                                                  profit entities. Public comments again                  contraceptive services under the                        August 2014 proposed rules extended
                                                  included the request that exemptions                    accommodation, plus an allowance for                    the accommodation process to closely
                                                  encompass objections to contraceptive                   certain administrative costs, as long as                held for-profit entities with religious
                                                  coverage based on moral convictions                                                                             objections to contraceptive coverage, by
                                                                                                          the HHS Secretary requests and an
                                                  and not just based on religious beliefs.14                                                                      including them in the definition of
                                                                                                          authorizing exception under OMB
                                                  On August 15, 2012, the Departments                                                                             eligible organizations (79 FR 51118).
                                                                                                          Circular No. A–25R is in effect.15 With
                                                  extended our temporary safe harbor                                                                              Neither the August 2014 interim final
                                                                                                          respect to fully insured group health
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                                                                                                                                                                  rules nor the August 2014 proposed
                                                    13 The NPRM proposed to treat student health             15 See also 45 CFR 156.50. Under the regulations,
                                                                                                                                                                  rules extended the exemption; neither
                                                  insurance coverage arranged by eligible                 if the third party administrator does not participate   added a certification requirement for
                                                  organizations that are institutions of higher           in a Federally-facilitated Exchange as an issuer, it
                                                  education in a similar manner.                          is permitted to contract with an insurer which does       16 ‘‘[P]roviding payments for contraceptive
                                                    14 See,for example, AUL Comment on CMS–               so participate, in order to obtain such                 services is cost neutral for issuers.’’ (78 FR 39877).
                                                  9968–P at 5 (Apr. 8, 2013), available at http://        reimbursement. The total contraceptive user fee           17 The Supreme Court did not decide whether

                                                  www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=CMS-             adjustment for the 2015 benefit year was $33            RFRA would apply to publicly traded for-profit
                                                  2012-0031-79115.                                        million.                                                corporations. See 134 S. Ct. at 2774.



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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                       47843

                                                  exempt entities; and neither                            Supreme Court’s remand order. (81 FR                  contraception), applying the Mandate to
                                                  encompassed objections based on non-                    47741). Public comments were                          March for Life or similar organizations
                                                  religious moral convictions.                            submitted in response to the RFI, during              that definitively hire only employees
                                                     On July 14, 2015, the Departments                    a comment period that closed on                       who oppose certain contraceptives
                                                  finalized both the August 2014 interim                  September 20, 2016. Those comments                    lacked a rational basis and therefore
                                                  final rules and the August 2014                         included the request that the exemption               violated their right of equal protection
                                                  proposed rules in a set of final                        be expanded to include those who                      under the Due Process Clause.
                                                  regulations (the July 2015 final                        oppose the Mandate for either religious                  March for Life’s employees, who
                                                  regulations) (80 FR 41318). (The July                   ‘‘or moral’’ reasons, consistent with                 stated they were personally religious
                                                  2015 final regulations also encompassed                 various state laws (such as in                        (although personal religiosity was not a
                                                  issues related to other preventive                      Connecticut or Missouri) that protect                 condition of their employment), also
                                                  services coverage.) The July 2015 final                 objections to contraceptive coverage                  sued as co-plaintiffs. They contended
                                                  regulations allowed eligible                            based on moral convictions.18                         that the Mandate violates their rights
                                                  organizations to submit a notice to HHS                    Beginning in 2015, lawsuits                        under RFRA by making it impossible for
                                                  as an alternative to submitting the EBSA                challenging the Mandate were also filed               them to obtain health insurance
                                                  Form 700, but specified that such notice                by various non-religious organizations                consistent with their religious beliefs,
                                                  must include the eligible organization’s                with moral objections to contraceptive                either from the plan March for Life
                                                  name and an expression of its religious                 coverage. These organizations asserted                wanted to offer them, or in the
                                                  objection, along with the plan name,                    that they believe some methods                        individual market, because the
                                                  plan type, and name and contact                         classified by FDA as contraceptives may               Departments offered no exemptions in
                                                  information for any of the plan’s third                 have an abortifacient effect and                      either circumstance. Another non-
                                                  party administrators or health insurance                therefore, in their view, are morally                 religious nonprofit organization that
                                                  issuers. The Departments indicated that                 equivalent to abortion. These                         opposed the Mandate’s requirement to
                                                  such information represents the                         organizations have neither received an                provide certain contraceptive coverage
                                                  minimum information necessary for us                    exemption from the Mandate nor do                     on moral grounds also filed a lawsuit
                                                  to administer the accommodation                         they qualify for the accommodation. For               challenging the Mandate. Real
                                                  process.                                                example, the organization that since                  Alternatives, Inc. v. Burwell, 150 F.
                                                     Meanwhile, a second series of legal                  1974 has sponsored the annual March                   Supp. 3d 419 (M.D. Pa. 2015).
                                                  challenges were filed by religious                      for Life in Washington, DC (March for                    Challenges by non-religious nonprofit
                                                  nonprofit organizations that stated the                 Life), filed a complaint claiming that the            organizations led to conflicting opinions
                                                  accommodation impermissibly                             Mandate violated the equal protection                 among the Federal courts. A district
                                                  burdened their religious beliefs because                                                                      court agreed with the March for Life
                                                                                                          component of the Due Process Clause of
                                                  it utilized their health plans to provide                                                                     plaintiffs on the organization’s equal
                                                                                                          the Fifth Amendment, and was arbitrary
                                                  services to which they objected on                                                                            protection claim and the employees’
                                                                                                          and capricious under the
                                                  religious grounds, and it required them                                                                       RFRA claims (not specifically ruling on
                                                                                                          Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
                                                  to submit a self-certification or notice.                                                                     the APA claim), and issued a permanent
                                                                                                          Citing, for example, (77 FR 8727), March
                                                  On November 6, 2015, the U.S. Supreme                                                                         injunction against the Departments that
                                                                                                          for Life argued that the Departments’
                                                  Court granted certiorari in seven similar                                                                     is still in place. March for Life v.
                                                                                                          stated interests behind the Mandate
                                                  cases under the title of a filing from the                                                                    Burwell, 128 F. Supp. 3d 116 (D.D.C.
                                                                                                          were only advanced among women who
                                                  Third Circuit, Zubik v. Burwell. On May                                                                       2015). The appeal in March for Life is
                                                                                                          ‘‘want’’ the coverage so as to prevent
                                                  16, 2016, the Supreme Court issued a                                                                          pending and has been stayed since early
                                                                                                          ‘‘unintended’’ pregnancy. March for Life              2016. In another case, Federal district
                                                  per curiam opinion in Zubik, vacating
                                                  the judgments of the Courts of                          contended that because it only hires                  and appellate courts in Pennsylvania
                                                  Appeals—most of which had ruled in                      employees who publicly advocate                       disagreed with the reasoning from
                                                  the Departments’ favor—and remanding                    against abortion, including what they                 March for Life and ruled against claims
                                                  the cases ‘‘in light of the substantial                 regard as abortifacient contraceptive                 brought by a similarly non-religious
                                                  clarification and refinement in the                     items, the Departments’ interests were                nonprofit employer and its religious
                                                  positions of the parties’’ that had been                not rationally advanced by imposing the               employees. Real Alternatives, 150 F.
                                                  filed in supplemental briefs. 136 S. Ct.                Mandate upon it and its employees.                    Supp. 3d 419, affirmed by 867 F.3d 338
                                                  1557, 1560 (2016). The Court stated that                Accordingly, March for Life contended                 (3d Cir. 2017). One member of the
                                                  it anticipated that, on remand, the                     that applying the Mandate to it (and                  appeals court panel in Real Alternatives
                                                  Courts of Appeals would ‘‘allow the                     other similarly situated organizations)               dissented in part, stating he would have
                                                  parties sufficient time to resolve any                  lacked a rational basis and therefore                 ruled in favor of the individual
                                                  outstanding issues between them.’’ Id.                  doing so was arbitrary and capricious in              employee plaintiffs under RFRA. Id. at
                                                  The Court also specified that ‘‘the                     violation of the APA. March for Life                  *18.
                                                  Government may not impose taxes or                      further contended that because the                       On December 20, 2016, HRSA
                                                  penalties on petitioners for failure to                 Departments concluded the                             updated the Guidelines via its Web site,
                                                  provide the relevant notice’’ while the                 government’s interests were not                       https://www.hrsa.gov/
                                                  cases remained pending. Id. at 1561.                    undermined by exempting houses of                     womensguidelines2016/index.html.
                                                     After remand, as indicated by the                    worship and integrated auxiliaries                    HRSA announced that, for plans subject
                                                  Departments in court filings, meetings                  (based on our assumption that such                    to the Guidelines, the updated
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                                                  were held between attorneys for the                     entities are relatively more likely than              Guidelines would apply to the first plan
                                                  Government and for the plaintiffs in                    other religious nonprofits to have                    year beginning after December 20, 2017.
                                                  those cases. The Departments also                       employees that share their views against              Among other changes, the updated
                                                  issued a Request for Information (‘‘RFI’’)                                                                    Guidelines specified that the required
                                                                                                            18 See, for example, https://www.regulations.gov/
                                                  on July 26, 2016, seeking public                                                                              contraceptive coverage includes follow-
                                                                                                          document?D=CMS-2016-0123-54142; see also
                                                  comment on options for modifying the                    https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-
                                                                                                                                                                up care (for example, management and
                                                  accommodation process in light of the                   2016-0123-54218 and https://www.regulations.gov/      evaluation, as well as changes to, and
                                                  supplemental briefing in Zubik and the                  document?D=CMS-2016-0123-46220.                       removal or discontinuation of, the


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                                                  47844              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  contraceptive method). They also                         conscience protections if they did so.               below, of protecting moral convictions
                                                  specified, for the first time, that                      Specifically, these interim final rules              in particular health care contexts. The
                                                  coverage should include instruction in                   expand exemptions to the contraceptive               Departments’ implementation of section
                                                  fertility awareness-based methods for                    Mandate to protect certain entities and              2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act with respect
                                                  women desiring an alternative method                     individuals that object to coverage of               to contraceptive coverage is a context
                                                  of family planning. HRSA stated that,                    some or all contraceptives based on                  similar to those encompassed by many
                                                  with the input of a committee operating                  sincerely held moral convictions but not             other health care conscience protections
                                                  under a cooperative agreement, HRSA                      religious beliefs, and these rules make              provided or supported by Congress.
                                                  would review and periodically update                     those exempt entities eligible for                   This Mandate concerns contraception
                                                  the Women’s Preventive Services’                         accommodations concerning the same                   and sterilization services, including
                                                  Guidelines. The updated Guidelines did                   Mandate.                                             items believed by some citizens to have
                                                  not alter the religious employer                                                                              an abortifacient effect—that is, to cause
                                                                                                           A. Discretion To Provide Exemptions
                                                  exemption or accommodation process,                                                                           the destruction of a human life at an
                                                                                                           Under Section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act
                                                  nor did they extend the exemption or                                                                          early stage of embryonic development.
                                                                                                           and the Affordable Care Act
                                                  accommodation process to organizations                                                                        These are highly sensitive issues in the
                                                  or individuals that oppose certain forms                    The Departments have consistently                 history of health care regulation and
                                                  of contraception (and coverage thereof)                  interpreted HRSA’s authority under                   have long been shielded by conscience
                                                  on moral grounds.                                        section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act to                 protections in the laws of the United
                                                     On January 9, 2017, the Departments                   allow for exemptions and                             States.
                                                  issued a document entitled, ‘‘FAQs                       accommodations to the contraceptive
                                                  About Affordable Care Act                                Mandate for certain objecting                        B. Congress’ History of Providing
                                                  Implementation Part 36.’’ 19 The FAQ                     organizations. Section 2713(a)(4) of the             Exemptions for Moral Convictions
                                                  stated that, after reviewing comments                    PHS Act gives HRSA discretion to                        In deciding the most appropriate way
                                                  submitted in response to the 2016 RFI                    decide whether and in what                           to exercise our discretion in this
                                                  and considering various options, the                     circumstances it will support                        context, the Departments draw on
                                                  Departments could not find a way at                      Guidelines providing for additional                  nearly 50 years of statutory law and
                                                  that time to amend the accommodation                     women’s preventive services coverage.                Supreme Court precedent discussing the
                                                  so as to satisfy objecting eligible                      That authority includes HRSA’s                       protection of moral convictions in
                                                  organizations while pursuing the                         discretion to include contraceptive                  certain circumstances—particularly in
                                                  Departments’ policy goals. The                           coverage in those Guidelines, but the                the context of health care and health
                                                  Departments did not adopt the approach                   Congress did not specify whether or to               insurance coverage. Congress very
                                                  requested by certain commenters, cited                   what extent HRSA should do so.                       recently expressed its intent on the
                                                  above, to expand the exemption to                        Therefore, section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS             matter of Government-mandated
                                                  include those who oppose the Mandate                     Act allows HRSA to not apply the                     contraceptive coverage when it
                                                  for moral reasons.                                       Guidelines to certain plans of entities or           declared, with respect to the possibility
                                                     On May 4, 2017, the President issued                  individuals with religious or moral                  that the District of Columbia would
                                                  Executive Order 13798, ‘‘Promoting Free                  objections to contraceptive coverage,                require contraceptive coverage, that ‘‘it
                                                  Speech and Religious Liberty.’’ Section                  and by not applying the Guidelines to                is the intent of Congress that any
                                                  3 of that order declares, ‘‘Conscience                   them, to exempt those entities from the              legislation enacted on such issue should
                                                  Protections with Respect to Preventive-                  Mandate. These rules are a necessary                 include a ‘conscience clause’ which
                                                  Care Mandate. The Secretary of the                       and appropriate exercise of the                      provides exceptions for religious beliefs
                                                  Treasury, the Secretary of Labor, and the                authority of HHS, of which HRSA is a                 and moral convictions.’’ Consolidated
                                                  Secretary of Health and Human Services                   component, and of the authority                      Appropriations Act of 2017, Division C,
                                                  shall consider issuing amended                           delegated to the Departments                         Title VIII, Sec. 808, Public Law 115–31
                                                  regulations, consistent with applicable                  collectively as administrators of the                (May 5, 2017). In support of these
                                                  law, to address conscience-based                         statutes. (26 U.S.C. 9833; 29 U.S.C.                 interim final rules, we consider it
                                                  objections to the preventive-care                        1191c; 42 U.S.C. 300gg–92).                          significant that Congress’ most recent
                                                  mandate promulgated under section                           Our protection of conscience in these             statement on the prospect of
                                                  300gg–13(a)(4) of title 42, United States                interim final rules is consistent with the           Government mandated contraceptive
                                                  Code.’’                                                  structure and intent of the Affordable               coverage specifically intends that a
                                                                                                           Care Act. The Affordable Care Act                    conscience clause be included to protect
                                                  II. Expanded Exemptions and                              refrains from applying section                       moral convictions.
                                                  Accommodations for Moral Convictions                     2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act to millions of                The many statutes listed in Section I-
                                                     These interim final rules incorporate                 women in grandfathered plans. In                     Background under footnote 1, which
                                                  conscience protections into the                          contrast, we anticipate that                         show Congress’ consistent protection of
                                                  contraceptive Mandate. They do so in                     conscientious exemptions to the                      moral convictions alongside religious
                                                  part to bring the Mandate into                           Mandate will impact a much smaller                   beliefs in the Federal regulation of
                                                  conformity with Congress’s long history                  number of women. President Obama                     health care, includes laws such as the
                                                  of providing or supporting conscience                    emphasized in signing the Affordable                 1973 Church Amendments, which we
                                                  protections in the regulation of sensitive               Care Act that ‘‘longstanding Federal law             discuss at length below, all the way to
                                                  health-care issues, cognizant that                       to protect conscience’’—laws with                    the 2017 Consolidated Appropriations
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                                                  Congress neither required the                            conscience protections encompassing                  Act discussed above. Notably among
                                                  Departments to impose the Mandate nor                    moral (as well as religious) objections—             those laws, the Congress has enacted
                                                  prohibited them from providing                           specifically including (but not limited              protections for health plans or health
                                                                                                           to) the Church Amendments (42 U.S.C.                 care organizations in Medicaid or
                                                     19 Available at: https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/
                                                                                                           300a–7), ‘‘remain intact.’’ Executive                Medicare Advantage to object ‘‘on moral
                                                  files/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-center/
                                                  faqs/aca-part-36.pdf and https://www.cms.gov/
                                                                                                           Order 13535. Nothing in the Affordable               or religious grounds’’ to providing
                                                  CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/                    Care Act suggests Congress’ intent to                coverage of certain counseling or
                                                  Downloads/ACA-FAQs-Part36_1-9-17-Final.pdf.              deviate from its long history, discussed             referral services. 42 U.S.C. 1395w–


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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                             47845

