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In the limited time available to me, I cannot adequately convey the hostile tenor of most of the cases interpreting conscience clauses. Let me just give you a few selected examples. For example, in Browhfield v. Daniel Freeman Marina Hospital.31 In that case, a rape victim asked an emergency room worker at a Catholic hospital about the availability of the "morning after" pill. The worker declined to give any information because of her religious beliefs. The patient brought suit against the hospital, and the hospital raised the California conscience clause in defense. That statute provided that "no nonprofit hospital or clinic which is organized or operated by a religious corporation... or its administrative officers, employees, agents or... governing board shall be liable... for failure or refusal to perform or to permit the performance of an abortion in such facility or clinic or to provide abortion services." 32

Thus, the case turned on whether the morning after pill produced abortion. Finding no definition of “abortion" in the statute, the court made no effort to discern legislative intent (specifically, regarding the morning after pill, or generally, regarding protecting conscience rights of health care providers), and made no effort to interpret the statute in light of the policy underlying the statute or to achieve integrity within the structure of the provision, or to determine as a matter of judicial notice whether the morning after pill was understood by the medical community or the Catholic medical community to cause abortion.33 Instead, citing dicta in another case suggesting that at least one federal court did not consider the morning after pill to be an abortifacient,34 the California court summarily concluded that the hospital's refusal was not protected because the morning after pill did not cause abortion.35

While the conclusion of the court that the morning after pill does not cause abortion in at least some cases is probably inaccurate, the method of statutory construction is even more disturbing. The question the court had was one for which a resort to random dicta in other cases giving unsupported judicial ruminations in the context of interpreting entirely different statutes enacted by a different government is not an intelligent approach to legislative interpretation. The Brownfield case is an example of how judges can manipulate the interpretation of a statute to reach the outcome they prefer for personal or ideological reasons. Thus, it illustrates an unfortunate but very real risk for those who try to rely upon the current generation of conscience clauses.

In Spellacy v. Tri-County Hospital,36 Pennsylvania courts held that a part-time admissions clerk who claimed that she was fired by the hospital as a result of her refusal to participate in the admission procedures of abortion patients was not protected by the state's conscience clause because her position was one of mere "ancillary" or "clerical" assistance.37

Likewise, in Erzinger v. Regents of University of California, the California Appellate court noted: "The proscription only applies when the applicant must participate in acts related to the actual performance of abortions or sterilizations. Indirect or remote connection with abortions or sterilizations are not within the terms of the statute." 38

The same bias is reflected in the dissenting opinion of two Montana Supreme Court justices in Swanson v. St. John's Lutheran Hospital. 39 That case involved a

31 256 Cal. Rptr. 240 (Cal. App. 2989).

32 Cal. Health & Safety Code § 25955k. Six years ago, this statute was revised and recodified Cal. Health & Safety Code 123420 (2001) without substantive change.

33 While the conclusion of the court that the morning after pill does not cause abortion is medically inaccurate (in at least some cases), the method of statutory construction is even more disturbing. The question the court had was one for which a resort to random dicta in other cases giving unsupported judicial ruminations in the context of interpreting entirely different statutes enacted by a different government is not an intelligent approach to legislative interpretation. 34 McRae v. Matthews, 421 F. Supp. 533 (ED. N.Y.1976), rev'd on other grounds, Harris v. McRae, 448 U.S. 297 (1980). The court also cited dicta from another case.

35 Brownfield, 256 Cal.Rptr. at 245.

36 18 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) ¶8871 (Pa. C.P. De. Cty.), aff'd, 395 A.2d 998 (1978).

37 Id. at 5605 (relying on administrative regulations interpreting the conscience clause). Alternatively, the court found that the hospital had met its duty to accommodate because it had offered her four others jobs, all of which she had declined. "There came a time in the Spellacy situation when the plaintiff had simply rejected one too many reasonable accommodation offers, and her employer could not be expected to continue generating new ones." Durham, Wood & Condie, supra note at 318-319.

38 Erzinger v. Regents of University of California, 137 Cal. App. 3d 389, 394, 187 Cal. Rptr. 164, 168 (1982). The court held that 42 U.S.C. §300a-7 did not apply to prevent a university from requiring students to participate in a comprehensive health insurance program which included benefits for persons desiring abortions or sterilizations.

