David & Barbara Green, Hobby Lobby co-founders |
At issue is the Health and Human Service
(HHS) Mandate which requires David and Barbara Green and their family business
Hobby Lobby to provide and facilitate four potential life-terminating drugs and
devices in their health insurance plan, against their religious convictions, or
pay severe fines to the IRS.
“Our family started Hobby Lobby built on our
faith and together as a family. We’ve kept that tradition for more than
forty years and we want to continue to live out our faith in the way we do
business,” said Barbara Green, co-founder of Hobby
Lobby.
“The choice that the government has forced on us is out
of step with the history of our great nation founded on religious
freedom. We believe that no American should lose their religious freedom
just because they open a family business. We are thankful that the
Supreme Court has heard our case, and we prayerfully await the justices’
decision.”
Founded in an Oklahoma City garage in 1972,
the Green family has grown Hobby Lobby from one 300-square-foot retail space
into more than 500 stores in over 40 states. Devout Christians, the Green
family believes that “it is by God’s grace and provision that Hobby Lobby has
endured” and seek to run their company “in a manner consistent with Biblical
principles.” This includes closing on Sundays and generous treatment of
their employees with full-time hourly workers starting at 90 percent above the
federal minimum wage. The Greens and their family businesses have no moral
objection to providing 16 of the 20 FDA-approved contraceptives under the HHS
mandate, and will continue to provide a broad range of contraceptives at no
additional cost to their employees.
“No one should be forced to give up their
constitutionally protected civil rights just to open a family business,” said Lori Windham, Senior Counsel for The Becket Fund for ReligiousLiberty and counsel for Hobby Lobby. “This case
demonstrates in no uncertain terms that the government’s efforts to strip this
family business of its religious rights represent a gross violation of the
Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the First Amendment.”
In court former
United States Solicitor General Paul Clement argued on behalf of
Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood, two family businesses whose cases were consolidated
before the court. Clement argued that Hobby Lobby and Conestoga are protected
under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and that nothing in the law
excludes these family businesses and their owners from religious freedom
protections.
The Court is expected to rule on the case
before the end of its current term in June.
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