                                                  22(j)(3)(B) (protecting against forced                  protections provided by those                         participating in the performance of certain
                                                  counseling or referrals in Medicare                     provisions of the Church Amendments                   medical procedures; others, for moral
                                                  Choice, now Medicare Advantage,                         would encompass moral objections to                   reasons, not necessarily for any religious
                                                                                                                                                                belief, can feel equally as strong about human
                                                  managed care plans with respect to                      contraceptive services or coverage.
                                                                                                                                                                life. They too can revere human life.
                                                  objections based on ‘‘moral or religious                   The Church Amendments were                            As mortals, we cannot with confidence say,
                                                  grounds’’); 42 U.S.C. 1396u–2(b)(3)                     enacted in the wake of the Supreme                    when life begins. But whether it is life, or the
                                                  (protecting against forced counseling or                Court’s decision in Roe v. Wade, 410                  potentiality of life, our moral convictions as
                                                  referrals in Medicaid managed care                      U.S. 113 (1973). Even though the Court                well as our religious beliefs, warrant
                                                  plans with respect to objections based                  in Roe required abortion to be legal in               protection from this intrusion by the
                                                  on ‘‘moral or religious grounds’’). The                 certain circumstances, Roe did not                    Government. Would, therefore, the Senator
                                                  Congress has also protected individuals                 include, within that right, the                       include moral convictions?
                                                  who object to prescribing or providing                  requirement that other citizens must                     Would the Senator consider an amendment
                                                                                                                                                                on page 2, line 18 which would add to
                                                  contraceptives contrary to their                        facilitate its exercise. Thus, Roe                    religious beliefs, the words ‘‘or moral’’?
                                                  ‘‘religious beliefs or moral convictions.’’             favorably quoted the proceedings of the                  Mr. CHURCH. I would suggest to the
                                                  Consolidated Appropriations Act of                      American Medical Association House of                 Senator that perhaps his objective could be
                                                  2017, Division C, Title VII, Sec. 726(c)                Delegates 220 (June 1970), which                      more clearly stated if the words ‘‘or moral
                                                  (Financial Services and General                         declared ‘‘Neither physician, hospital,               conviction’’ were added after ‘‘religious
                                                  Government Appropriations Act),                         nor hospital personnel shall be required              belief.’’ I think that the Supreme Court in
                                                  Public Law 115–31.                                      to perform any act violative of                       considering the protection we give religious
                                                                                                          personally-held moral principles.’’ 410               beliefs has given comparable treatment to
                                                  C. The Church Amendments’ Protection                                                                          deeply held moral convictions. I would not
                                                  of Moral Convictions                                    U.S. at 144 & n.38 (1973). Likewise in                be averse to amending the language of the
                                                                                                          Roe’s companion case, Doe v. Bolton,                  amendment in such a manner. It is consistent
                                                     One of the most important and well-                  the Court observed that, under State                  with the general purpose. I see no reason
                                                  established federal statutes respecting                 law, ‘‘a physician or any other employee              why a deeply held moral conviction ought
                                                  conscientious objections in specific                    has the right to refrain, for moral or                not be given the same treatment as a religious
                                                  health care contexts was enacted over                   religious reasons, from participating in              belief.
                                                  the course of several years beginning in                the abortion procedure.’’ 410 U.S. 179,                  Mr. STEVENSON. The Senator’s suggestion
                                                  1973, initially as a response to court                  197–98 (1973). The Court said that these              is well taken. I thank him.
                                                  decisions raising the prospect that                     conscience provisions ‘‘obviously . . .
                                                  entities or individuals might be required               afford appropriate protection.’’ Id. at               119 Congr. Rec. S5717–18.
                                                  to facilitate abortions or sterilizations.              198. As an Arizona court later put it, ‘‘a               As the debate proceeded, Senator
                                                  These sections of the United States Code                woman’s right to an abortion or to                    Church went on to quote Doe v. Bolton’s
                                                  are known as the Church Amendments,                     contraception does not compel a private               reliance on a Georgia statute that stated
                                                  named after their primary sponsor                       person or entity to facilitate either.’’              ‘‘a physician or any other employee has
                                                  Senator Frank Church (D–Idaho). The                     Planned Parenthood Ariz., Inc. v. Am.                 the right to refrain, for moral or religious
                                                  Church Amendments specifically                          Ass’n of Pro-Life Obstetricians &                     reasons, from participating in the
                                                  provide conscience protections based on                 Gynecologists, 257 P.3d 181, 196 (Ariz.               abortion procedure.’’ 119 Congr. Rec. at
                                                  sincerely held moral convictions.                                                                             S5722 (quoting 410 U.S. at 197–98).
                                                                                                          Ct. App. 2011).
                                                  Among other things, the amendments                         The Congressional Record contains                  Senator Church added, ‘‘I see no reason
                                                  protect the recipients of certain Federal               relevant discussions that occurred when               why the amendment ought not also to
                                                  health funds from being required to                     the protection for moral convictions was              cover doctors and nurses who have
                                                  perform, assist, or make their facilities               first proposed in the Church                          strong moral convictions against these
                                                  available for abortions or sterilizations if            Amendments. When Senator Church                       particular operations.’’ Id. Considering
                                                  they object ‘‘on the basis of religious                 introduced the first of those                         the scope of the protections, Senator
                                                  beliefs or moral convictions,’’ and they                amendments in 1973, he cited not only                 Gaylord Nelson (D–WI) asked whether,
                                                  prohibit recipients of certain Federal                                                                        ‘‘if a hospital board, or whatever the
                                                                                                          Roe v. Wade but also an instance where
                                                  health funds from discriminating                                                                              ruling agency for the hospital was, a
                                                                                                          a Federal court had ordered a Catholic
                                                  against any personnel ‘‘because he                                                                            governing agency or otherwise, just
                                                                                                          hospital to perform sterilizations. 119
                                                  refused to perform or assist in the
                                                                                                          Congr. Rec. S5717–18 (Mar. 27, 1973).                 capriciously—and not upon the
                                                  performance of such a procedure or
                                                                                                          After his opening remarks, Senator                    religious or moral questions at all—
                                                  abortion on the grounds that his
                                                                                                          Adlai Stevenson III (D–IL) rose to ask                simply said, ‘We are not going to bother
                                                  performance or assistance in the
                                                                                                          that the amendment be changed to                      with this kind of procedure in this
                                                  performance of the procedure or
                                                                                                          specify that it also protects objections to           hospital,’ would the pending
                                                  abortion would be contrary to his
                                                                                                          abortion and sterilization based on                   amendment permit that?’’ 119 Congr.
                                                  religious beliefs or moral convictions’’
                                                                                                          moral convictions on the same terms as                Rec. at S5723. Senator Church
                                                  (42 U.S.C. 300a–7(b), (c)(1)). Later
                                                                                                          it protects objections based on religious             responded that the amendment would
                                                  additions to the Church Amendments
                                                                                                          beliefs. The following excerpt of the                 not encompass such an objection. Id.
                                                  protect other conscientious objections,
                                                                                                          Congressional Record is particularly                     Senator James L. Buckley (C–NY),
                                                  including some objections on the basis
                                                                                                          relevant to this discussion:                          speaking in support of the amendment,
                                                  of moral conviction to ‘‘any lawful
                                                                                                             Mr. STEVENSON. Mr. President, first of all
                                                                                                                                                                added the following perspective:
                                                  health service,’’ or to ‘‘any part of a
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                                                  health service program.’’ (42 U.S.C.                    I commend the Senator from Idaho for                    Mr. BUCKLEY. Mr. President, I
                                                  300a–7(c)(2), (d)). In contexts covered                 bringing this matter to the attention of the          compliment the Senator from Idaho for
                                                                                                          Senate. I ask the Senator a question.                 proposing this most important and timely
                                                  by those sections of the Church
                                                                                                             One need not be of the Catholic faith or           amendment. It is timely in the first instance
                                                  Amendments, the provision or coverage                   any other religious faith to feel deeply about        because the attempt has already been made
                                                  of certain contraceptives, depending on                 the worth of human life. The protections              to compel the performance of abortion and
                                                  the circumstances, could constitute                     afforded by this amendment run only to                sterilization operations on the part of those
                                                  ‘‘any lawful health service’’ or a ‘‘part of            those whose religious beliefs would be                who are fundamentally opposed to such
                                                  a health service program.’’ As such, the                offended by the necessity of performing or            procedures. And it is timely also because the



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                                                  47846              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  recent Supreme Court decisions will likely              moral objections in many other                        nevertheless impose upon him a duty of
                                                  unleash a series of court actions across the            situations. These include, for example:               conscience to refrain from participating
                                                  United States to try to impose the personal                • Protections for individuals and                  in any war at any time, those beliefs
                                                  preferences of the majority of the Supreme              entities that object to abortion: See 42              certainly occupy in the life of that
                                                  Court on the totality of the Nation.
                                                     I believe it is ironic that we should have
                                                                                                          U.S.C. 238n; 42 U.S.C. 18023; 42 U.S.C.               individual ‘a place parallel to that filled
                                                  this debate at all. Who would have predicted            2996f(b); and Consolidated                            by . . . God’ in traditionally religious
                                                  a year or two ago that we would have to                 Appropriations Act of 2017, Div. H,                   persons. Because his beliefs function as
                                                  guard against even the possibility that                 Title V, Sec. 507(d), Public Law 115–31;              a religion in his life, such an individual
                                                  someone might be free [sic] 20 to participate              • Protections for entities and                     is as much entitled to a ‘religious’
                                                  in an abortion or sterilization against his             individuals that object to providing or               conscientious objector exemption . . .
                                                  will? Such an idea is repugnant to our                  covering contraceptives: See id. at Div.              as is someone who derives his
                                                  political tradition. This is a Nation which has         C, Title VIII, Sec. 808; id. at Div. C, Title         conscientious opposition to war from
                                                  always been concerned with the right of                 VII, Sec. 726(c) (Financial Services and
                                                  conscience. It is the right of conscience                                                                     traditional religious convictions.’’
                                                  which is protected in our draft laws. It is the         General Government Appropriations                        The Departments look to the
                                                  right of conscience which the Supreme Court             Act); and id. at Div. I, Title III; and               description of moral convictions in
                                                  has quite properly expanded not only to                    • Protections for entities and                     Welsh to help explain the scope of the
                                                  embrace those young men who, because of                 individuals that object to performing,                protection provided in these interim
                                                  the tenets of a particular faith, believe they          assisting, counseling, or referring as                final rules. Neither these interim final
                                                  cannot kill another man, but also those who             pertains to suicide, assisted suicide, or             rules, nor the Church Amendments or
                                                  because of their own deepest moral                      advance directives: See 42 U.S.C.                     other Federal health care conscience
                                                  convictions are so persuaded.                           290bb–36; 42 U.S.C. 14406; 42 U.S.C.
                                                     I am delighted that the Senator from Idaho
                                                                                                                                                                statutes, define ‘‘moral convictions’’
                                                  has amended his language to include the
                                                                                                          18113; and 42 U.S.C. 1396a(w)(3).                     (nor do they define ‘‘religious beliefs’’).
                                                  words ‘‘moral conviction,’’ because, of
                                                                                                             The Departments believe that the                   But in issuing these interim final rules,
                                                  course, we know that this is not a matter of            intent behind Congress’ protection of                 we seek to use the same background
                                                  concern to any one religious body to the                moral convictions in certain health care              understanding of that term that is
                                                  exclusion of all others, or even to men who             contexts, especially to protect entities              reflected in the Congressional Record in
                                                  believe in a God to the exclusion of all                and individuals from governmental                     1973, in which legislators referenced
                                                  others. It has been a traditional concept in            coercion, supports our decision in these              cases such as Welsh to support the
                                                  our society from the earliest times that the            interim final rules to protect sincerely              addition of language protecting moral
                                                  right of conscience, like the paramount right           held moral convictions from
                                                  to life from which it is derived, is sacred.                                                                  convictions. In protecting moral
                                                                                                          governmental compulsion threatened by                 convictions parallel to religious beliefs,
                                                  119 Congr. Rec. at S5723.                               the contraceptive Mandate.                            Welsh describes moral convictions
                                                     In support of the same protections                   D. Court Precedents Relevant to These                 warranting such protection as ones: (1)
                                                  when they were debated in the U.S.                      Expanded Exemptions                                   That the ‘‘individual deeply and
                                                  House, Representative Margaret Heckler                                                                        sincerely holds’’; (2) ‘‘that are purely
                                                                                                             The legislative history of the                     ethical or moral in source and content;
                                                  (R–MA) 21 likewise observed that ‘‘the                  protection of moral convictions in the
                                                  right of conscience has long been                                                                             (3) ‘‘but that nevertheless impose upon
                                                                                                          first Church Amendments shows that                    him a duty’’; (4) and that ‘‘certainly
                                                  recognized in the parallel situation in                 Members of Congress saw the protection
                                                  which the individual’s right to                                                                               occupy in the life of that individual a
                                                                                                          as being consistent with Supreme Court                place parallel to that filled by . . . God’
                                                  conscientious objector status in our                    decisions. Not only did Senator Church
                                                  selective service system has been                                                                             in traditionally religious persons,’’ such
                                                                                                          cite the abortion case Doe v. Bolton as               that one could say ‘‘his beliefs function
                                                  protected’’ and ‘‘expanded by the                       a parallel instance of conscience
                                                  Supreme Court to include moral                                                                                as a religion in his life.’’ (398 U.S. at
                                                                                                          protection, but he also spoke of the                  339–40). As recited above, Senators
                                                  conviction as well as formal religious                  Supreme Court generally giving
                                                  belief.’’ 119 Congr. Rec. H4148–49 (May                                                                       Church and Nelson agreed that
                                                                                                          ‘‘comparable treatment to deeply held                 protections for such moral convictions
                                                  31, 1973). Rep. Heckler added, ‘‘We are                 moral convictions.’’ Both Senator
                                                  concerned here only with the right of                                                                         would not encompass an objection that
                                                                                                          Buckley and Rep. Heckler specifically                 an individual or entity raises
                                                  moral conscience, which has always                      cited the Supreme Court’s protection of
                                                  been a part of our national tradition.’’                                                                      ‘‘capriciously.’’ Instead, along with the
                                                                                                          moral convictions in laws governing                   requirement that protected moral
                                                  Id. at 4149.                                            military service. Those legislators
                                                     These first of the Church                                                                                  convictions must be ‘‘sincerely held,’’
                                                                                                          appear to have been referencing cases                 this understanding cabins the protection
                                                  Amendments, codified at 42 U.S.C.
                                                                                                          such as Welsh v. United States, 398 U.S.              of moral convictions in contexts where
                                                  300a–7(b) and (c)(1), passed the House
                                                                                                          333 (1970), which the Supreme Court                   they occupy a place parallel to that
                                                  372–1, and were approved by the Senate
                                                                                                          decided just 3 years earlier.                         filled by sincerely held religious beliefs
                                                  94–0. 119 Congr. Rec. at H4149; 119                        Welsh involved what is perhaps the
                                                  Congr. Rec. S10405 (June 5, 1973). The                                                                        in religious persons and organizations.
                                                                                                          Government’s paradigmatic compelling                     In the context of this particular
                                                  subsequently adopted provisions that                    interest—the need to defend the nation                Mandate, it is also worth noting that, in
                                                  comprise the Church Amendments                          by military force. The Court stated that,             Hobby Lobby, Justice Ginsburg (joined,
                                                  similarly extend protection to those                    where the Government protects                         in this part of the opinion, by Justices
                                                  organizations and individuals who                       objections to military service based on               Breyer, Kagan, and Sotomayor), cited
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                                                  object to the provision of certain                      ‘‘religious training and belief,’’ that               Justice Harlan’s opinion in Welsh, 398
                                                  services on the basis of their moral                    protection would also extend to                       U.S. at 357–58, in support of her
                                                  convictions. And, as noted above,                       avowedly non-religious objections to                  statement that ‘‘[s]eparating moral
                                                  subsequent statutes add protections for                 war held with the same moral strength.                convictions from religious beliefs would
                                                    20 The Senator might have meant ‘‘[forced] . . .
                                                                                                          Id. at 343. The Court declared, ‘‘[i]f an             be of questionable legitimacy.’’ 134 S.
                                                  against his will.’’                                     individual deeply and sincerely holds                 Ct. at 2789 n.6. In quoting this passage,
                                                    21 Rep. Heckler later served as the 15th Secretary    beliefs that are purely ethical or moral              the Departments do not mean to suggest
                                                  of HHS, from March 1983 to December 1985.               in source and content but that                        that all laws protecting only religious


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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                   47847

                                                  beliefs constitute an illegitimate                  participation or attendance contrary to                      respect for conscience in the laws and
                                                  ‘‘separat[ion]’’ of moral convictions, nor          medical ethics.’’ (28 CFR 26.5).23                           founding principles of the United
                                                  do we assert that moral convictions                    Forty-five States have health care                        States. Members of Congress specifically
                                                  must always be protected alongside                  conscience protections covering                              relied on the American tradition of
                                                  religious beliefs; we also do not agree             objections to abortion, and several of                       respect for conscience when they
                                                  with Justice Harlan that distinguishing             those also cover sterilization or                            decided to protect moral convictions in
                                                  between religious and moral objections              contraception.24 Most of those State                         health care. As quoted above, in
                                                  would violate the Establishment Clause.             laws protect objections based on                             supporting protecting conscience based
                                                  Instead, the Departments believe that, in           ‘‘moral,’’ ‘‘ethical,’’ or ‘‘conscientious’’                 on non-religious moral convictions,
                                                  the specific health care context                    grounds in addition to ‘‘religious’’                         Senator Buckley declared ‘‘[i]t has been
                                                  implicated here, providing respect for              grounds. Particularly in the case of                         a traditional concept in our society from
                                                  moral convictions parallel to the respect           abortion, some Federal and State                             the earliest times that the right of
                                                  afforded to religious beliefs is                    conscience laws do not require any                           conscience, like the paramount right to
                                                  appropriate, draws from long-standing               specified motive for the objection. (42                      life from which it is derived, is sacred.’’
                                                  Federal Government practice, and                    U.S.C. 238n). These various statutes and                     Rep. Heckler similarly stated that ‘‘the
                                                  shares common ground with Congress’                 regulations reflect an important                             right of moral conscience . . . has
                                                  intent in the Church Amendments and                 governmental interest in protecting                          always been a part of our national
                                                  in later Federal conscience statutes that           moral convictions in appropriate health                      tradition.’’ This tradition is reflected, for
                                                  provide protections for moral                       contexts.                                                    example, in a letter President George
                                                  convictions alongside religious beliefs                The contraceptive Mandate implicates                      Washington wrote saying that ‘‘[t]he
                                                  in other health care contexts.                      that governmental interest. Many                             Citizens of the United States of America
                                                                                                      persons and entities object to this                          have a right to applaud themselves for
                                                  E. Conscience Protections in Regulations Mandate in part because they consider                                   having given to mankind examples of an
                                                  and Among the States                                some forms of FDA-approved                                   enlarged and liberal policy: A policy
                                                     The tradition of protecting moral                contraceptives to be abortifacients and                      worthy of imitation. All possess alike
                                                  convictions in certain health contexts is morally equivalent to abortion due to                                  liberty of conscience and immunities of
                                                  not limited to Congress. Multiple federal the possibility that some of the items                                 citizenship.’’ 25 Thomas Jefferson
                                                  regulations protect objections based on             may have the effect of preventing the                        similarly declared that ‘‘[n]o provision
                                                  moral convictions in such contexts.22               implantation of a human embryo after                         in our Constitution ought to be dearer to
                                                  Other federal regulations have also                 fertilization. Based on our knowledge                        man than that which protects the rights
                                                  applied the principle of respecting                 from the litigation, all of the current                      of conscience against the enterprises of
                                                  moral convictions alongside religious               litigants asserting purely non-religious                     the civil authority.’’ 26 Although these
                                                  beliefs when they have determined that              objections share this view, and most of                      statements by Presidents Washington
                                                  it is appropriate to do so in particular            the religious litigants do as well. The                      and Jefferson were spoken to religious
                                                  circumstances. The Equal Employment                 Supreme Court, in describing family                          congregations, and although religious
                                                  Opportunity Commission has                          business owners with religious                               and moral conscience were tightly
                                                  consistently protected ‘‘moral or ethical objections, explained that ‘‘[t]he owners                              intertwined for the Founders, they both
                                                  beliefs as to what is right and wrong               of the businesses have religious                             reflect a broad principle of respect for
                                                  which are sincerely held with the                   objections to abortion, and according to                     conscience against government
                                                  strength of traditional religious views’’           their religious beliefs the four                             coercion. James Madison likewise called
                                                  alongside religious views under the                 contraceptive methods at issue are                           conscience ‘‘the most sacred of all
                                                  ‘‘standard [] developed in United States abortifacients. If the owners comply                                    property,’’ and proposed that the Bill of
                                                                                                      with the HHS mandate, they believe                           Rights should guarantee, in addition to
                                                  v. Seeger, 380 U.S. 163 (1965) and
                                                                                                      they will be facilitating abortions.’’                       protecting religious belief and worship,
                                                  [Welsh].’’ (29 CFR 1605.1). The
                                                                                                      Hobby Lobby, 134 S. Ct. at 2751.                             that ‘‘the full and equal rights of
                                                  Department of Justice has declared that,
                                                                                                      Outside of the context of abortion, as                       conscience [shall not] be in any manner,
                                                  in cases of capital punishment, no
                                                                                                      cited above, Congress has also provided                      or on any pretext infringed.’’ 27
                                                  officer or employee may be required to
                                                                                                      health care conscience protections                              These Founding Era statements of
                                                  attend or participate if doing so ‘‘is
                                                                                                      pertaining to sterilization,                                 general principle do not specify how
                                                  contrary to the moral or religious
                                                                                                      contraception, and other health care                         they would be applied in a particular
                                                  convictions of the officer or employee,
                                                                                                      services and practices.                                      health care context. We do not suggest
                                                  or if the employee is a medical
                                                                                                      F. Founding Principles                                       that the specific protections offered in
                                                  professional who considers such
                                                                                                                                                                   this rule would also be required or
                                                    22 See, for example, 42 CFR 422.206 (declaring
                                                                                                         The Departments also look to                              necessarily appropriate in any other
                                                  that the general Medicare Advantage rule ‘‘does not
                                                                                                      guidance from the broader history of                         context that does not raise the specific
                                                  require the MA plan to cover, furnish, or pay for                                                                concerns implicated by this Mandate.
                                                                                                             23 See also 18 CFR 214.11 (where a law
                                                  a particular counseling or referral service if the MA                                                            These interim final rules do not address
                                                  organization that offers the plan—(1) Objects to the    enforcement agency (LEA) seeks assistance in the
                                                  provision of that service on moral or religious         investigation or prosecution of trafficking of           in any way how the Government would
                                                  grounds.’’); 42 CFR 438.102 (declaring that             persons, the reasonableness of the LEA’s request         balance its interests with respect to
                                                  information requirements do not apply ‘‘if the          will depend in part on ‘‘[c]ultural, religious, or
                                                  MCO, PIHP, or PAHP objects to the service on            moral objections to the request’’).                        25 From George Washington to the Hebrew
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                                                  moral or religious grounds’’); 48 CFR 1609.7001            24 According to the Guttmacher Institute, 45 states   Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island (Aug. 18,
                                                  (‘‘health plan sponsoring organizations are not         have conscience statutes pertaining to abortion (43      1790), available at https://founders.archives.gov/
                                                  required to discuss treatment options that they         of which cover institutions), 18 have conscience         documents/Washington/05-06-02-0135.
                                                  would not ordinarily discuss in their customary         statutes pertaining to sterilization (16 of which          26 Letter to the Society of the Methodist Episcopal