39 597 P.2d 702 (1979).

wrongful discharge action brought by a nurse-anesthetist who had worked at a hospital for eight years. She had performed more than two dozen sterilizations, but after participating in one particularly shocking and gruesome abortion, she informed her supervisor that she would not participate in any more sterilizations. The hospital administrator tried to change her mind, referred her to her priest, and called the priest to ask him to counsel her to change her mind. She remained fixed in her decision, and the next day was fired by the hospital administrator. She brought suit under Montana's conscience clause, which protects the rights of individuals to refuse on moral or religious grounds to perform sterilizations, and prohibits employment discrimination based on such refusals. After a harrowing encounter with a hostile Montana trial court, she ultimately prevailed in the Montana Supreme Court.40 However, two of the Montana Supreme Court justices would have denied her claim on the ground, inter alia, that her reasons for refusing to participate in any more sterilizations were emotional rather than moral.41

In Catholic Charities of Sacramento, Inc. v. Superior Court,42 a Catholic charitable organization was held not to qualify for the “religious employer" exemption from a California statute requiring employer to provide prescription contraceptives in benefits package, and was also denied constitutional protection from that requirement which violated basic Roman Catholic doctrine. .

In Valley Hosp. Ass'n, Inc. v. Mat-Su Coalition for Choice, 43 the Alaska Supreme Court held that that state's conscience clause was unconstitutional to the extent it applied to allow a private nonprofit hospital that was the sole hospital in the MatSu valley to refuse to provide abortions because it was a de facto quasi-public insti

tutions.

In Larson v. Albany Medical Center,44 a New York state appellate court held that employees fired in alleged retaliation for exercising rights protected under the state conscience clause had not no private right of action.

VI. THE HISTORY OF PROTECTION OF CONSCIENCE IN AMERICA

The history of protection of conscience in America is directly relevant to the protection of rights of conscience of health care providers in three ways. First, protection for rights of conscience underlie and historically preceded the First Amendment.45 In June, 1776, even before the Declaration of Independence, the Virginia Declaration of Rights provided, inter alia, that "all men are equally entitled to the free exercise of religion, according to the dictates of conscience..."46 After centuries of government support for the state church in Virginia, the Baptists led a petition campaign demanding that "every tax upon conscience... be abolished." 47 In 1779, Thomas Jefferson introduced his Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom in the Virginia Legislature (House of Burgesses). It declared that "to compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves, is sinful and tyrannical." (If Jefferson thought that about merely funding things against ones will, one can imagine what he would say about being compelled to perform acts or services like abortion or the MAP against one's conscience.) Jefferson's Bill did not pass for over six years, but in December, 1785, while Jefferson was Minister to

through

40 See infra, notes and accompanying text. See also Swanson v. St. Johns Lutheran Hospital, 615 P.2d 882 (Mont. 1980) (affirming award of $11,950.86 to Nurse Swanson, and affirming rejection of her claim for punitive or future damages for lack of evidence). 41 597 P.2d at 714. The hospital administrator himself obviously perceived her denial to be based on religious/moral grounds, and treated it as such, contacting the nurse's priest in an effort to have him influence her to drop her objections. The dissenters failed to explain the distinction between "emotional" and "moral" grounds. Are they really mutually exclusive categories? Their bias against conscience clause rights is evident.

By contrast, in a case interpreting a conscience clause that protects the right of physicians from employment discrimination because they have performed abortions or sterilizations, a pair of federal courts did not require any evidence about the moral or religious basis for a doctor's practice or sterilizations. See Watkins v. Mercy Medical Center, 364 F. Supp. 799 (D. Ida. 1973), aff'd, 520 F.2d 894 (9th Cir. 1975). There appears to be at least a hint of anti-Catholic, antiprolife bias in the way the conscience clauses have been interpreted. See also In Re Raquena, 517 A.2d 886,891 (N.J. Super. 1986) (lecturing Medical Center that unwillingness to participate in withdrawal of life-support food/hydration systems was not "pro-life", and requiring the hospital to participate in the withdrawal over its and staff's moral objections). See further infra through and accompanying text.

notes

42 109 Cal.Rptr.2d 176 (3d D.Cal.App. 2001).