                                                  course of practice because such options are             cover institutions), and 12 have conscience statutes     Church at New London, Connecticut (February 4,
                                                  inconsistent with their professional judgment or        pertaining to contraception (8 of which cover            1809), available at https://founders.archives.gov/
                                                  ethical, moral or religious beliefs.’’); 48 CFR         institutions). ‘‘Refusing to Provide Health Services’’   documents/Jefferson/99-01-02-9714.
                                                  352.270–9 (‘‘Non-Discrimination for Conscience’’        (June 1, 2017), available at https://                      27 James Madison, ‘‘Essay on Property’’ (March

                                                  clause for organizations receiving HIV or Malaria       www.guttmacher.org/state-policy/explore/refusing-        29, 1792); First draft of the First Amendment, 1
                                                  relief funds).                                          provide-health-services.                                 Annals of Congress 434 (June 8, 1789).



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                                                  47848              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  other health services not encompassed                   H. Litigation Concerning the Mandate                  organizations that have sued seeking a
                                                  by the contraceptive Mandate.28 Instead                    The sensitivity of certain health care             moral exemption have all adopted moral
                                                  we highlight this tradition of respect for              matters makes it particularly important               tenets opposed to contraception and
                                                  conscience from our Founding Era to                     for the Government to tread carefully                 hire only employees who share this
                                                  provide background support for the                      when engaging in regulation concerning                view. It is reasonable to conclude that
                                                  Departments’ decision to implement                      those areas, and to respect individuals               employees of these organizations would
                                                  section 2713(a)(4) of the PHS Act, while                and organizations whose moral                         therefore not benefit from the Mandate.
                                                  protecting conscience in the exercise of                convictions are burdened by                           As a result, subjecting this subset of
                                                  moral convictions. We believe that these                Government regulations. Providing                     organizations to the Mandate does not
                                                  interim final rules are consistent both                 conscience protections advances the                   advance any governmental interest. The
                                                  with the American tradition of respect                  Affordable Care Act’s goal of expanding               need to resolve this litigation and the
                                                  for conscience and with Congress’                       health coverage among entities and                    potential concerns of similar entities,
                                                  history of providing conscience                         individuals that might otherwise be                   and our requirement to comply with
                                                  protections in the kinds of health care                 reluctant to participate in the market.               permanent injunctive relief currently
                                                  matters involved in this Mandate.                       For example, the Supreme Court in                     imposed in March for Life, provide
                                                                                                          Hobby Lobby declared that, if HHS                     substantial reasons for the Departments
                                                  G. Executive Orders Relevant to These
                                                                                                          requires owners of businesses to cover                to protect moral convictions through
                                                  Expanded Exemptions
                                                                                                                                                                these interim final rules. Even though,
                                                     Protecting moral convictions, as set                 procedures that the owners ‘‘could not
                                                                                                                                                                as discussed below, we assume the
                                                  forth in the expanded exemptions and                    in good conscience’’ cover, such as
                                                                                                                                                                number of entities and individuals that
                                                  accommodations of these rules, is                       abortion, ‘‘HHS would effectively
                                                                                                                                                                may seek exemption from the Mandate
                                                  consistent with recent executive orders.                exclude these people from full
                                                                                                                                                                on the basis of moral convictions, as
                                                  President Trump’s Executive Order                       participation in the economic life of the
                                                                                                                                                                these two sets of litigants did, will be
                                                  concerning this Mandate directed the                    Nation.’’ 134 S. Ct. at 2783. That would
                                                                                                                                                                small, we know from the litigation that
                                                  Departments to consider providing                       be a serious outcome. As demonstrated
                                                                                                                                                                it will not be zero. As a result, the
                                                  protections, not specifically for                       by litigation and public comments,
                                                                                                                                                                Departments have taken these types of
                                                  ‘‘religious’’ beliefs, but for                          various citizens sincerely hold moral
                                                                                                                                                                objections into consideration in
                                                  ‘‘conscience.’’ We interpret that term to               convictions, which are not necessarily                reviewing our regulations. Having done
                                                  include moral convictions and not just                  religious, against providing or                       so, we consider it appropriate to issue
                                                  religious beliefs. Likewise, President                  participating in coverage of                          the protections set forth in these interim
                                                  Trump’s first Executive Order, EO                       contraceptive items included in the                   final rules. Just as Congress, in adopting
                                                  13765, declared that ‘‘the Secretary of                 Mandate, and some believe that some of                the early provisions of the Church
                                                  Health and Human Services (Secretary)                   those items may cause early abortions.                Amendments, viewed it as necessary
                                                  and the heads of all other executive                    The Departments wish to implement the                 and appropriate to protect those
                                                  departments and agencies (agencies)                     contraceptive coverage Guidelines                     organizations and individuals with
                                                  with authorities and responsibilities                   issued under section 2713(a)(4) of the                objections to certain health care services
                                                  under the [ACA] shall exercise all                      PHS Act in a way that respects the                    on the basis of moral convictions, so we,
                                                  authority and discretion available to                   moral convictions of our citizens so that             too, believe that ‘‘our moral convictions
                                                  them to waive, defer, grant exemptions                  they are more free to engage in ‘‘full                as well as our religious beliefs, warrant
                                                  from, or delay the implementation of                    participation in the economic life of the             protection from this intrusion by the
                                                  any provision or requirement of the Act                 Nation.’’ These expanded exemptions                   Government’’ in this situation.
                                                  that would impose a fiscal burden on                    do so by removing an obstacle that
                                                  any State or a cost, fee, tax, penalty, or              might otherwise lead entities or                      I. The Departments’ Rebalancing of
                                                  regulatory burden on individuals,                       individuals with moral objections to                  Government Interests
                                                  families, healthcare providers, health                  contraceptive coverage to choose not to                  For additional discussion of the
                                                  insurers, patients, recipients of                       sponsor or participate in health plans if             Government’s balance of interests
                                                  healthcare services, purchasers of health               they include such coverage.                           concerning religious beliefs issued
                                                  insurance, or makers of medical devices,                   Among the lawsuits challenging the                 contemporaneously with these interim
                                                  products, or medications.’’ This                        Mandate, two have been filed based in                 final rules, see the related document
                                                  Mandate imposes both a cost, fee, tax,                  part on non-religious moral convictions.              published by the Department elsewhere
                                                  or penalty, and a regulatory burden, on                 In one case, the Departments are subject              in this issue of the Federal Register.
                                                  individuals and purchasers of health                    to a permanent injunction requiring us                There, we acknowledge that the
                                                  insurance that have moral convictions                   to respect the non-religious moral                    Departments have changed the policies
                                                  opposed to providing contraceptive                      objections of an employer. See March                  and interpretations we previously
                                                  coverage. These interim final rules                     for Life v. Burwell, 128 F. Supp. 3d 116              adopted with respect to the Mandate
                                                  exercise the Departments’ discretion to                 (D.D.C. 2015). In the other case, an                  and the governmental interests that
                                                  grant exemptions from the Mandate to                    appeals court recently affirmed a district            underlying it, and we assert that we
                                                  reduce and relieve regulatory burdens                   court ruling that allows the previous                 now believe the Government’s
                                                  and promote freedom in the health care                  regulations to be imposed in a way that               legitimate interests in providing for
                                                  market.                                                 violates the moral convictions of a small             contraceptive coverage do not require us
                                                                                                          nonprofit pro-life organization and its               to violate sincerely held religious beliefs
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                                                     28 As the Supreme Court stated in Hobby Lobby,       employees. See Real Alternatives, 2017                while implementing the Guidelines. For
                                                  the Court’s decision concerns only the                  WL 3324690. Our litigation of these                   parallel reasons, the Departments
                                                  contraceptive Mandate, and should not be
                                                  understood to hold that all insurance-coverage          cases has led to inconsistent court                   believe Congress did not set forth—and
                                                  mandates, for example, for vaccinations or blood        rulings, consumed substantial                         we do not possess—interests that
                                                  transfusions, must necessarily fail if they conflict    governmental resources, and created                   require us to violate sincerely held
                                                  with an employer’s religious beliefs. Nor does the      uncertainty for objecting organizations,              moral convictions in the course of
                                                  Court’s opinion provide a shield for employers who
                                                  might cloak illegal discrimination as a religious (or   issuers, third party administrators, and              generally requiring contraceptive
                                                  moral) practice. 134 S. Ct. at 2783.                    employees and beneficiaries. The                      coverage. These changes in policy are


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                               47849

                                                  within the Departments’ authority. As                     Government is under no constitutional                   III. Provisions of the Interim Final
                                                  the Supreme Court has acknowledged,                       obligation to fund contraception, cf.                   Rules With Comment Period
                                                  ‘‘[a]gencies are free to change their                     Harris v. McRae, 448 U.S. 297 (1980),                      The Departments are issuing these
                                                  existing policies as long as they provide                 even more so may the Government                         interim final rules in light of the full
                                                  a reasoned explanation for the change.’’                  refrain from requiring private citizens to              history of relevant rulemaking
                                                  Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 136                     cover contraception for other citizens in               (including 3 previous interim final
                                                  S. Ct. 2117, 2125 (2016). This ‘‘reasoned                 violation of their moral convictions. Cf.               rules), public comments, and the long-
                                                  analysis’’ requirement does not demand                    Rust v. Sullivan, 500 U.S. 173, 192–93                  running litigation from non-religious
                                                  that an agency ‘‘demonstrate to a court’s                 (1991) (‘‘A refusal to fund protected                   moral objectors to the Mandate, as well
                                                  satisfaction that the reasons for the new                 activity, without more, cannot be                       as the information contained in the
                                                  policy are better than the reasons for the                equated with the imposition of a                        companion interim final rules issued
                                                  old one; it suffices that the new policy                  ‘penalty’ on that activity.’’).
                                                  is permissible under the statute, that                                                                            elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
                                                  there are good reasons for it, and that                      The Departments acknowledge that                     Register. These interim final rules seek
                                                  the agency believes it to be better, which                coverage of contraception is an                         to resolve these matters by directing
                                                  the conscious change of course                            important and highly controversial                      HRSA, to the extent it requires coverage
                                                  adequately indicates.’’ United Student                    issue, implicating many different views,                for certain contraceptive services in its
                                                  Aid Funds, Inc. v. King, 200 F. Supp. 3d                  as reflected for example in the public                  Guidelines, to afford an exemption to
                                                  163, 169–70 (D.D.C. 2016) (citing FCC v.                  comments received on multiple                           certain entities and individuals with
                                                  Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S.                   rulemakings over the course of                          sincerely held moral convictions by
                                                  502, 515 (2009)); see also New Edge                       implementation of section 2713(a)(4) of                 which they object to contraceptive or
                                                  Network, Inc. v. FCC, 461 F.3d 1105,                      the PHS Act. Our expansion of                           sterilization coverage, and by making
                                                  1112–13 (9th Cir. 2006) (rejecting an                     conscience protections for moral                        the accommodation process available
                                                  argument that ‘‘an agency changing its                    convictions, similar to protections                     for certain organizations with such
                                                  course by rescinding a rule is obligated                  contained in numerous statutes                          convictions.
                                                  to supply a reasoned analysis for the                     governing health care regulation, is not                   For all of the reasons discussed and
                                                  change beyond that which may be                           taken lightly. However, after                           referenced above, the Departments have
                                                  required when an agency does not act in                   reconsidering the interests served by the               determined that the Government’s
                                                  the first instance’’).29                                  Mandate in this particular context, the                 interest in applying contraceptive
                                                     The Departments note that the                          objections raised, and the relevant                     coverage requirements to the plans of
                                                  exemptions created here, like the                         Federal law, the Departments have                       certain entities and individuals does not
                                                  exemptions created by the last                            determined that expanding the                           outweigh the sincerely held moral
                                                  Administration, do not burden third                       exemptions to include protections for                   objections of those entities and
                                                  parties to a degree that counsels against                 moral convictions is a more appropriate                 individuals. Thus, these interim final
                                                  providing the exemptions. In addition to                  administrative response than continuing                 rules amend the regulations amended in
                                                  the apparent fact that many entities with                 to refuse to extend the exemptions and                  both the Departments’ July 2015 final
                                                  non-religious moral objections to the                     accommodations to certain entities and                  regulations and in the companion
                                                  Mandate appear to only hire persons                       individuals for whom the Mandate                        interim final rules concerning religious
                                                  that share those objections, Congress did                 violates their sincerely held moral                     beliefs issued contemporaneously with
                                                  not create a right to receive                             convictions. Although the number of                     these interim final rules and published
                                                  contraceptive coverage, and Congress                      organizations and individuals that may                  elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
                                                  explicitly chose not to impose the                        seek to take advantage of these                         Register.
                                                  section 2713 requirements on                              exemptions and accommodations may                          These interim final rules expand
                                                  grandfathered plans benefitting millions                  be small, we believe that it is important               those exemptions to include additional
                                                  of people. Individuals who are unable to                  formally to codify such protections for                 entities and persons that object based on
                                                  obtain contraceptive coverage through                     objections based on moral conviction,                   sincerely held moral convictions. These
                                                  their employer-sponsored health plans                     given the long-standing recognition of                  rules leave in place HRSA’s discretion
                                                  because of the exemptions created in                      such protections in health care and                     to continue to require contraceptive and
                                                  these interim final rules, or because of                  health insurance context in law and                     sterilization coverage where no
                                                  other exemptions to the Mandate, have                     regulation and the particularly sensitive               objection specified in the regulations
                                                  other avenues for obtaining                               nature of these issues in the health care               exists, and if section 2713 of the PHS
                                                  contraception, including through                          context. These interim final rules leave                Act otherwise applies. These interim
                                                  various other mechanisms by which the                     unchanged HRSA’s authority to decide                    final rules also maintain the existence of
                                                  Government advances contraceptive                         whether to include contraceptives in the                an accommodation process as a
                                                  coverage, particularly for low-income                     women’s preventive services Guidelines                  voluntary option for organizations with
                                                  women, and which these interim final                      for entities that are not exempted by                   moral objections to contraceptive
                                                  rules leave unchanged.30 As the                           law, regulation, or the Guidelines. These               coverage, but consistent with our
                                                                                                            rules also do not change the many other                 expansion of the exemption, we expand
                                                    29 See also Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural            mechanisms by which the Government                      eligibility for the accommodation to
                                                  Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 863–       advances contraceptive coverage,                        include organizations with sincerely
                                                  64 (1984) (‘‘The fact that the agency has adopted
                                                                                                            particularly for low-income women.                      held moral convictions concerning
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                                                  different definitions in different contexts adds force
                                                  to the argument that the definition itself is flexible,                                                           contraceptive coverage. HRSA is
                                                  particularly since Congress has never indicated any       and Child Health Block Grants, 42 U.S.C. 703; 42        simultaneously updating its Guidelines
                                                  disapproval of a flexible reading of the statute.’’)      U.S.C. 247b–12; Title XIX of the Social Security        to reflect the requirements of these
                                                    30 See, for example, Family Planning grants in 42       Act, 42 U.S.C. 1396, et seq.; the Indian Health         interim final rules.31
                                                  U.S.C. 300, et seq.; the Teenage Pregnancy                Service, 25 U.S.C. 13, 42 U.S.C. 2001(a), & 25 U.S.C.
                                                  Prevention Program, Public Law 112–74 (125 Stat           1601, et seq.; Health center grants, 42 U.S.C.
                                                  786, 1080); the Healthy Start Program, 42 U.S.C.          254b(e), (g), (h), & (i); the NIH Clinical Center, 42     31 See https://www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines/

                                                  254c–8; the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood         U.S.C. 248; and the Personal Responsibility             and https://www.hrsa.gov/womensguidelines2016/
                                                  Home Visiting Program, 42 U.S.C. 711; Maternal            Education Program, 42 U.S.C. 713.                       index.html.