43 948 P.2d 963 (Alaska 1997).

44 676 N.Y.S.2d 293 (3d App. Div. 1998).

45 Joseph L. Hassan, Freedom of Conscience in Early Virginia: A Precursor to the Religion Clauses of the First Amendment, Paper submitted for Origins of the Constitution, Apr. 17, 1998. 46 Kermit Hall, et al, American Legal History: Cases and Materials 70 (1996).

47 Hassan, supra, at 12.

80-684 D-3

France, James Madison engineered passage of Jefferson's Bill. As finally enacted it declared that "no man shall be... molested or burdened in his body or his good, nor shall otherwise suffer on account of his religious opinions or belief... and that the same shall in no wise diminish, enlarge or effect their civil capacity." So proud was Jefferson of his role in securing protection for rights of conscience that he asked that his gravestone be inscribed: "Thomas Jefferson, Author of the Declaration of Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom, and Father of the University of Virginia."

148

Second, it is critical to understand that in America in the 1770s and 1780s two different views about matters of conscience and religion were competing.49 One view, with a high and honorable heritage traceable to John Locke's famous essay, A Letter Concerning Toleration, viewed accommodation of religious variety and differences to be a matter of utilitarian toleration or accommodation. In some of his early writing, at least, Thomas Jefferson advocated this approach. Respect matters of conscience and religion as simply a matter of toleration-sound public policy, good neighborliness and good Polistes. On the other hand, the Virginia Baptists and most famously, James Madison, spoke of matters of conscience and religion not merely as toleration but as fundamental, natural rights. It makes a big difference whether respect for another's moral convictions is given simply as a matter of convenience and tolerance (to be suspended when outweighed by other political considerations, for example, in time of emergency), or whether that is a matter of your neighbor's basic civil rights. Fortunately, the Founders ultimately concluded that protection for conscience was a matter of fundamental right. Early colonial charters and state constitutions spoke of it as a right, and during the frightening emergency of the War of Independence, rather than suspend respect for divergent moral views, many states granted exemptions from conscription to persons with religious scruples against war, such as Quakers and Mennonites. In 1775, the Continental Congress granted a general exemption from military conscription to religious groups. The Virginia Declaration of Rights was initially drafted too guarantee "fullest toleration” of religion; but Madison amended it and when it passed, it protected the rights of religion: "all men are entitled to the full and free exercise of it according to the dictates of conscience." Madison's Memorial and Remonstrance expressed the language of rights, not toleration ("The equal right of every citizen to the free exercise of his Religion according to the dictates of conscience is held by the same tenure with all our other rights." 50 Of course, the best example is the protection of conscience as a right is inclusion of the right to free exercise of religion in the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights. (James Madison, of course, was the Father of the Bill of Rights.) Ironically, some courts and most commentators today have slipped into using the language of toleration and accommodation. It is time for us to reassert emphatically the language of rights.

Third, when an effort to revive the religion tax in Virginia was made after the War of Independence, James Madison drafted his famous Memorial and Remonstrance declaring that certain things like religious duties "must be left to the conviction and conscience of every man; and it is the right of every man to exercise it as these may dictate." 51 He explained why:

Before any man can be considered as a member of Civil Society, he must be considered as a subject of the Governor of the Universe: And if a member of a Civil Society, who enters into any subordinate Association, must always do it with reservation of his duty to the general authority; much more must every man who becomes a member of any particular Civil Society, do it with a saving of his allegiance to the Universal Sovereign.52

Madison clearly understood that if men are not loyal to themselves, to their conscience, to their God and their moral duty as they see it, it is utterly irrational folly to expect them to be loyal to less compelling moral obligations of legal rules, statutes, judicial orders, or the claims of citizenship and civic virtue, much less professional duties. If you demand that a man betray his conscience, you have eliminated the only moral basis for his fidelity to the rule of law, and have destroyed the foundation for all civic virtue.