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                                                  47850             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  1. Exemption for Objecting Entities                     document provides what benefits are                   with reference to nonprofit status as
                                                  Based on Moral Convictions                              provided to participants and                          previous rules have done. Many of the
                                                     In the new 45 CFR 147.133 as created                 beneficiaries under the plan and,                     federal health care conscience statutes
                                                  by these interim final rules, we expand                 therefore, if an objecting employer                   cited above offer protections for the
                                                  the exemption that was previously                       would like to exclude all or a subset of              moral convictions of entities without
                                                  located in § 147.131(a), and that was                   contraceptive services, it must ensure                regard to whether they operate as
                                                  expanded in § 147.132 by the                            that the exclusion is clear in the plan               nonprofits or for-profit entities. In
                                                  companion interim final rules                           document. Moreover, if there is a                     addition, a significant majority of states
                                                  concerning religious beliefs issued                     reduction in a covered service or                     either impose no contraceptive coverage
                                                  contemporaneously with these interim                    benefit, the plan has to disclose that                requirement, or offer broader
                                                                                                          change to plan participants.32 Thus,                  exemptions than the exemption
                                                  final rules and published elsewhere in
                                                                                                          where an exemption applies and all or                 contained in the July 2015 final
                                                  this issue of the Federal Register.
                                                     With respect to employers that                       a subset of contraceptive services are                regulations.33 States also generally
                                                  sponsor group health plans,                             omitted from a plan’s coverage,                       protect moral convictions in health care
                                                  § 147.133(a)(1) and (a)(1)(i) provide                   otherwise applicable ERISA disclosures                conscience laws, and they often offer
                                                  exemptions for certain employers that                   should reflect the omission of coverage               those protections whether or not an
                                                                                                          in ERISA plans. These existing                        entity operates as a nonprofit.34
                                                  object to coverage of all or a subset of
                                                                                                          disclosure requirements serve to help                 Although the practice of states is by no
                                                  contraceptives or sterilization and
                                                                                                          provide notice to participants and                    means a limit on the discretion
                                                  related patient education and
                                                                                                          beneficiaries of what ERISA plans do                  delegated to HRSA by the Affordable
                                                  counseling based on sincerely held
                                                                                                          and do not cover. The Departments                     Care Act, nor is it a statement about
                                                  moral convictions.
                                                     For avoidance of doubt, the                          invite public comment on whether                      what the Federal Government may do
                                                  Departments wish to make clear that the                 exempt entities, or others, would find                consistent with other protections or
                                                  expanded exemption in § 147.133(a)                      value either in being able to maintain or             limitations in federal law, such state
                                                  applies to several distinct entities                    submit a specific form of certification to            practice can be informative as to the
                                                  involved in the provision of coverage to                claim their exemption, or in otherwise                viability of offering protections for
                                                  the objecting employer’s employees.                     receiving guidance on a way to                        conscientious objections in particularly
                                                  This explanation is consistent with how                 document their exemption.                             sensitive health care contexts. In this
                                                                                                             The exemptions in § 147.133(a) apply               case, the existence of many instances
                                                  prior rules have worked by means of
                                                                                                          ‘‘to the extent’’ of the objecting entities’          where conscience protections are
                                                  similar language. Section 147.133(a)(1)
                                                                                                          sincerely held moral convictions. Thus,               offered, or no underlying mandate of
                                                  and (a)(1)(i), by specifying that ‘‘[a]
                                                                                                          entities that hold a requisite objection to           this kind exists that could violate moral
                                                  group health plan and health insurance
                                                                                                          covering some, but not all, contraceptive             convictions, supports the Departments’
                                                  coverage provided in connection with a
                                                                                                          items would be exempt with respect to                 decision to expand the Federal
                                                  group health plan’’ is exempt ‘‘to the
                                                                                                          the items to which they object, but not               exemption concerning this Mandate as
                                                  extent the plan sponsor objects as
                                                                                                          with respect to the items to which they               set forth in these interim final rules.
                                                  specified in paragraph (a)(2),’’ exempt
                                                                                                          do not object. Likewise, the requisite                  Section 147.133(a)(1)(i)(A) of the rules
                                                  the group health plans the sponsors of
                                                                                                          objection of a plan sponsor or                        specifies that the exemption includes
                                                  which object, and exempt their health
                                                                                                          institution of higher education in                    the plans of a plan sponsor that is a
                                                  insurance issuers in providing the
                                                                                                          § 147.133(a)(1)(i) and (ii) exempts its               nonprofit organization with sincerely
                                                  coverage in those plans (whether or not
                                                                                                          group health plan, health insurance                   held moral convictions.
                                                  the issuers have their own objections).
                                                                                                          coverage offered by a health insurance                  Section 147.133(a)(1)(i)(B) of the rules
                                                  Consequently, with respect to
                                                                                                          issuer in connection with such plan,                  specifies that the exemption includes
                                                  Guidelines issued under
                                                                                                          and its issuer in its offering of such                the plans of a plan sponsor that is a for-
                                                  § 147.130(a)(1)(iv), or the parallel
                                                                                                          coverage, but that exemption does not                 profit entity that has no publicly traded
                                                  provisions in 26 CFR 54.9815–
                                                                                                          extend to coverage provided by that                   ownership interests (for this purpose, a
                                                  2713T(a)(1)(iv) and 29 CFR 2590.715–
                                                                                                          issuer to other group health plans where              publicly traded ownership interest is
                                                  2713(a)(1)(iv), the plan sponsor, issuer,
                                                                                                          the plan sponsors have no qualifying                  any class of common equity securities
                                                  and plan covered in the exemption of
                                                                                                          objection. The objection of a health                  required to be registered under section
                                                  that paragraph would face no penalty as
                                                                                                          insurance issuer in § 147.133(a)(1)(iii)              12 of the Securities Exchange Act of
                                                  a result of omitting contraceptive
                                                                                                          similarly operates only to the extent of              1934).
                                                  coverage from the benefits of the plan
                                                                                                          its objection, and as otherwise limited                 Extending the exemption to certain
                                                  participants and beneficiaries.
                                                                                                          as described below.                                   for-profit entities is consistent with the
                                                     Consistent with the restated
                                                                                                                                                                Supreme Court’s ruling in Hobby Lobby,
                                                  exemption, exempt entities will not be                  2. Exemption of Certain Plan Sponsors
                                                                                                                                                                which declared that a corporate entity is
                                                  required to comply with a self-                            The rules cover certain kinds of non-              capable of possessing and pursuing non-
                                                  certification process. Although exempt                  governmental employer plan sponsors                   pecuniary goals (in Hobby Lobby,
                                                  entities do not need to file notices or                 with the requisite objections, and the                religion), regardless of whether the
                                                  certifications of their exemption, and                  rules specify which kinds of entities                 entity operates as a nonprofit
                                                  these interim final rules do not impose                 qualify for the exemption.                            organization, and rejecting the
                                                  any new notice requirements on them,                       Under these interim final rules, the
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                                                  existing ERISA rules governing group                    Departments do not limit the exemption                   33 See Guttmacher Institute, ‘‘Insurance Coverage
                                                  health plans require that, with respect to                                                                    of Contraceptives’’ (Aug. 1, 2017), available at
                                                  plans subject to ERISA, a plan                            32 See, for example, 29 U.S.C. 1022, 1024(b), 29    https://www.guttmacher.org/state-policy/explore/
                                                  document must include a                                 CFR 2520.102–2, 2520.102–3, & 2520.104b–3(d),         insurance-coverage-contraceptives.
                                                  comprehensive summary of the benefits                   and 29 CFR 2590.715–2715. See also 45 CFR                34 See, for example, Guttmacher Institute,

                                                                                                          147.200 (requiring disclosure of the ‘‘exceptions,    ‘‘Refusing to Provide Health Services’’ (Aug. 1,
                                                  covered by the plan and a statement of                  reductions, and limitations of the coverage,’’        2017), available at https://www.guttmacher.org/
                                                  the conditions for eligibility to receive               including group health plans and group &              state-policy/explore/refusing-provide-health-
                                                  benefits. Under ERISA, the plan                         individual issuers).                                  services.



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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                 47851

                                                  Departments’ argument to the contrary.                  whether the exemption in                              furnished for the purpose of causing or
                                                  134 S. Ct. 2768–75. Some reports and                    § 147.133(a)(1)(i) for plan sponsors with             assisting in causing assisted suicide,
                                                  industry experts have indicated that not                moral objections to the Mandate should                euthanasia, or mercy killing, and the
                                                  many for-profit entities beyond those                   be finalized to encompass all of the                  statute similarly does not limit those
                                                  that had originally brought suit have                   types of plan sponsors covered by                     protections based on whether the entity
                                                  sought relief from the Mandate after                    § 147.132(a)(1)(i), including publicly                is publicly traded or governmental. (42
                                                  Hobby Lobby.35 The mechanisms for                       traded corporations with objections                   U.S.C. 18113).38
                                                  determining whether a company has                       based on sincerely held moral                            Sections 1395w–22(j)(3)(B) and
                                                  adopted and holds certain principles or                 convictions, and also non-federal                     1396u–2(b)(3) of 42 U.S.C. protect
                                                  views, such as sincerely held moral                     governmental plan sponsors that may                   organizations that offer Medicaid and
                                                  convictions, is a matter of well-                       have objections based on sincerely held               Medicare Advantage managed care
                                                  established State law with respect to                   moral convictions.                                    plans from being required to provide,
                                                  corporate decision-making,36 and the                       In the case of particularly sensitive              reimburse for, or provide coverage of a
                                                  Departments expect that application of                  health care matters, several significant              counseling or referral service if they
                                                  such laws would cabin the scope of this                 federal health care conscience statutes               object to doing so on moral grounds,
                                                  exemption.                                              protect entities’ moral objections                    and those paragraphs do not further
                                                     The July 2015 final regulations                      without precluding publicly traded and                specify that publicly traded entities do
                                                  extended the accommodation to for-                      governmental entities from using those                not qualify for the protections. Congress’
                                                  profit entities only if they are closely                protections. For example, the first                   most recent statement on Government
                                                  held, by positively defining what                       paragraph of the Church Amendments                    requirements of contraceptive coverage
                                                  constitutes a closely held entity. Any                  provides certain protections for entities             specified that, if the District of
                                                  such positive definition runs up against                that object based on moral convictions                Columbia requires ‘‘the provision of
                                                  the myriad state differences in defining                to making their facilities or personnel               contraceptive coverage by health
                                                  such entities, and potentially intrudes                 available to assist in the performance of             insurance plans,’’ ‘‘it is the intent of
                                                  into a traditional area of state regulation             abortions or sterilizations, and the                  Congress that any legislation enacted on
                                                  of business organizations. The                          statute does not limit those protections              such issue should include a ‘conscience
                                                  Departments implicitly recognized the                   based on whether the entities are                     clause’ which provides exceptions for
                                                  difficulty of defining closely held                     publicly traded or governmental. (42                  religious beliefs and moral convictions.’’
                                                  entities in the July 2015 final                         U.S.C. 300a–7(b)). Thus, under section                Consolidated Appropriations Act of
                                                  regulations when we adopted a                           300a–7(b), a hospital in a publicly                   2017, Division C, Title VIII, Sec. 808.
                                                  definition that included entities that are              traded health system, or a local                      Congress expressed no intent that such
                                                  merely ‘‘substantially similar’’ to certain             governmental hospital, could adopt                    a conscience should be limited based on
                                                  specified parameters, and we allowed                    sincerely held moral convictions by                   whether the entity is publicly traded.
                                                  entities that were not sure if they met                 which it objects to providing facilities or              At the same time, the Departments
                                                  the definition to inquire with HHS; HHS                 personnel for abortions or sterilizations,            lack significant information about the
                                                  was permitted to decline to answer the                  and if the entity receives relevant funds             need to extend the expanded exemption
                                                  inquiry, at which time the entity would                 from HHS specified by section 300a–                   further. We have been subjected to
                                                  be deemed to qualify as an eligible                     7(b), the protections of that section                 litigation by nonprofit entities
                                                  organization. Instead of attempting to                  would apply. The Coats-Snowe                          expressing objections to the Mandate
                                                  positively define closely held                          Amendment likewise provides certain                   based on non-religious moral
                                                  businesses for the purpose of this rule,                protections for health care entities and              convictions, and we have been sued by
                                                  the Departments consider it much more                   postgraduate physician training                       closely held for-profit entities
                                                  clear, effective, and preferable to define              programs that choose not to perform,                  expressing religious objections. This
                                                  the category negatively by reference to                 refer for, or provide training for                    combination of different types of
                                                  one element of our previous definition,                 abortions, and the statute does not limit             plaintiffs leads us to believe that there
                                                  namely, that the entity has no publicly                 those protections based on whether the                may be a small number of closely held
                                                  traded ownership interest (that is, any                 entities are publicly traded or                       for-profit entities that would seek to use
                                                  class of common equity securities                       governmental. (42 U.S.C. 238n).                       an exemption to the contraceptive
                                                  required to be registered under section                    The Weldon Amendment 37 provides                   Mandate based on moral convictions.
                                                  12 of the Securities Exchange Act of                    certain protections for health care                   The fact that many closely held for-
                                                  1934).                                                  entities, hospitals, provider-sponsored               profit entities brought challenges to the
                                                     In this way, these interim final rules               organizations, health maintenance                     Mandate has led us to offer protections
                                                  differ from the exemption provided to                   organizations, and health insurance                   that would include publicly traded
                                                  plan sponsors with objections based on                  plans that do not provide, pay for,                   entities with religious objections to the
                                                  sincerely held religious beliefs set forth              provide coverage of, or refer for                     Mandate if such entities exist. But the
                                                  in § 147.132(a)(1)—those extend to for-                 abortions, and the statute does not limit             combined lack of any lawsuits
                                                  profit entities whether or not they are                 those protections based on whether the                challenging the Mandate by for-profit
                                                  closely held or publicly traded. The                    entity is publicly traded or                          entities with non-religious moral
                                                  Departments seek public comment on                      governmental. The Affordable Care Act                 convictions, and of any lawsuits by any
                                                                                                          provides certain protections for any                  kind of publicly traded entity, leads us
                                                    35 See Jennifer Haberkorn, ‘‘Two years later, few
                                                                                                          institutional health care entity, hospital,           to not extend the expanded exemption
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                                                  Hobby Lobby copycats emerge,’’ Politico (Oct. 11,                                                             in these interim final rules to publicly
                                                  2016), available at http://www.politico.com/story/      provider-sponsored organization, health
                                                  2016/10/obamacare-birth-control-mandate-                maintenance organization, health                      traded entities, but rather to invite
                                                  employers-229627.                                       insurance plan, or any other kind of                  public comment on whether to do so in
                                                    36 Although the Departments do not prescribe any
                                                                                                          health care facility, that does not
                                                  form or notification, they would expect that such                                                               38 The lack of the limitation in this provision may

                                                  principles or views would have been adopted and
                                                                                                          provide any health care item or service               be particularly relevant since it is contained in the
                                                  documented in accordance with the laws of the                                                                 same statute, the ACA, as the provision under
                                                  jurisdiction under which they are incorporated or         37 Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2017, Div.    which the Mandate—and these exemptions to the
                                                  organized.                                              H, Title V, Sec. 507(d), Pub. L. 115–31.              Mandate—are promulgated.



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                                                  47852             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  a way parallel to the protections set                   accommodation process does not                        4. Exemption for Issuers
                                                  forth in § 147.132(a)(1)(i). We agree with              actually accommodate the objections of                   These interim final rules extend the
                                                  the Supreme Court that it is improbable                 many entities. This has led many                      exemption, in § 147.133(a)(1)(iii), to
                                                  that many publicly traded companies                     religious groups to challenge the                     health insurance issuers offering group
                                                  with numerous ‘‘unrelated                               accommodation in court, and we expect                 or individual health insurance coverage
                                                  shareholders—including institutional                    similar challenges would come from                    that sincerely hold their own moral
                                                  investors with their own set of                         organizations objecting to the                        convictions opposed to providing
                                                  stakeholders—would agree to run a                       accommodation based on moral                          coverage for contraceptive services.
                                                  corporation under the same religious                    convictions if we offered them the                       As discussed above, where the
                                                  beliefs’’ (or moral convictions) and                    accommodation but not an exemption.                   exemption for plan sponsors or
                                                  thereby qualify for the exemption.                      When we took that narrow approach                     institutions of higher education applies,
                                                  Hobby Lobby, 134 S. Ct. at 2774. We are                 with religious nonprofit entities it led to           issuers are exempt under those sections
                                                  also not aware of other types of plan                                                                         with respect to providing coverage in
                                                                                                          multiple cases in many courts that we
                                                  sponsors (such as non-Federal                                                                                 those plans. The issuer exemption in
                                                                                                          needed to litigate to the Supreme Court
                                                  governmental entities) that might                                                                             § 147.133(a)(1)(iii) adds to that
                                                  possess moral objections to compliance                  various times. Although objections to
                                                                                                          the accommodation were not                            protection, but the additional protection
                                                  with the Mandate, including whether                                                                           operates in a different way than the plan
                                                  some might consider certain                             specifically litigated in the two cases
                                                                                                          brought by nonprofit non-religious                    sponsor exemption operates. The only
                                                  contraceptive methods as having a
                                                                                                          organizations (because we have not even               plan sponsors, or in the case of
                                                  possible abortifacient effect.
                                                                                                          made them eligible for the                            individual insurance coverage,
                                                  Nevertheless, we would welcome any
                                                                                                          accommodation), those organizations                   individuals, who are eligible to
                                                  comments on whether such
                                                                                                          made it clear that they and their                     purchase or enroll in health insurance
                                                  corporations or other plan sponsors
                                                                                                          employees strongly oppose coverage of                 coverage offered by an exempt issuer
                                                  exist and would benefit from such an
                                                                                                          certain contraceptives in their plans and             that does not cover some or all
                                                  exemption.
                                                     Despite our a lack of complete                       in connection with their plans.                       contraceptive services are plan sponsors
                                                  information, the Departments know that                                                                        or individuals who themselves object
                                                  nonprofit entities have challenged the                  3. Exemption for Institutions of Higher               and are otherwise exempt based on their
                                                  Mandate, and we assume that a closely                   Education                                             objection (whether the objection is
                                                  held business might wish to assert non-                                                                       based on moral convictions, as set forth
                                                                                                            The plans of institutions of higher                 in these rules, or on religious beliefs, as
                                                  religious moral convictions in objecting                education that arrange student health
                                                  to the Mandate (although we anticipate                                                                        set forth in exemptions created by the
                                                                                                          insurance coverage will be treated                    companion interim final rules published
                                                  very few if any will do so). Thus we
                                                                                                          similarly to the way that plans of                    elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
                                                  have chosen in these interim final rules
                                                  to include them in the expanded                         employers are treated for the purposes                Register). Thus, the issuer exemption
                                                  exemption and thereby remove an                         of such plans being exempt or                         specifies that where a health insurance
                                                  obstacle preventing such entities from                  accommodated based on moral                           issuer providing group health insurance
                                                  claiming an exemption based on non-                     convictions. These interim final rules                coverage is exempt under paragraph
                                                  religious moral convictions. But we are                 specify, in § 147.133(a)(1)(ii), that the             (a)(1)(iii), the plan remains subject to
                                                  less certain that we need to use these                  exemption is extended, in the case of                 any requirement to provide coverage for
                                                  interim final rules to extend the                       institutions of higher education (as                  contraceptive services under Guidelines
                                                  expanded exemption for moral                            defined in 20 U.S.C. 1002), to their                  issued under § 147.130(a)(1)(iv) unless
                                                  convictions to encompass other kinds of                 arrangement of student health insurance               the plan is otherwise exempt from that
                                                  plan sponsors not included in the                       coverage, in a manner comparable to the               requirement. Accordingly, the only plan
                                                  protections of these interim final rules.               applicability of the exemption for group              sponsors, or in the case of individual
                                                  Therefore, with respect to plan sponsors                health insurance coverage provided in                 insurance coverage, individuals, who
                                                  not included in the expanded                            connection with a group health plan                   are eligible to purchase or enroll in
                                                  exemptions of § 147.133(a)(1)(i), and                   established or maintained by a plan                   health insurance coverage offered by an
                                                  non-federal governmental plan sponsors                  sponsor.                                              issuer that is exempt under this
                                                  that might have moral objections to the                                                                       paragraph (a)(1)(iii) that does not
                                                                                                            The Departments are not aware of                    include some or all contraceptive
                                                  Mandate, we invite public comment on                    institutions of higher education that
                                                  whether to include such entities when                                                                         services are plan sponsors or
                                                                                                          arrange student coverage and object to                individuals who themselves object and
                                                  we finalize these rules at a later date.
                                                     The Departments further conclude                     the Mandate based on non-religious                    are exempt.
                                                  that it would be inadequate to merely                   moral convictions. We have been sued                     Under the rules as amended, issuers
                                                  provide entities access to the                          by several institutions of higher                     with objections based on sincerely held
                                                  accommodation process instead of to                     education that arrange student coverage               moral convictions could issue policies
                                                  the exemption where those entities                      and object to the Mandate based on                    that omit contraception to plan sponsors
                                                  object to the Mandate based on sincerely                religious beliefs. We believe the                     or individuals that are otherwise exempt
                                                  held moral convictions. The                             existence of such entities with non-                  based on either their religious beliefs or
                                                  Departments have stated in our                          religious moral objections, or the                    their moral convictions, and issuers
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                                                  regulations and court briefings that the                possible formation of such entities in                with sincerely held religious beliefs
                                                  existing accommodation with respect to                  the future, is sufficiently possible so               could likewise issue policies that omit
                                                  self-insured plans requires                             that we should provide protections for                contraception to plan sponsors or
                                                  contraceptive coverage as part of the                   them in these interim final rules. But                individuals that are otherwise exempt
                                                  same plan as the coverage provided by                   based on a lack of information about                  based on either their religious beliefs or
                                                  the employer, and operates in a way                     such entities, we assume that none will               their moral convictions.
                                                  ‘‘seamless’’ to those plans. As a result,               use the exemption concerning student                     Issuers that hold moral objections
                                                  in significant respects, the                            coverage at this time.                                should identify to plan sponsors the


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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                               47853

                                                  lack of contraceptive coverage in any                   elsewhere in this issue of the Federal                   This individual exemption allows
                                                  health insurance coverage being offered                 Register. The Departments solicit public              plan sponsors and issuers that do not
                                                  that is based on the issuer’s exemption,                comment; however, on whether there                    specifically object to contraceptive
                                                  and communicate the group health                        are situations where there may be an                  coverage to offer morally acceptable
                                                  plan’s independent obligation to                        additional need to provide distinct                   coverage to their participants or
                                                  provide contraceptive coverage, unless                  protections for third party                           subscribers who do object, while
                                                  the group health plan itself is exempt                  administrators that may have moral                    offering coverage that includes
                                                  under regulations governing the                         convictions implicated by the                         contraception to participants or
                                                  Mandate.                                                Mandate.39                                            subscribers who do not object. This
                                                     In this way, the issuer exemption                                                                          individual exemption can apply with
                                                  serves to protect objecting issuers both                5. Scope of Objections Needed for the                 respect to individuals in plans
                                                  from being asked or required to issue                   Objecting Entity Exemption                            sponsored by private employers or
                                                  policies that cover contraception in                       Exemptions for objecting entities                  governmental employers. For example,
                                                  violation of the issuers’ sincerely held                specify that they apply where the                     in one case brought against the
                                                  moral convictions, and from being asked                 entities object as specified in                       Departments, the State of Missouri
                                                  or required to issue policies that omit                 § 147.133(a)(2). That section specifies               enacted a law under which the State is
                                                  contraceptive coverage to non-exempt                    that exemptions for objecting entities                not permitted to discriminate against
                                                  entities or individuals, thus subjecting                will apply to the extent that an entity               insurance issuers that offer health plans
                                                  the issuers to potential liability if those             described in § 147.133(a)(1) objects to its           without coverage for contraception
                                                  plans are not exempt from the                           establishing, maintaining, providing,                 based on employees’ moral convictions,
                                                  Guidelines. At the same time, the issuer                offering, or arranging (as applicable) for            or against the individual employees
                                                  exemption will not serve to remove                      coverage, payments, or a plan that                    who accept such offers. See Wieland,
                                                  contraceptive coverage obligations from                 provides coverage or payments for some                196 F. Supp. 3d at 1015–16 (quoting
                                                  any plan or plan sponsor that is not also               or all contraceptive services, based on               Mo. Rev. Stat. 191.724). Under the
                                                  exempt, nor will it prevent other issuers               its sincerely held moral convictions.                 individual exemption of these interim
                                                  from being required to provide                                                                                final rules, employers sponsoring
                                                  contraceptive coverage in individual                    6. Individual Exemption                               governmental plans would be free to
                                                  insurance coverage. Protecting issuers                     These interim final rules include a                honor the sincerely held moral
                                                  that object to offering contraceptive                   special rule pertaining to individuals                objections of individual employees by
                                                  coverage based on sincerely held moral                  (referred to here as the ‘‘individual                 offering them plans that omit
                                                  convictions will help preserve space in                 exemption’’). Section 147.133(b)                      contraception, even if those
                                                  the health insurance market for certain                 provides that nothing in                              governmental entities do not object to
                                                  issuers so that exempt plan sponsors                    § 147.130(a)(1)(iv), 26 CFR 54.9815–                  offering contraceptive coverage in
                                                  and individuals will be able to obtain                  2713T(a)(1)(iv) and 29 CFR 2590.715–                  general.
                                                  coverage.                                               2713(a)(1)(iv), may be construed to                      This ‘‘individual exemption’’ cannot
                                                     The Departments are not currently                    prevent a willing plan sponsor of a                   be used to force a plan (or its sponsor)
                                                  aware of health insurance issuers that                  group health plan and/or a willing                    or an issuer to provide coverage
                                                  possess their own religious or moral                    health insurance issuer offering group or             omitting contraception, or, with respect
                                                  objections to offering contraceptive                    individual health insurance coverage,                 to health insurance coverage, to prevent
                                                  coverage. Nevertheless, many Federal                    from offering a separate benefit package              the application of state law that requires
                                                  health care conscience laws and                         option, or a separate policy, certificate,            coverage of such contraceptives or
                                                  regulations protect issuers or plans                    or contract of insurance, to any                      sterilization. Nor can the individual
                                                  specifically. For example, as discussed                                                                       exemption be construed to require the
                                                                                                          individual who objects to coverage or
                                                  above, 42 U.S.C. 1395w–22(j)(3)(B) and                                                                        guaranteed availability of coverage
                                                                                                          payments for some or all contraceptive
                                                  1396u–2(b)(3) protect plans or managed                                                                        omitting contraception to a plan sponsor
                                                                                                          services based on the individual’s
                                                  care organizations in Medicaid or                                                                             or individual who does not have a
                                                                                                          sincerely held moral convictions. The
                                                  Medicare Advantage. The Weldon                                                                                sincerely held moral objection. This
                                                                                                          individual exemption extends to the
                                                  Amendment protects HMOs, health                                                                               individual exemption is limited to the
                                                                                                          coverage unit in which the plan
                                                  insurance plans, and any other health                                                                         requirement to provide contraceptive
                                                                                                          participant, or subscriber in the
                                                  care organizations from being required                                                                        coverage under section 2713(a)(4) of the
                                                                                                          individual market, is enrolled (for
                                                  to provide coverage or pay for abortions.                                                                     PHS Act, and does not affect any other
                                                                                                          instance, to family coverage covering
                                                  See, for example, Consolidated                                                                                federal or state law governing the plan
                                                  Appropriations Act of 2017, Div. H,                     the participant and his or her
                                                                                                          beneficiaries enrolled under the plan),               or coverage. Thus, if there are other
                                                  Title V, Sec. 507(d), Public Law 115–31.                                                                      applicable laws or plan terms governing
                                                  The most recently enacted Consolidated                  but does not relieve the plan’s or
                                                                                                          issuer’s obligation to comply with the                the benefits, these interim final rules do
                                                  Appropriations Act declares that
                                                                                                          Mandate with respect to the group                     not affect such other laws or terms.
                                                  Congress supports a ‘‘conscience                                                                                 The Departments believe the
                                                  clause’’ to protect moral convictions                   health plan at large or, as applicable, to
                                                                                                          any other individual policies the issuer              individual exemption will help to meet
                                                  concerning ‘‘the provision of                                                                                 the Affordable Care Act’s goal of
                                                  contraceptive coverage by health                        offers.
                                                                                                                                                                increasing health coverage because it
                                                  insurance plans.’’ See id. at Div. C, Title                                                                   will reduce the incidence of certain
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                                                                                                            39 The exemption for issuers, as outlined here,
                                                  VIII, Sec. 808.                                                                                               individuals choosing to forego health
                                                                                                          does not make a distinction among issuers based on
                                                     The issuer exemption does not                        whether they are publicly traded, unlike the plan     coverage because the only coverage
                                                  specifically include third party                        sponsor exemption for business entities. Because      available would violate their sincerely
                                                  administrators, for the reasons                         the issuer exemption operates more narrowly than
                                                                                                          the exemption for business plan sponsors operates,    held moral convictions.40 At the same
                                                  discussed in the companion interim
                                                                                                          in the ways described here, and exists in part to
                                                  final rules concerning religious beliefs                help preserve market options for objecting plan         40 This prospect has been raised in cases of
                                                  issued contemporaneously with these                     sponsors, the Departments consider it appropriate     religious individuals—see, for example, Wieland,
                                                  interim final rules and published                       to not draw such a distinction among issuers.                                                   Continued




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                                                  47854               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  time, this individual exemption ‘‘does                    on moral bases from those who object                 section 2713(a) and (a)(4) of the PHS
                                                  not undermine the governmental                            on religious bases. That is, a willing               Act, contained in 26 CFR 54.9815–
                                                  interests furthered by the contraceptive                  employer or issuer may offer the same                2713T(a)(1) introductory text and
                                                  coverage requirement,’’ 41 because,                       benefit package option or policy,                    (a)(1)(iv), 29 CFR 2590.715–2713(a)(1)
                                                  when the exemption is applicable, the                     certificate, or contract of insurance—               introductory text and (a)(1)(iv), and 45
                                                  individual does not want the coverage,                    which excludes the same scope of some                CFR 147.130(a)(1) and (a)(1)(iv).
                                                  and therefore would not use the                           or all contraceptive coverage—to
                                                                                                                                                                 9. Conclusion
                                                  objectionable items even if they were                     individuals who are exempt from the
                                                  covered. In addition, because the                         Mandate because of their moral                          The Departments believe that the
                                                  individual exemption only operates                        convictions (under these rules) or their             Guidelines, and the expanded
                                                  when the employer and/or issuer, as                       religious beliefs (under the regulations             exemptions and accommodations set
                                                  applicable, are willing, the exemption                    as amended by the interim final rules                forth in these interim final rules, will
                                                  will not undermine any governmental                       pertaining to religious beliefs).                    advance the legitimate but limited
                                                  interest in the workability of the                                                                             purposes for which Congress imposed
                                                                                                            7. Optional Accommodation                            section 2713 of the PHS Act, while
                                                  insurance market, because we expect
                                                  that any workability concerns will be                        In addition to expanding the                      acting consistently with Congress’ well-
                                                  taken into account in the decision of                     exemption to those with sincerely held               established record of allowing for moral
                                                  whether to be willing to offer the                        moral convictions, these rules also                  exemptions with respect to various
                                                  individual morally acceptable coverage.                   expand eligibility for the optional                  health care matters. These interim final
                                                     For similar reasons, we have changed                   accommodation process to include                     rules maintain HRSA’s discretion to
                                                  our position and now believe the                          employers with objections based on                   decide whether to continue to require
                                                  individual exemption will not                             sincerely held moral convictions. This               contraceptive coverage under the
                                                  undermine any Government interest in                      is accomplished by inserting references              Guidelines if no regulatorily recognized
                                                  uniformity in the health insurance                        to the newly added exemption for moral               exemption exists (and in plans where
                                                  market. At the level of plan offerings,                   convictions, 45 CFR 147.133, into the                Congress applied section 2713 of the
                                                  the extent to which plans cover                           regulatory sections where the                        PHS Act). As cited above, these interim
                                                  contraception under the prior rules is                    accommodation process is codified, 45                final rules also leave fully in place over
                                                  already far from uniform. The Congress                    CFR 147.131, 26 CFR 54.9815–2713AT,                  a dozen Federal programs that provide,
                                                  did not require compliance with section                   and 29 CFR 2590.715–2713A. In all                    or subsidize, contraceptives for women,
                                                  2713 of the PHS Act by all entities—in                    other respects the accommodation                     including for low income women based
                                                  particular by grandfathered plans. The                    process works the same as it does for                on financial need. The Departments
                                                  Departments’ previous exemption for                       entities with objections based on                    believe this array of programs and
                                                  houses of worship and integrated                          sincerely held religious beliefs, as                 requirements better serves the interests
                                                  auxiliaries, and our accommodation of                     described in the companion interim                   of providing contraceptive coverage
                                                  self-insured church plans, show that the                  final rules concerning religious beliefs             while protecting the moral convictions
                                                  importance of a uniform health                            issued contemporaneously with these                  of entities and individuals concerning
                                                  insurance system is not significantly                     interim final rules and published                    coverage of some or all contraceptive or
                                                  harmed by allowing plans to omit                          elsewhere in this issue of the Federal               sterilization services.
                                                  contraception in many contexts.42                         Register.                                               The Departments request and
                                                     With respect to operationalizing this                     The Departments are not aware of                  encourage public comments on all
                                                  provision of these rules, as well as the                  entities with objections to the Mandate              matters addressed in these interim final
                                                  similar provision protecting individuals                  based on sincerely held moral                        rules.
                                                  with religious objections to purchasing                   convictions that wish to make use of the
                                                                                                            optional accommodation, and our                      IV. Interim Final Rules, Request for
                                                  insurance that covers some or all
                                                                                                            present assumption is that no such                   Comments and Waiver of Delay of
                                                  contraceptives, in the interim final rules
                                                                                                            entities will seek to use the                        Effective Date
                                                  published elsewhere in this issue of the
                                                  Federal Register, the Departments note                    accommodation rather than the                           Section 9833 of the Code, section 734
                                                  that a plan sponsor or health insurance                   exemption. But if such entities do wish              of ERISA, and section 2792 of the PHS
                                                  issuer is not required to offer separate                  to use the accommodation, making it                  Act authorize the Secretaries of the
                                                  and different benefit package options, or                 available to them will both provide                  Treasury, Labor, and HHS (collectively,
                                                  separate and different forms of policy,                   contraceptive coverage to their plan                 the Secretaries) to promulgate any
                                                  certificate, or contract of insurance with                participants and respect those entities’             interim final rules that they determine
                                                  respect to those individuals who object                   objections. Because entities with                    are appropriate to carry out the
                                                                                                            objections to the Mandate based on                   provisions of chapter 100 of the Code,
                                                  196 F. Supp. 3d at 1017, and March for Life, 128          sincerely held non-religious moral                   part 7 of subtitle B of title I of ERISA,
                                                  F. Supp. 3d at 130—where the courts noted that the        convictions have not previously had                  and part A of title XXVII of the PHS Act,
                                                  individual employee plaintiffs indicated that they                                                             which include sections 2701 through
                                                  viewed the Mandate as pressuring them to ‘‘forgo
                                                                                                            access to the accommodation, they
                                                  health insurance altogether.’’                            would not be in a position to revoke                 2728 of the PHS Act and the
                                                     41 78 FR 39874.                                        their use of the accommodation at the                incorporation of those sections into
                                                     42 See also Real Alternatives, 2017 WL 3324690         time these interim final rules are issued,           section 715 of ERISA and section 9815
                                                  at *36 (3d Cir. Aug. 4, 2017) (Jordan, J., concurring     but could do so in the future under the              of the Code. These interim final rules
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                                                  in part and dissenting in part) (‘‘Because insurance                                                           fall under those statutory authorized
                                                  companies would offer such plans as a result of
                                                                                                            same parameters set forth in the
                                                  market forces, doing so would not undermine the           accommodation regulations.                           justifications, as did previous rules on
                                                  government’s interest in a sustainable and                                                                     this matter (75 FR 41726; 76 FR 46621;
                                                  functioning market. . . . Because the government          8. Regulatory Restatements of Section                and 79 FR 51092).
                                                  has failed to demonstrate why allowing such a             2713(a) and (a)(4) of the PHS Act                       Section 553(b) of the APA requires
                                                  system (not unlike the one that allowed wider
                                                  choice before the ACA) would be unworkable, it has
                                                                                                               These interim final rules insert                  notice and comment rulemaking,
                                                  not satisfied strict scrutiny.’’ (citation and internal   references to 45 CFR 147.133 into the                involving a notice of proposed
                                                  quotation marks omitted)).                                restatements of the requirements of                  rulemaking and a comment period prior


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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                               47855