Finally, the loss of virtue that results from requiring men to violate and disregard their conscience undermines the basis for self-government. The founders of the American Constitution really believed that virtue in the citizenry was absolutely es

48 Hassan, supra, at 17.

49 Dawn Hendrickson Steadman, The Free Exercise Clause and Original Intent: A View Toward Exemptions, for Origins of the Constitution, Winter Semester 2000.

[blocks in formation]

52 James Madison, Memorial and Remonstrance cited in Hussan at 15.

sential, indispensable for this system of government to function and survive. I have brought just a few quotes from the Founders to make this point.

Thomas Jefferson: "[O]ur rules can have authority over such natural rights only as we have submitted to them. The rights of conscience we never submitted, we could not submit. We are answerable for them to our God." 53

George Washington: "Tis substantially true, that virtue or morality is a necessary spring of popular government. The rule indeed extends with more or less force to every species of Free Government. Who then is a sincere friend to it, can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?..." 54

Samuel Adams agreed that "neither the wisest constitution nor the wisest laws will secure the liberty and happiness of a people whose manners are universally corrupt." 55

James Madison told delegates to Virginia's ratifying convention: "To suppose that any form of government will secure liberty or happiness without any virtue in the people, is a chimerical idea." 56 He also wrote in Federalist No. 57: "The aim of every political Constitution is or ought to be first to obtain for rules men who possess most wisdom to discern, and most virtue to pursue, the common good of society; and in the next place, to take the most effectual precautions for keeping them virtuous whilst they continue to hold their public trust."

John Adams clearly warned: "Out constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." 57 He also said: "Liberty can no more exist without virtue and independence than the body can live and move without a soul." 58

Thus, protection of conscience has been crucial to the foundation of this nation.

VII. CONCLUSION

This Energy and Commerce Committee has recently be involved in hearing testimony about enormous scandals caused because businessmen and accountants and other professional have anesthetized their consciences in the pursuit of wealth. The consequences have been seedy, shady, and disastrous for the companies and for the economy of the country.

In this context, it is more than a little ironic to hear abortion zealots plead that Congress must look the other way while they continue to coerce health care professionals and entities to ignore their consciences. The results of not protecting and encouraging the exercise of conscience in the health care profession will be just as disastrous as it has been for Enron and Worldcom and perhaps for Martha Stewart. Currently pending in Congress is the Abortion Non-Discrimination Act. It is a very small, but very important step in the right direction. It simply protects conscience by requiring modest accommodation for entities that cover and pay for and provide medical services. It merely prohibits use of state power to coerce abandonment of conscience and moral principles. It is a true neutrality provision, guaranteeing each health care participant the right to choose for himself or herself or itself to follow the values and moral precepts they espouse.

I urge this Committee to act promptly to enact the Abortion Non-Discrimination Act and other acts which will address the crisis of conscience and begin to eliminate the intolerance, coercion and discrimination against health care participants who do not believe in participating in the provision of abortion and other morally controversial procedures.

ATTACHMENT

Summary of State Laws Protecting Rights of Conscience-July 8, 2002

Code of Ala. §22-8A-8 (2001) No nurse, physician or healthcare provider is required to withdraw lifesustaining treatment. Health care provider will attempt to transfer patient to other provider.

Alabama

Alaska

Alaska Stat. § 18.16.010 (b) "Nothing in this section requires a hospital or person to participate in an abortion, nor is a hospital or person liable for refusing to participate in an abortion under this section."

53 Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)

54 George Washington, Washington's Farewell Address from Saul Padover, The Washington Papers (searched Sept. 9, 1999).

55 Id.

56 Id.

57 J. Howe, The Changing Political Thought of John Adams 165 (1966).

58 10 The Works of John Adams 284.

Arizona

Arkansas

California

Colorado

Summary of State Laws Protecting Rights of Conscience-July 8, 2002-Continued

Connecticut

Delaware
Florida

Georgia

Hawaii

Idaho

Illinois

Indiana

lowa

Kansas

Kentucky
Louisiana

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi

Missouri

A.R.S. 36-2151 Hospital, physician or other medical personnel may refuse to perform an abortion for moral or religious reasons.

A.C.A. § 20-16-304, 601 (2001) No person or hospital has to participate in an abortion. Medical personnel may refuse to give contraceptives or information about such things if it is against their religious beliefs.