                                                  to finalization of regulatory                           serious disincentive—indeed a crisis of               that the exemptions be expanded to
                                                  requirements—except when an agency,                     conscience—between participating in or                include those who oppose the Mandate
                                                  for good cause, finds that notice and                   providing quality and affordable health               for either religious or ‘‘moral’’ reasons.45
                                                  public comment thereon are                              insurance coverage and being forced to                In connection with past regulations, the
                                                  impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary                 violate their sincerely held moral                    Departments have offered or expanded a
                                                  to the public interest. These provisions                convictions. The existence of                         temporary safe harbor allowing
                                                  of the APA do not apply here because                    inconsistent court rulings in multiple                organizations that were not exempt from
                                                  of the specific authority granted to the                proceedings has also caused confusion                 the HRSA Guidelines to operate out of
                                                  Secretaries by section 9833 of the Code,                and uncertainty that has extended for                 compliance with the Guidelines. The
                                                  section 734 of ERISA, and section 2792                  several years, with different federal                 Departments will fully consider
                                                  of the PHS Act.                                         courts taking different positions on                  comments submitted in response to
                                                     Even if these provisions of the APA                  whether entities with moral objections                these interim final rules, but believe that
                                                  applied, they would be satisfied: The                   are entitled to relief from the Mandate.              good cause exists to issue the rules on
                                                  Departments have determined that it                     Delaying the availability of the                      an interim final basis before the
                                                  would be impracticable and contrary to                  expanded exemption would require                      comments are submitted and reviewed.
                                                  the public interest to delay putting these              entities to bear these burdens for many               Issuing interim final rules with a
                                                  provisions in place until a full public                 more months. Continuing to apply the                  comment period provides the public
                                                  notice-and-comment process is                           Mandate’s regulatory burden on                        with an opportunity to comment on
                                                  completed. As discussed earlier, the                    individuals and organizations with                    whether these regulations expanding the
                                                  Departments have issued three interim                   moral convictions objecting to                        exemption should be made permanent
                                                  final rules implementing this section of                compliance with the Mandate also                      or subject to modification without
                                                  the PHS Act because of the immediate                    serves as a deterrent for citizens who                delaying the effective date of the
                                                  needs of covered entities and the                       might consider forming new entities                   regulations.
                                                  weighty matters implicated by the                       consistent with their moral convictions                  As the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
                                                  HRSA Guidelines. As recently as                         and offering health insurance through                 D.C. Circuit stated with respect to an
                                                  December 20, 2016, HRSA updated                         those entities.                                       earlier IFR promulgated with respect to
                                                  those Guidelines without engaging in                       Moreover, we separately expanded                   this issue in Priests for Life v. U.S.
                                                  the regulatory process (because doing so                exemptions to protect religious beliefs               Department of Health and Human
                                                  is not a legal requirement), and                        in the companion interim final rules                  Services, 772 F.3d 229, 276 (D.C. Cir.
                                                  announced that it plans to so continue                  issued contemporaneously with these                   2014), vacated on other grounds, Zubik
                                                  to update the Guidelines.                               interim final rules and published                     v. Burwell, 136 S. Ct. 1557 (2016),
                                                     Two lawsuits have been pending for                   elsewhere in this issue of the Federal                ‘‘[S]everal reasons support HHS’s
                                                  several years by entities raising non-                  Register. Because Congress has                        decision not to engage in notice and
                                                  religious moral objections to the                       provided many statutes that protect                   comment here.’’ Among other things,
                                                  Mandate.43 In one of those cases, the                   religious beliefs and moral convictions               the Court noted that ‘‘the agency made
                                                  Departments are subject to a permanent                  similarly in certain health care contexts,            a good cause finding in the rule it
                                                  injunction and the appeal of that case                  it is important not to delay the                      issued’’; that ‘‘the regulations the
                                                  has been stayed since February 2016. In                 expansion of exemptions for moral                     interim final rule modifies were recently
                                                  the other case, Federal district and                    convictions set forth in these rules,                 enacted pursuant to notice and
                                                  appeals courts ruled in favor of the                    since the companion rules provide                     comment rulemaking, and presented
                                                  Departments, denying injunctive relief                  protections for religious beliefs on an               virtually identical issues’’; that ‘‘HHS
                                                  to the plaintiffs, and that case is also                interim final basis. Otherwise, our                   will expose its interim rule to notice
                                                  still pending. Based on the public                      regulations would simultaneously                      and comment before its permanent
                                                  comments the Departments have                           provide and deny relief to entities and               implementation’’; and that not
                                                  received, we have reason to believe that                individuals that are, in the Departments’             proceeding under interim final rules
                                                  some similar nonprofit entities might                   view, similarly deserving of exemptions               would ‘‘delay the implementation of the
                                                  exist, even if it is likely a small                     and accommodations consistent, with                   alternative opt-out for religious
                                                  number.44                                               similar protections in other federal laws.
                                                                                                                                                                objectors.’’ Id. at 277. Similarly, not
                                                     For entities and individuals facing a                This could cause similarly situated
                                                                                                                                                                proceeding with exemptions and
                                                  burden on their sincerely held moral                    entities and individuals to be burdened
                                                                                                                                                                accommodations for moral objectors
                                                  convictions, providing them relief from                 unequally.
                                                                                                             In response to several of the previous             here would delay the implementation of
                                                  Government regulations that impose                                                                            those alternative opt-outs for moral
                                                  such a burden is an important and                       rules on this issue—including three
                                                                                                          issued as interim final rules under the               objectors.
                                                  urgent matter, and delay in doing so                                                                             Delaying the availability of the
                                                  injures those entities in ways that                     statutory authority cited above—the
                                                                                                                                                                expanded exemption could also
                                                  cannot be repaired retroactively. The                   Departments received more than
                                                                                                                                                                increase the costs of health insurance
                                                                                                          100,000 public comments on multiple
                                                  burdens of the existing rules undermine                                                                       for some entities. As reflected in
                                                                                                          occasions. Those comments included
                                                  these entities’ and individuals’                                                                              litigation pertaining to the Mandate,
                                                                                                          extensive discussion about whether and
                                                  participation in the health care market                                                                       some entities are in grandfathered
                                                                                                          to what extent to expand the exemption.
                                                  because they provide them with a                                                                              health plans that do not cover
                                                                                                          Most recently, on July 26, 2016, the
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                                                     43 March for Life, 128 F. Supp. 3d 116; Real
                                                                                                          Departments issued a request for                        45 See, for example, http://www.regulations.gov/
                                                  Alternatives, 867 F.3d 338.                             information (81 FR 47741) and received                #!documentDetail;D=HHS-OS-2011-0023-59496,
                                                     44 See, for example, Americans United for Life       over 54,000 public comments about                     http://www.regulations.gov/
                                                  (‘‘AUL’’) Comment on CMA–9992–IFC2 at 10 (Nov.          different possible ways to resolve these              #!documentDetail;D=CMS-2012-0031-79115,
                                                  1, 2011), available at http://www.regulations.gov/      issues. As noted above, the public                    https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-
                                                  #!documentDetail;D=HHS-OS-2011-0023-59496,                                                                    2016-0123-54142, https://www.regulations.gov/
                                                  and AUL Comment on CMS–9968–P at 5 (Apr. 8,
                                                                                                          comments in response to both the RFI                  document?D=CMS-2016-0123-54218, and https://
                                                  2013), available at http://www.regulations.gov/         and various prior rulemaking                          www.regulations.gov/document?D=CMS-2016-0123-
                                                  #!documentDetail;D=CMS-2012-0031-79115.                 proceedings included specific requests                46220.



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                                                  47856             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  contraception. As such, they may wish                   Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)                      Executive Order 12866. However, OMB
                                                  to make changes to their health plans                   (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354,                  has determined that the actions are
                                                  that will reduce the costs of insurance                 section 1102(b) of the Social Security                significant within the meaning of
                                                  coverage for their beneficiaries or                     Act, section 202 of the Unfunded                      section 3(f)(4) of the Executive Order.
                                                  policyholders, but which would cause                    Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March                    Therefore, OMB has reviewed these
                                                  the plans to lose grandfathered status.                 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–4), Executive                   final regulations and the Departments
                                                  To the extent that entities with                        Order 13132 on Federalism (August 4,                  have provided the following assessment
                                                  objections to the Mandate based on                      1999), the Congressional Review Act (5                of their impact.
                                                  moral convictions but not religious                     U.S.C. 804(2) and Executive Order
                                                                                                                                                                1. Need for Regulatory Action
                                                  beliefs fall into this category, they may               13771 on Reducing Regulation and
                                                  be refraining from making those                         Controlling Regulatory Costs (January                    These interim final rules amend the
                                                  changes—and therefore may be                            30, 2017).                                            Departments’ July 2015 final regulations
                                                  continuing to incur and pass on higher                                                                        and do so in conjunction with the
                                                                                                          A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563—                  amendments made in the companion
                                                  insurance costs—to prevent the
                                                                                                          Department of HHS and Department of                   interim final rules concerning religious
                                                  Mandate from applying to their plans in
                                                                                                          Labor                                                 beliefs issued contemporaneously with
                                                  violation of their consciences. We are
                                                  not aware of the extent to which such                      Executive Orders 12866 and 13563                   these interim final rules and published
                                                  entities exist, but 17 percent of all                   direct agencies to assess all costs and               elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
                                                  covered workers are in grandfathered                    benefits of available regulatory                      Register. These interim final rules
                                                  health plans, encompassing tens of                      alternatives and, if regulation is                    expand the exemption from the
                                                  millions of people.46 Issuing these rules               necessary, to select regulatory                       requirement to provide coverage for
                                                  on an interim final basis reduces the                   approaches that maximize net benefits                 contraceptives and sterilization,
                                                  costs of health insurance and regulatory                (including potential economic,                        established under the HRSA Guidelines,
                                                  burdens for such entities and their plan                environmental, and public health and                  promulgated under section 2713(a)(4) of
                                                  participants.                                           safety effects; distributive impacts; and             the PHS Act, section 715(a)(1) of the
                                                     These interim final rules also expand                equity). Executive Order 13563                        ERISA, and section 9815(a)(1) of the
                                                  access to the optional accommodation                    emphasizes the importance of                          Code, to include certain entities and
                                                  process for certain entities with                       quantifying both costs and benefits,                  individuals with objections to
                                                  objections to the Mandate based on                      reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and                compliance with the Mandate based on
                                                  moral convictions. If entities exist that               promoting flexibility.                                sincerely held moral convictions, and
                                                  wish to use that process, the                              Section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866              they revise the accommodation process
                                                  Departments believe they should be able                 defines a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’           to make entities with such convictions
                                                  to do so without the delay that would                   as an action that is likely to result in a            eligible to use it. The expanded
                                                  be involved by not offering them the                    regulation: (1) Having an annual effect               exemption would apply to certain
                                                  optional accommodation process by use                   on the economy of $100 million or more                individuals, nonprofit entities,
                                                  of interim final rules. Proceeding                      in any 1 year, or adversely and                       institutions of higher education, issuers,
                                                  otherwise could delay the provision of                  materially affecting a sector of the                  and for-profit entities that do not have
                                                  contraceptive coverage to those entities’               economy, productivity, competition,                   publicly traded ownership interests,
                                                  employees.                                              jobs, the environment, public health or               that have a moral objection to providing
                                                     For the foregoing reasons, the                       safety, or State, local, or tribal                    coverage for some (or all) of the
                                                  Departments have determined that it                     governments or communities (also                      contraceptive and/or sterilization
                                                  would be impracticable and contrary to                  referred to as ‘‘economically                         services covered by the Guidelines.
                                                  the public interest to engage in full                   significant’’); (2) creating a serious                Such action is taken, among other
                                                  notice and comment rulemaking before                    inconsistency or otherwise interfering                reasons, to provide for conscientious
                                                  putting these interim final rules into                  with an action taken or planned by                    participation in the health insurance
                                                  effect, and that it is in the public interest           another agency; (3) materially altering               market free from penalties for violating
                                                  to promulgate interim final rules. For                  the budgetary impacts of entitlement                  sincerely held moral convictions
                                                  the same reasons, the Departments have                  grants, user fees, or loan programs or the            opposed to providing or receiving
                                                  determined, consistent with section                     rights and obligations of recipients                  coverage of contraceptive services, to
                                                  553(d) of the APA (5 U.S.C. 553(d)), that               thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or                resolve lawsuits that have been filed
                                                  there is good cause to make these                       policy issues arising out of legal                    against the Departments by some such
                                                  interim final rules effective immediately               mandates, the President’s priorities, or              entities, and to avoid similar legal
                                                  upon filing for public inspection at the                the principles set forth in the Executive             challenges.
                                                  Office of the Federal Register.                         Order.
                                                                                                             A regulatory impact analysis must be               2. Anticipated Effects
                                                  V. Economic Impact and Paperwork                        prepared for major rules with                            The Departments acknowledge that
                                                  Burden                                                  economically significant effects ($100                expanding the exemption to include
                                                    We have examined the impacts of the                   million or more in any one year), and                 objections based on moral convictions
                                                  interim final rules as required by                      an ‘‘economically significant’’                       might result in less insurance coverage
                                                  Executive Order 12866 on Regulatory                     regulatory action is subject to review by             of contraception for some women who
                                                  Planning and Review (September 30,                      the Office of Management and Budget                   may want the coverage. Although the
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                                                  1993), Executive Order 13563 on                         (OMB). As discussed below regarding                   Departments do not know the exact
                                                  Improving Regulation and Regulatory                     anticipated effects of these rules and the            scope of that effect attributable to the
                                                  Review (January 18, 2011), the                          Paperwork Reduction Act, these interim                moral exemption in these interim final
                                                                                                          final rules are not likely to have                    rules, they believe it to be small.
                                                    46 Kaiser Family Foundation & Health Research &
                                                                                                          economic impacts of $100 million or                      With respect to the expanded
                                                  Educational Trust, ‘‘Employer Health Benefits, 2017
                                                  Annual Survey,’’ available at http://files.kff.org/
                                                                                                          more in any one year, and therefore do                exemption for nonprofit organizations,
                                                  attachment/Report-Employer-Health-Benefits-             not meet the definition of                            as noted above the Departments are
                                                  Annual-Survey-2017.                                     ‘‘economically significant’’ under                    aware of two small nonprofit


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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                      47857

                                                  organizations that have filed lawsuits                  is possible that the exemption for                      come into existence, based on similar
                                                  raising non-religious moral objections to               nonprofit organizations with moral                      reasons to those given above for why the
                                                  coverage of some contraceptives. Both of                convictions in these interim final rules                exemptions and accommodations are
                                                  those entities have fewer than five                     could be used by a nonprofit                            extended to other entities. We invite
                                                  employees enrolled in health coverage,                  organization that employs persons who                   public comment on whether and how
                                                  and both require all of their employees                 do not share the organization’s views on                many such entities will make use of
                                                  to agree with their opposition to the                   contraception, but it was also possible                 these interim final rules.
                                                  coverage.47 Based on comments                           under our previous rules that a house of                  The expanded exemption for issuers
                                                  submitted in response to prior                          worship or integrated auxiliary could                   will not result in a distinct effect on
                                                  rulemakings on this subject, we believe                 employ persons who do not share their                   contraceptive coverage for women who
                                                  that at least one other similar entity                  views on contraception.48 Although we                   wish to receive it because that
                                                  exists. However, we do not know how                     are unable to find sufficient data on this              exemption only applies in cases where
                                                  many similar entities exist. Lacking                    issue, we believe that there are far fewer              plan sponsors or individuals are also
                                                  other information we assume that the                    non-religious moral nonprofit                           otherwise exempt, and the effect of
                                                  number is small. Without data to                        organizations opposed to contraceptive                  those exemptions is discussed
                                                  estimate the number of such entities, we                coverage than there are churches with                   elsewhere herein. The expanded
                                                  believe it to be less than 10, and assume               religious objections to such coverage.                  exemption for individuals that oppose
                                                  the exemption will be used by nine                      Based on our limited data, we believe                   contraceptive coverage based on
                                                  nonprofit entities.                                     the most likely effect of the expanded                  sincerely held moral convictions will
                                                     We also assume that those nine                       exemption for nonprofit entities is that                provide coverage that omits
                                                  entities will operate in a fashion similar              it will be used by entities similar to the              contraception for individuals that object
                                                  to the two similar entities of which we                 two entities that have sought an                        to contraceptive coverage.
                                                  are aware, so that their employees will                 exemption through litigation, and                         The expanded moral exemption
                                                  likely share their views against coverage               whose employees also oppose the                         would also cover for-profit entities that
                                                  of certain contraceptives. This is                      coverage. Therefore, we expect that the                 do not have publicly traded ownership
                                                  consistent with our conclusion in                       expanded exemption for nonprofit                        interests, and that have non-religious
                                                  previous rules that no significant                      entities will have no effect of reducing                moral objections to the Mandate. The
                                                  burden or costs would result from                       contraceptive coverage to employees                     Departments are not aware of any for-
                                                  exempting houses of worship and                         who want that coverage.                                 profit entities that possess non-religious
                                                  integrated auxiliaries. (See 76 FR 46625                   These interim final rules expand the                 moral objections to the Mandate.
                                                  and 78 FR 39889). We reached that                       exemption to include institutions of                    However, scores of for-profit entities
                                                  conclusion without ultimately requiring                 higher education that arrange student                   have filed suit challenging the Mandate.
                                                  that houses of worship and integrated                   coverage and have non-religious moral                   Among the over 200 entities that
                                                  auxiliaries only hire persons who agree                 objections to the Mandate, and they                     brought legal challenges, only two
                                                  with their views against contraception,                 make exempt entities with moral                         entities (less than 1 percent) raised non-
                                                  and without even requiring that such                    objections eligible to use the                          religious moral objections—both were
                                                  entities actually oppose contraception                  accommodation. The Departments are                      nonprofit. Among the general public
                                                  in order to be exempt (in contrast, the                 not aware of either kind of entity. We                  polls vary about religious beliefs, but
                                                  expanded exemption here requires the                    believe the number of entities that                     one prominent poll shows that 89
                                                  exempt entity to actually possess                       object to the Mandate based on non-                     percent of Americans say they believe in
                                                  sincerely held moral convictions                        religious moral convictions is already                  God.49 Among non-religious persons,
                                                  objecting to the coverage). In concluding               very small. The only entities of which                  only a very small percentage appears to
                                                  that the exemption for houses of                        we are aware that have raised such                      hold moral objections to contraception.
                                                  worship and integrated auxiliaries                      objections are not institutions of higher               A recent study found that only 2 percent
                                                  would result in no significant burden or                education, and appear to hold                           of religiously unaffiliated persons
                                                  costs, we relied on our assumption that                 objections that we assume would likely                  believed using contraceptives is morally
                                                  the employees of exempt houses of                       lead them to reject the accommodation                   wrong.50 Combined, this suggests that
                                                  worship and integrated auxiliaries likely               process. Therefore, for the purposes of                 0.2 percent of Americans at most 51
                                                  share their employers’ opposition to                    estimating the anticipated effect of these              might believe contraceptives are morally
                                                  contraceptive coverage.                                 interim final rules on contraceptive                    wrong based on moral convictions but
                                                     A similar assumption is supported                    coverage of women who wish to receive                   not religious beliefs. We have no
                                                  with respect to the expanded exemption                  such coverage, we assume that—at this                   information about how many of those
                                                  for nonprofit organizations. To our                     time—no entities with non-religious                     persons run closely held businesses,
                                                  knowledge, the vast majority of                         moral objections to the Mandate will be                 offer employer sponsored health
                                                  organizations objecting to the Mandate                  institutions of higher education that                   insurance, and would make use of the
                                                  assert religious beliefs. The only                      arrange student coverage, and no                        expanded exemption for moral
                                                  nonprofit organizations of which we are                 entities with non-religious moral
                                                  aware that possess non-religious moral                  objections will opt into the                               49 Gallup, ‘‘Most Americans Still Believe in God’’

                                                  convictions against some or all                         accommodation. We wish to make the                      (June 14–23, 2016), available at http://
                                                                                                          expanded exemption and                                  www.gallup.com/poll/193271/americans-believe-
                                                  contraceptive methods only hire                                                                                 god.aspx.
                                                  persons who share their convictions. It                 accommodation available to such
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                                                                                                                                                                     50 Pew Research Center, ‘‘Where the Public
                                                                                                          entities in case they do exist or might                 Stands on Religious Liberty vs. Nondiscrimination’’
                                                    47 Non-religious nonprofit organizations that                                                                 at page 26 (Sept. 28, 2016), available at http://
                                                  engage in expressive activity generally have a First      48 Cf., for example, Gallup, ‘‘Americans,             assets.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/
                                                  Amendment right to hire only people who share           Including Catholics, Say Birth Control Is Morally       11/2016/09/Religious-Liberty-full-for-web.pdf.
                                                  their moral convictions or will be respectful of        OK,’’ (May 22, 2012) (‘‘Eighty-two percent of U.S.         51 The study defined religiously ‘‘unaffiliated’’ as

                                                  them—including their convictions on whether the         Catholics say birth control is morally acceptable’’),   agnostic, atheist or ‘‘nothing in particular’’ (id. at 8),
                                                  organization or others provide health coverage of       available at http://www.gallup.com/poll/154799/         as distinct from several versions of Protestants, or
                                                  contraception, or of certain items they view as being   americans-including-catholics-say-birth-control-        Catholics. ‘‘Nothing in particular’’ might have
                                                  abortifacient.                                          morally.aspx.                                           included some theists.