Cal. Health & Safety Code 123420 A physician, nurse or other hospital employee may refuse to participate in an abortion for moral or religious reasons. Admission to a school may not be denied due to applicant's unwillingness to participate in an abortion. Non-profit facility or religious hospitals do not have to perform abortions.

C.R.S. 18-6-104 (2001) Hospital does not have to admit a person for the purpose of performing an abortion. A person who is an employee at a hospital does not have to perform an abortion if it is against his morals or religious principles.

C.R.S. 25-6-102, 207 (2001) No private institution or physician is required to give out contraceptive. A county or city employee may refuse the duty to supply contraceptives.

Conn. Gen. Stat. § 19a-580a (2001) Any physician who does not wish to comply with a living will must transfer the patient.

24 Del. Code Ann. 1791 No person is required to participate in an abortion. No hospital has to participate.

Fla. Stat. § 390.0111 (2001) Hospital and person do not have to participate in abortion if it against moral or religious principles.

Fla. Stat. § 381.0051 (2001) Physician or other person may refuse to give contraceptives for medical or religious purposes.

O.C.G.A. § 16-12-142 (2001) No person or hospital shall be required to perform an abortion when it is against his moral or religious principles.

O.C.G.A. § 49-7-6 (2001) Any employee can refuse to provide family planning services if it is contrary to his religious beliefs

H.R.S. § 453-16 Nothing in this section shall require any hospital or any person to participate in such abortion nor shall any hospital or any person be liable for such refusal.

Idaho Code § 18-612 (2002) No hospital or person shall be required to perform an abortion if it is objected to for moral reasons.

745 ILCS 70-Rights of Conscience are protected for all procedures. Sec. 11.2-Health Care Payers are not liable. Sec. 12-Right to recover treble damages, may not be less than $2,500.

Ind. Stat. 16-34-1-3 to 5. No hospital shall be required to perform an abortion. No person shall have to do so if it against his moral or religious principles and one cannot be required to participate in an abortion as a condition of training or employment.

lowa Code § 146.1&2 (2002) No person shall be required to perform an abortion if it against his moral or religious convictions. No hospital that is not maintained by public authority must perform an abortion.

K.S.A. § 65-443, 444 (2001) No person or hospital is required to perform an abortion. Refusal to do so is not grounds for civil liability against any person.

KRS § 311.800 (2001) No public funds shall be used to perform an abortion. No private hospital or person shall be required to perform an abortion.

La. R.S. 40:1299.31 to 32 (2002) No person in the medical field can be liable for refusing to participate in abortion. No social service worker is liable for refusing to recommend abortions. No hospital shall be required to perform an abortion.

22 M.R.S. § 1591-2 (2001) no person or hospital is required to perform an abortion. No hospital, firm, or education institution can discriminate for a person's refusal to perform an abortion.

22 M.R.S. § 1903 (2001) A private institution or physician or their agent may refuse to provide family planning services if it is against their religious or moral beliefs.

Md. Health-General Code Ann. § 20-214 No person or hospital has to participate in an abortion, artificial insemination, or sterilization. There is no immunity if a person's referring the patient to a source of pregnancy termination would have prevented death or long lasting injury.

Mass. Ann. Laws ch. 112, § 121 (2002) Any person who objects to abortion or sterilization will not be re-
quired to participate. Such an objection will not be used against a person to keep him out of medical
school, social work, etc.

MCLS § 333.20181, 20182 (2002) No hospital, teaching institution or person connected with such a fa-
Icility is required to perform an abortion if objected to on professional, moral, or religious grounds.
Minn. Stat. Ann. 145.414, 145.42 No hospital or person is liable if they refuse to participate in an abor-
tion. No health Plan company will be held liable for not providing abortions.

Miss. Code Ann. § 41-41-215 "A health-care provider may decline to comply with an individual instruc-
tion or health-care decision for reasons of conscience."

§ 197.032 R.S.Mo.No person or public or private hospital shall be required to treat a person for abortion. § 188.110 R.S. Mo. (2001) No employer can discriminate against employees for their refusal to participate in an abortion.

§ 188.110 R.S.Mo. (2001) No school can deny admittance for a person's refusal to participate in an abortion

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