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                                                  47858              Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  convictions set forth in these interim                  covered persons. Census data indicate                   its plan participants and beneficiaries.
                                                  final rules. Given the large number of                  that women of childbearing age—that is,                 Finally, because the accommodation
                                                  closely held entities that challenged the               women aged 15–44—comprise 20.2                          process was not previously available to
                                                  Mandate based on religious objections,                  percent of the general population.54                    entities that possess non-religious moral
                                                  we assume that some similar for-profit                  This amounts to approximately 33                        objections to the Mandate, we do not
                                                  entities with non-religious moral                       women of childbearing age for this                      anticipate that these interim final rules
                                                  objections exist. But we expect that it                 group of individuals covered by group                   will result in any burden from such
                                                  will be a comparatively small number of                 plans sponsored by for-profit moral                     entities revoking their accommodated
                                                  entities, since among the nonprofit                     objectors. Approximately 44.3 percent                   status.
                                                  litigants, only two were non-religious.                 of women currently use contraceptives                      The Departments believe the
                                                  Without data available to estimate the                  covered by the Guidelines.55 Thus we                    foregoing analysis represents a
                                                  actual number of entities that will make                estimate that 15 women may incur                        reasonable estimate of the likely impact
                                                  use of the expanded exemption for for-                  contraceptive costs due to for-profit                   under the rules expanded exemptions.
                                                  profit entities that do not have publicly               entities using the expanded exemption                   The Departments acknowledge
                                                  traded ownership interests and that                     provided in these interim final rules.56                uncertainty in the estimate and
                                                  have objections to the Mandate based on                 In the companion interim final rules                    therefore conducted a second analysis
                                                  sincerely held moral convictions, we                    concerning religious beliefs issued                     using an alternative framework, which
                                                  expect that fewer than 10 entities, if                  contemporaneously with these interim                    is set forth in the companion interim
                                                  any, will do so—we assume nine for-                     final rules and published elsewhere in                  final rule concerning religious beliefs
                                                  profit entities will use the exemption in               this issue of the Federal Register, we                  issued contemporaneously with this
                                                  these interim final rules.                              estimate that the average cost of                       interim final rule and published
                                                     The expanded exemption                               contraception per year per woman of                     elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
                                                  encompassing certain for-profit entities                childbearing age that use contraception                 Register. Under either estimate, this
                                                  could result in the removal of                          covered by the Guidelines, within                       interim final rule is not economically
                                                  contraceptive coverage from women                       health plans that cover contraception, is               significant.
                                                  who do not share their employers’                       $584. Consequently, we estimate that                       We reiterate the rareness of instances
                                                  views. The Departments used data from                   the anticipated effects attributable to the             in which we are aware that employers
                                                  the Current Population Survey (CPS)                     cost of contraception from for-profit                   assert non-religious objections to
                                                  and the Medical Expenditure Panel                       entities using the expanded exemption                   contraceptive coverage based on
                                                  Survey-Insurance Component (MEPS–                       in these interim final rules is                         sincerely held moral convictions, as
                                                  IC) to obtain an estimate of the number                 approximately $8,760.                                   discussed above, and also that in the
                                                  of policyholders that will be covered by                   The Departments estimate that these                  few instances where such an objection
                                                  the plans of the nine for-profit entities               interim final rules will not result in any              has been raised, employees of such
                                                  we assume may make use of these                         additional burden or costs on issuers or                employers also opposed contraception.
                                                  expanded exemptions.52 The average                      third party administrators. As discussed                   We request comment on all aspects of
                                                  number of policyholders (9) in plans                    above, we assume that no entities with                  the preceding regulatory impact
                                                  with under 100 employees was                            non-religious moral convictions will use                analysis.
                                                  obtained. It is not known what size the                 the accommodation, although we wish
                                                                                                                                                                  B. Special Analyses—Department of the
                                                  for-profit employers will be that might                 to make it available in case an entity
                                                                                                                                                                  Treasury
                                                  claim this exemption, but as discussed                  voluntarily opts into it in order to allow
                                                  above these interim final rules do not                  contraceptive coverage to be provided to                  For purposes of the Department of the
                                                  include publicly traded companies (and                                                                          Treasury, certain Internal Revenue
                                                  we invite public comments on whether
                                                                                                             54 U.S. Census Bureau, ‘‘Age and Sex                 Service (IRS) regulations, including this
                                                  to do so in the final rules), and both of
                                                                                                          Composition: 2010’’ (May 2011), available at            one, are exempt from the requirements
                                                                                                          https://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/             in Executive Order 12866, as
                                                  the two nonprofit entities that                         c2010br-03.pdf. The Guidelines’ requirement of
                                                  challenged the Mandate included fewer                   contraceptive coverage only applies ‘‘for all women     supplemented by Executive Order
                                                  than five policyholders in each entity.                 with reproductive capacity.’’ https://www.hrsa.gov/     13563. The Departments estimate that
                                                                                                          womensguidelines/; see also 80 FR 40318. In             the likely effect of these interim final
                                                  Therefore we assume the for-profit                      addition, studies commonly consider the 15–44 age
                                                  entities that may claim this expanded                   range to assess contraceptive use by women of
                                                                                                                                                                  rules will be that entities will use the
                                                  exemption will have fewer than 100                      childbearing age. See, Guttmacher Institute,            exemption and not the accommodation.
                                                  employees and an average of 9                           ‘‘Contraceptive Use in the United States’’ (Sept.       Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not
                                                                                                          2016), available at https://www.guttmacher.org/fact-    required.
                                                  policyholders. For nine entities, the                   sheet/contraceptive-use-united-states.
                                                  total number of policyholders would be                     55 See https://www.guttmacher.org/fact-sheet/        C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                  81. DOL estimates that for each                         contraceptive-use-united-states.
                                                                                                                                                                     The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
                                                                                                             56 We note that many non-religious for-profit
                                                  policyholder, there is approximately                                                                            U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes
                                                                                                          entities which sued the Departments challenging
                                                  one dependent.53 This amounts to 162                    the Mandate, including some of the largest              certain requirements with respect to
                                                                                                          employers, only objected to coverage of 4 of the 18     Federal rules that are subject to the
                                                    52 ‘‘Health Insurance Coverage Bulletin’’ Table 4,
                                                                                                          types of contraceptives required to be covered by
                                                  page 21. Using March 2015 Annual Social and             the Mandate—namely, those contraceptives which
                                                                                                                                                                  notice and comment requirements of
                                                  Economic Supplement to the Current Population           they viewed as abortifacients, and akin to abortion     section 553(b) of the APA (5 U.S.C. 551
                                                  Survey. https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/        —and they were willing to provide coverage for          et seq.) and that are likely to have a
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                                                  ebsa/researchers/data/health-and-welfare/health-        other types of contraception. It is reasonable to       significant economic impact on a
                                                  insurance-coverage-bulletin-2015.pdfEstimates of        assume that this would also be the case with respect
                                                  the number of ERISA Plans based on 2015 Medical         to some for-profits that object to the Mandate on the
                                                                                                                                                                  substantial number of small entities.
                                                  Expenditure Survey—Insurance                            basis of sincerely held moral convictions.              Under Section 553(b) of the APA, a
                                                    53 ‘‘Health Insurance Coverage Bulletin’’ Table 4,    Accordingly, it is possible that even fewer women       general notice of proposed rulemaking
                                                  page 21. Using March 2015 Annual Social and             beneficiaries under such plans would bear out-of-       is not required when an agency, for
                                                  Economic Supplement to the Current Population           pocket expenses in order to obtain contraceptives,
                                                  Survey. https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/        and that those who might do so would bear lower
                                                                                                                                                                  good cause, finds that notice and public
                                                  ebsa/researchers/data/health-and-welfare/health-        costs due to many contraceptive items being             comment thereon are impracticable,
                                                  insurance-coverage-bulletin-2015.pdf.                   covered.                                                unnecessary, or contrary to the public


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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                        47859

                                                  interest. The interim final rules are                   contemporaneously with these interim                     3. Call the Reports Clearance Office at
                                                  exempt from the APA, both because the                   final rules and published elsewhere in                (410) 786–1326.
                                                  PHS Act, ERISA, and the Code contain                    this issue of the Federal Register. As                   If you comment on these information
                                                  specific provisions under which the                     discussed there, regulations covering                 collections, that is, reporting,
                                                  Secretaries may adopt regulations by                    the accommodation include provisions                  recordkeeping or third-party disclosure
                                                  interim final rule and because the                      regarding self-certification or notices to            requirements, please submit your
                                                  Departments have made a good cause                      HHS from eligible organizations                       comments electronically as specified in
                                                  finding that a general notice of proposed               (§ 147.131(c)(3)), notice of availability of          the ADDRESSES section of these interim
                                                  rulemaking is not necessary earlier in                  separate payments for contraceptive                   final rules with comment period.
                                                  this preamble. Therefore, the RFA does                  services (§ 147.131(f)), and notice of                E. Paperwork Reduction Act—
                                                  not apply and the Departments are not                   revocation of accommodation                           Department of Labor
                                                  required to either certify that the                     (§ 147.131(c)(4)). The burdens related to
                                                  regulations or this amendment would                     those ICRs are currently approved under                  Under the Paperwork Reduction Act,
                                                  not have a significant economic impact                  OMB Control Numbers 0938–1248 and                     an agency may not conduct or sponsor,
                                                  on a substantial number of small entities               0938–1292. These interim final rules                  and an individual is not required to
                                                  or conduct a regulatory flexibility                     amend the accommodation regulations                   respond to, a collection of information
                                                  analysis.                                               to make entities with moral objections                unless it displays a valid OMB control
                                                     Nevertheless, the Departments                        to the Mandate eligible to use the same               number. In accordance with the
                                                  carefully considered the likely impact of               accommodation processes. The                          requirements of the PRA, the ICR for the
                                                  the rule on small entities in connection                Departments will update the forms and                 EBSA Form 700 and alternative notice
                                                  with their assessment under Executive                   model notices regarding these processes               have previously been approved by OMB
                                                  Order 12866. The Departments do not                     to reflect that entities with sincerely               under control numbers 1210–0150 and
                                                  expect that these interim final rules will              held moral convictions are eligible                   1210–0152. A copy of the ICR may be
                                                  have a significant economic effect on a                 organizations.                                        obtained by contacting the PRA
                                                  substantial number of small entities,                      As discussed above, however, we                    addressee shown below or at http://
                                                  because they will not result in any                     assume that no entities with non-                     www.RegInfo.gov. PRA ADDRESSEE: G.
                                                  additional costs to affected entities.                  religious moral objections to the                     Christopher Cosby, Office of Policy and
                                                  Instead, by exempting from the Mandate                  Mandate will use the accommodation,                   Research, U.S. Department of Labor,
                                                  small businesses and nonprofit                          and we know that no such entities were                Employee Benefits Security
                                                  organizations with moral objections to                  eligible for it until now, so that they do            Administration, 200 Constitution
                                                  some or all contraceptives and/or                       not possess accommodated status to                    Avenue NW., Room N–5718,
                                                  sterilization, the Departments have                     revoke. Therefore we believe that the                 Washington, DC 20210. Telephone:
                                                  reduced regulatory burden on small                      burden for these ICRs is accounted for                202–693–8410; Fax: 202–219–4745.
                                                  entities. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of                in the collection approved under OMB                  These are not toll-free numbers.
                                                  the Code, these regulations have been                   Control Numbers 0938–1248 and 0938–                      Consistent with the analysis in the
                                                  submitted to the Chief Counsel for                      1292, as described in the interim final               HHS PRA section above, although these
                                                  Advocacy of the Small Business                          rules concerning religious beliefs issued             interim final rules make entities with
                                                  Administration for comment on their                     contemporaneously with these interim                  certain moral convictions eligible for the
                                                  impact on small business.                               final rules.                                          accommodation, we assume that no
                                                                                                             We are soliciting comments on all of               entities will use it rather than the
                                                  D. Paperwork Reduction Act—                             the possible information collection                   exemption, and such entities were not
                                                  Department of Health and Human                          requirements contained in these interim               previously eligible for the
                                                  Services                                                final rules, including those discussed in             accommodation so as to revoke it.
                                                    Under the Paperwork Reduction Act                     the companion interim final rules                     Therefore we believe these interim final
                                                  of 1995 (the PRA), federal agencies are                 concerning religious beliefs issued                   rules do not involve additional burden
                                                  required to publish notice in the                       contemporaneously with these interim                  not accounted for under OMB control
                                                  Federal Register concerning each                        final rules and published elsewhere in                number 1210–0150.
                                                  proposed collection of information.                     this issue of the Federal Register, for                  Regarding the ICRs discussed in the
                                                  Interested persons are invited to send                  which these interim final rules provide               companion interim final rules
                                                  comments regarding our burden                           eligibility to entities with objections               concerning religious beliefs issued
                                                  estimates or any other aspect of this                   based on moral convictions. In addition,              contemporaneously with these interim
                                                  collection of information, including any                we are also soliciting comments on all                final rules and published elsewhere in
                                                  of the following subjects: (1) The                      of the related information collection                 this issue of the Federal Register, the
                                                  necessity and utility of the proposed                   requirements currently approved under                 forms for which would be used if any
                                                  information collection for the proper                   0938–1292 and 0938–1248.                              entities with moral objections used the
                                                  performance of the agency’s functions;                     To obtain copies of a supporting                   accommodation process in the future,
                                                  (2) the accuracy of the estimated                       statement and any related forms for the               DOL submitted those ICRs in order to
                                                  burden; (3) ways to enhance the quality,                proposed collection(s) summarized in                  obtain OMB approval under the PRA for
                                                  utility, and clarity of the information to              this notice, you may make your request                the regulatory revision. The request was
                                                  be collected; and (4) the use of                        using one of following:                               made under emergency clearance
                                                  automated collection techniques or                         1. Access CMS’ Web site address at                 procedures specified in regulations at 5
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                                                  other forms of information technology to                https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-                  CFR 1320.13. OMB approved the ICRs
                                                  minimize the information collection                     Guidance/Legislation/                                 under the emergency clearance process.
                                                  burden.                                                 PaperworkReductionActof1995/PRA-                      In an effort to consolidate the number of
                                                    We estimate that these interim final                  Listing.html.                                         information collection requests, DOL
                                                  rules will not result in additional                        2. Email your request, including your              indicated it will combine the ICR
                                                  burdens not accounted for as set forth in               address, phone number, OMB number,                    related to the OMB control number
                                                  the companion interim final rules                       and CMS document identifier, to                       1210–0152 with the ICR related to the
                                                  concerning religious beliefs issued                     Paperwork@cms.hhs.gov.                                OMB control number 1210–0150. Once


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                                                  47860             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  the ICR is approved, DOL indicated it                   is considered an EO 13771 deregulatory                concerns of state and local officials in
                                                  will discontinue 1210–0152. OMB                         action.                                               the preamble to the regulation.
                                                  approved the ICR under control number                                                                           These interim final rules do not have
                                                                                                          G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                  1210–0150 through [DATE]. A copy of                                                                           any Federalism implications, since they
                                                  the information collection request may                     The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                                                                                                                                only provide exemptions from the
                                                  be obtained free of charge on the                       of 1995 (section 202(a) of Pub. L. 104–
                                                                                                          4), requires the Departments to prepare               contraceptive and sterilization coverage
                                                  RegInfo.gov Web site at http://
                                                  www.reginfo.gov/public/do/                              a written statement, which includes an                requirement in HRSA Guidelines
                                                  PRAViewICR?ref_nbr=201705-1210-001.                     assessment of anticipated costs and                   supplied under section 2713 of the PHS
                                                  This approval allows respondents                        benefits, before issuing ‘‘any rule that              Act.
                                                  temporarily to utilize the additional                   includes any Federal mandate that may                 VI. Statutory Authority
                                                  flexibility these interim final regulations             result in the expenditure by State, local,
                                                  provide, while DOL seeks public                         and tribal governments, in the aggregate,               The Department of the Treasury
                                                  comment on the collection methods—                      or by the private sector, of $100,000,000             temporary regulations are adopted
                                                  including their utility and burden.                     or more (adjusted annually for inflation)             pursuant to the authority contained in
                                                  Contemporaneously with the                              in any one year.’’ The current threshold              sections 7805 and 9833 of the Code.
                                                  publication of these interim final rules,               after adjustment for inflation is $148                  The Department of Labor regulations
                                                  DOL will publish a notice in the Federal                million, using the most current (2016)
                                                  Register informing the public of its                                                                          are adopted pursuant to the authority
                                                                                                          Implicit Price Deflator for the Gross
                                                  intention to extend the OMB approval.                                                                         contained in 29 U.S.C. 1002(16), 1027,
                                                                                                          Domestic Product. For purposes of the
                                                                                                          Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, these                   1059, 1135, 1161–1168, 1169, 1181–
                                                  F. Regulatory Reform Executive Orders                                                                         1183, 1181 note, 1185, 1185a, 1185b,
                                                  13765, 13771 and 13777                                  interim final rules do not include any
                                                                                                          Federal mandate that may result in                    1185d, 1191, 1191a, 1191b, and 1191c;
                                                     Executive Order 13765 (January 20,                   expenditures by State, local, or tribal               sec. 101(g), Public Law 104–191, 110
                                                  2017) directs that, ‘‘[t]o the maximum                  governments, nor do they include any                  Stat. 1936; sec. 401(b), Public Law 105–
                                                  extent permitted by law, the Secretary of               Federal mandates that may impose an                   200, 112 Stat. 645 (42 U.S.C. 651 note);
                                                  Health and Human Services (Secretary)                   annual burden of $100 million, adjusted               sec. 512(d), Public Law 110–343, 122
                                                  and the heads of all other executive                    for inflation, or more on the private                 Stat. 3881; sec. 1001, 1201, and 1562(e),
                                                  departments and agencies (agencies)                     sector.                                               Public Law 111–148, 124 Stat. 119, as
                                                  with authorities and responsibilities                                                                         amended by Public Law 111–152, 124
                                                  under the Act shall exercise all                        H. Federalism
                                                                                                                                                                Stat. 1029; Secretary of Labor’s Order 1–
                                                  authority and discretion available to                      Executive Order 13132 outlines                     2011, 77 FR 1088 (Jan. 9, 2012).
                                                  them to waive, defer, grant exemptions                  fundamental principles of federalism,
                                                  from, or delay the implementation of                                                                            The Department of Health and Human
                                                                                                          and requires the adherence to specific
                                                  any provision or requirement of the Act                                                                       Services regulations are adopted
                                                                                                          criteria by Federal agencies in the
                                                  that would impose a fiscal burden on                                                                          pursuant to the authority contained in
                                                                                                          process of their formulation and
                                                  any State or a cost, fee, tax, penalty, or                                                                    sections 2701 through 2763, 2791, and
                                                                                                          implementation of policies that have
                                                  regulatory burden on individuals,                       ‘‘substantial direct effects’’ on States,             2792 of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 300gg
                                                  families, healthcare providers, health                  the relationship between the Federal                  through 300gg–63, 300gg–91, and
                                                  insurers, patients, recipients of                       Government and States, or the                         300gg–92), as amended; and Title I of
                                                  healthcare services, purchasers of health               distribution of power and                             the Affordable Care Act, sections 1301–
                                                  insurance, or makers of medical devices,                responsibilities among the various                    1304, 1311–1312, 1321–1322, 1324,
                                                  products, or medications.’’ In addition,                levels of Government. Federal agencies                1334, 1342–1343, 1401–1402, and 1412,
                                                  agencies are directed to ‘‘take all actions             promulgating regulations that have                    Pub. L. 111–148, 124 Stat. 119 (42
                                                  consistent with law to minimize the                     these federalism implications must                    U.S.C. 18021–18024, 18031–18032,
                                                  unwarranted economic and regulatory                     consult with state and local officials,               18041–18042, 18044, 18054, 18061,
                                                  burdens of the [Affordable Care Act],                   and describe the extent of their                      18063, 18071, 18082, 26 U.S.C. 36B, and
                                                  and prepare to afford the States more                   consultation and the nature of the                    31 U.S.C. 9701).
                                                  flexibility and control to create a more
                                                  free and open healthcare market.’’ These                including potential decreased expenditures on
                                                                                                                                                                List of Subjects
                                                  interim final rules exercise the                        contraceptive devices and drugs and potential         26 CFR Part 54
                                                  discretion provided to the Departments                  increased expenditures on pregnancy-related
                                                                                                          medical services. OMB’s guidance on E.O. 13771
                                                  under the Affordable Care Act and other                 implementation (https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-         Excise taxes, Health care, Health
                                                  laws to grant exemptions and thereby                    press-office/2017/04/05/memorandum-                   insurance, Pensions, Reporting and
                                                  minimize regulatory burdens of the                      implementing-executive-order-13771-titled-            recordkeeping requirements.
                                                  Affordable Care Act on the affected                     reducing-regulation) states that impacts should be
                                                  entities and recipients of health care                  categorized as consistently as possible within        29 CFR Part 2590
                                                                                                          Departments. The Food and Drug Administration,
                                                  services.                                               within HHS, and the Occupational Safety and             Continuation coverage, Disclosure,
                                                     Consistent with Executive Order                      Health Administration (OSHA) and Mine Safety
                                                  13771 (82 FR 9339, February 3, 2017),                   and Health Administration (MSHA), within DOL,         Employee benefit plans, Group health
                                                  we have estimated the costs and cost                    regularly estimate medical expenditure impacts in     plans, Health care, Health insurance,
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                                                                                                          the analyses that accompany their regulations, with   Medical child support, Reporting and
                                                  savings attributable to this interim final              the results being categorized as benefits (positive
                                                  rule. As discussed in more detail in the                benefits if expenditures are reduced, negative
                                                                                                                                                                recordkeeping requirements.
                                                  preceding analysis, this interim final                  benefits if expenditures are raised). Following the
                                                                                                                                                                45 CFR Part 147
                                                  rule lessens incremental reporting                      FDA, OSHA and MSHA accounting convention
                                                                                                          leads to this interim final rule’s medical
                                                  costs.57 Therefore, this interim final rule             expenditure impacts being categorized as (positive      Health care, Health insurance,
                                                                                                          or negative) benefits, rather than as costs, thus     Reporting and recordkeeping
                                                    57 Other noteworthy potential impacts encompass       placing them outside of consideration for E.O.
                                                  potential changes in medical expenditures,              13771 designation purposes.



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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                          47861

                                                  requirements, State regulation of health                ■  f. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) by                   adding in its place the reference
                                                  insurance.                                              removing the reference ‘‘147.132’’ and                ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’; and
                                                                                                          adding in its place the reference                     ■ g. In paragraph (c)(2) introductory text
                                                  Kirsten B. Wielobob,
                                                                                                          ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’; and                           by removing the reference ‘‘147.132’’
                                                  Deputy Commissioner for Services and                                                                          and adding in its place the reference
                                                                                                          ■ g. In paragraph (c)(2) introductory text
                                                  Enforcement.
                                                                                                          by removing the reference ‘‘147.132’’                 ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’.
                                                    Approved: October 2, 2017.
                                                                                                          and adding in its place the reference
                                                  David J. Kautter,                                                                                             DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
                                                                                                          ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’.
                                                  Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy.                                                                           HUMAN SERVICES
                                                                                                          DEPARTMENT OF LABOR                                     For the reasons set forth in the
                                                    Signed this 4th day of October, 2017.
                                                  Timothy D. Hauser,                                      Employee Benefits Security                            preamble, the Department of Health and
                                                  Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program                  Administration                                        Human Services amends 45 CFR part
                                                  Operations, Employee Benefits Security                    For the reasons set forth in the                    147 as follows:
                                                  Administration, Department of Labor.                    preamble, the Department of Labor                     PART 147—HEALTH INSURANCE
                                                    Dated: October 4, 2017.                               amends 29 CFR part 2590 as follows:                   REFORM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
                                                  Seema Verma,                                                                                                  GROUP AND INDIVIDUAL HEALTH
                                                                                                          PART 2590—RULES AND
                                                  Administrator, Centers for Medicare &                                                                         INSURANCE MARKETS
                                                  Medicaid Services.                                      REGULATIONS FOR GROUP HEALTH
                                                                                                          PLANS                                                 ■ 6. The authority citation for part 147
                                                    Approved: October 4, 2017.
                                                                                                                                                                continues to read as follows:
                                                  Donald Wright,                                          ■ 3. The authority citation for part 2590
                                                  Acting Secretary, Department of Health and              continues to read as follows:                           Authority: Secs 2701 through 2763, 2791,
                                                  Human Services.                                                                                               and 2792 of the Public Health Service Act (42
                                                                                                            Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1027, 1059, 1135,              U.S.C. 300gg through 300gg–63, 300gg–91,
                                                  DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY                              1161–1168, 1169, 1181–1183, 1181 note,                and 300gg–92), as amended.
                                                                                                          1185, 1185a, 1185b, 1191, 1191a, 1191b, and
                                                  Internal Revenue Service                                1191c; sec. 101(g), Pub. L. 104–191, 110 Stat.        § 147.130   [Amended]
                                                    For the reasons set forth in this                     1936; sec. 401(b), Pub. L. 105–200, 112 Stat.
                                                                                                          645 (42 U.S.C. 651 note); sec. 512(d), Pub. L.        ■  7. Section 147.130, as amended
                                                  preamble, 26 CFR part 54 is amended as                  110–343, 122 Stat. 3881; sec. 1001, 1201, and         elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
                                                  follows:                                                1562(e), Pub. L. 111–148, 124 Stat. 119, as           Register, is further amended in
                                                                                                          amended by Pub. L. 111–152, 124 Stat. 1029;           paragraphs (a)(1) introductory text and
                                                  PART 54—PENSION EXCISE TAXES                            Division M, Pub. L. 113–235, 128 Stat. 2130;          (a)(1)(iv) by removing the reference
                                                                                                          Secretary of Labor’s Order 1–2011, 77 FR              ‘‘§§ 147.131 and 147.132’’ and adding in
                                                  ■ 1. The authority citation for part 54                 1088 (Jan. 9, 2012).
                                                  continues to read, in part, as follows:                                                                       its place the reference ‘‘§§ 147.131,
                                                                                                          § 2590.715–2713       [Amended]                       147.132, and 147.133’’.
                                                      Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805. * * *
                                                                                                          ■  4. Section 2590.715–2713, as                       § 147.131   [Amended]
                                                  § 54.9815–2713T      [Amended]
                                                                                                          amended elsewhere in this issue of the                ■  8. Section 147.131, as revised
                                                  ■  2. Section 54.9815–2713T, as added                   Federal Register], is further amended in              elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
                                                  elsewhere in this issue of the Federal                  paragraph (a)(1)(iv) by removing the                  Register, is further amended—
                                                  Register, is amended in paragraph                       reference ‘‘147.131 and 147.132’’ and                 ■ a. In paragraph (c)(1) by removing the
                                                  (a)(1)(iv) by removing the reference                    adding in its place the reference                     reference ‘‘(ii)’’ and adding in its place
                                                  ‘‘147.131 and 147.132’’ and adding in its               ‘‘147.131, 147.132, and 147.133’’.                    the reference ‘‘(ii), or 45 CFR
                                                  place the reference ‘‘147.131, 147.132,                                                                       147.133(a)(1)(i) or (ii)’’.
                                                  and 147.133’’.                                          § 2590.715–2713A        [Amended]
                                                                                                                                                                ■ b. In paragraph (c)(2) by removing the
                                                                                                          ■  5. Section 2590.715–2713A, as revised              reference ‘‘§ 147.132(a)’’ and adding in
                                                  § 54.9815–2713AT       [Amended]
                                                                                                          elsewhere in this issue of the Federal                its place the reference ‘‘§ 147.132(a) or
                                                  ■  3. Section 54.9815–2713AT, as added                  Register], is further amended—                        147.133’’; and
                                                  elsewhere in this issue of the Federal                  ■ a. In paragraph (a)(1) by removing                  ■ c. In paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) introductory
                                                  Register], is amended—                                  ‘‘(ii)’’ and adding in its place ‘‘(ii), or 45        text, (d)(1)(ii)(B) and (d)(2) by removing
                                                  ■ a. In paragraph (a)(1) by removing ‘‘or               CFR 147.133(a)(1)(i) or (ii)’’;                       the reference ‘‘§ 147.132’’ and to adding
                                                  (ii)’’ and adding in its place ‘‘or (ii), or            ■ b. In paragraph (a)(2) by removing the              in its place the reference ‘‘§ 147.132 or
                                                  45 CFR 147.133(a)(1)(i) or (ii)’’;                      reference ‘‘147.132(a)’’ and adding in its            147.133’’.
                                                  ■ b. In paragraph (a)(2) by removing the                place the reference ‘‘147.132(a) or                   ■ 9. Add § 147.133 to read as follows:
                                                  reference ‘‘147.132(a)’’ and adding in its              147.133(a)’’;
                                                  place the reference ‘‘147.132(a) or                     ■ c. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii) introductory             § 147.133 Moral exemptions in connection
                                                  147.133(a)’’;                                           text by removing the reference                        with coverage of certain preventive health
                                                  ■ c. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii) introductory               ‘‘147.132’’ and adding in its place the               services.
                                                  text by removing the reference                          reference ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’;                        (a) Objecting entities. (1) Guidelines
                                                  ‘‘147.132’’ and adding in its place the                 ■ d. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(B) by                    issued under § 147.130(a)(1)(iv) by the
                                                  reference ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’;                       removing the reference ‘‘147.132’’ and                Health Resources and Services
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                                                  ■ d. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(B) by                      adding in its place the reference                     Administration must not provide for or
                                                  removing the reference ‘‘147.132’’ and                  ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’;                               support the requirement of coverage or
                                                  adding in its place the reference                       ■ e. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii) introductory             payments for contraceptive services
                                                  ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’;                                 text by removing the reference                        with respect to a group health plan
                                                  ■ e. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii) introductory               ‘‘147.132’’ and adding in its place the               established or maintained by an
                                                  text by removing the reference                          reference ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’;                     objecting organization, or health
                                                  ‘‘147.132’’ and adding in its place the                 ■ f. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) by                    insurance coverage offered or arranged
                                                  reference ‘‘147.132 or 147.133’’;                       removing the reference ‘‘147.132’’ and                by an objecting organization, and thus


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                                                  47862             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 197 / Friday, October 13, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  the Health Resources and Service                        to the extent the issuer objects as                   construed to prevent a willing health
                                                  Administration will exempt from any                     specified in paragraph (a)(2) of this                 insurance issuer offering group or
                                                  guidelines’ requirements that relate to                 section. Where a health insurance issuer              individual health insurance coverage,
                                                  the provision of contraceptive services:                providing group health insurance                      and as applicable, a willing plan
                                                     (i) A group health plan and health                   coverage is exempt under paragraph                    sponsor of a group health plan, from
                                                  insurance coverage provided in                          (a)(1)(iii) of this section, the group                offering a separate policy, certificate or
                                                  connection with a group health plan to                  health plan established or maintained                 contract of insurance or a separate group
                                                  the extent one of the following non-                    by the plan sponsor with which the                    health plan or benefit package option, to
                                                  governmental plan sponsors object as                    health insurance issuer contracts                     any individual who objects to coverage
                                                  specified in paragraph (a)(2) of this                   remains subject to any requirement to                 or payments for some or all
                                                  section:                                                provide coverage for contraceptive                    contraceptive services based on
                                                     (A) A nonprofit organization; or                     services under Guidelines issued under                sincerely held moral convictions.
                                                     (B) A for-profit entity that has no                  § 147.130(a)(1)(iv) unless it is also                    (c) Definition. For the purposes of this
                                                  publicly traded ownership interests (for                exempt from that requirement.                         section, reference to ‘‘contraceptive’’
                                                  this purpose, a publicly traded
                                                                                                             (2) The exemption of this paragraph                services, benefits, or coverage includes
                                                  ownership interest is any class of
                                                                                                          (a) will apply to the extent that an entity           contraceptive or sterilization items,
                                                  common equity securities required to be
                                                  registered under section 12 of the                      described in paragraph (a)(1) of this                 procedures, or services, or related
                                                  Securities Exchange Act of 1934);                       section objects to its establishing,                  patient education or counseling, to the
                                                     (ii) An institution of higher education              maintaining, providing, offering, or                  extent specified for purposes of
                                                  as defined in 20 U.S.C. 1002 in its                     arranging (as applicable) coverage or                 § 147.130(a)(1)(iv).
                                                  arrangement of student health insurance                 payments for some or all contraceptive                   (d) Severability. Any provision of this
                                                  coverage, to the extent that institution                services, or for a plan, issuer, or third             section held to be invalid or
                                                  objects as specified in paragraph (a)(2)                party administrator that provides or                  unenforceable by its terms, or as applied
                                                  of this section. In the case of student                 arranges such coverage or payments,                   to any person or circumstance, shall be
                                                  health insurance coverage, this section                 based on its sincerely held moral                     construed so as to continue to give
                                                  is applicable in a manner comparable to                 convictions.                                          maximum effect to the provision
                                                  its applicability to group health                          (b) Objecting individuals. Guidelines              permitted by law, unless such holding
                                                  insurance coverage provided in                          issued under § 147.130(a)(1)(iv) by the               shall be one of utter invalidity or
                                                  connection with a group health plan                     Health Resources and Services                         unenforceability, in which event the
                                                  established or maintained by a plan                     Administration must not provide for or                provision shall be severable from this
                                                  sponsor that is an employer, and                        support the requirement of coverage or                section and shall not affect the
                                                  references to ‘‘plan participants and                   payments for contraceptive services                   remainder thereof or the application of
                                                  beneficiaries’’ will be interpreted as                  with respect to individuals who object                the provision to persons not similarly
                                                  references to student enrollees and their               as specified in this paragraph (b), and               situated or to dissimilar circumstances.
                                                  covered dependents; and                                 nothing in § 147.130(a)(1)(iv), 26 CFR                [FR Doc. 2017–21852 Filed 10–6–17; 11:15 am]
                                                     (iii) A health insurance issuer offering             54.9815–2713(a)(1)(iv), or 29 CFR                     BILLING CODE 4830–01–P; 4510–029–P; 4120–01–P;
                                                  group or individual insurance coverage                  2590.715–2713(a)(1)(iv) may be                        6325–64–P
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Document Created: 2017-10-13 04:33:20
Document Modified: 2017-10-13 04:33:20
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionInterim final rules with request for comments.
DatesEffective date: These interim final rules are effective on October 6, 2017.
ContactJeff Wu (310) 492-4305 or [email protected] for Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Amber Rivers or Matthew Litton, Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA), Department of Labor, at (202) 693-8335; Karen Levin, Internal Revenue Service, Department of the Treasury, at (202) 317-5500.
FR Citation82 FR 47838 
RIN Number1545-BN91, 1210-AB84 and 0938-AT46
CFR Citation26 CFR 54
29 CFR 2590
45 CFR 147
CFR AssociatedExcise Taxes; Health Care; Health Insurance; Pensions; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements; Continuation Coverage; Disclosure; Employee Benefit Plans; Group Health Plans; Medical Child Support and State Regulation of Health Insurance

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