by
Deal Hudson
February 17,
2008
LifeNews.com Note: Deal W. Hudson is the director of the Morley Institute for Church & Culture, and is the former publisher and editor of CRISIS Magazine, a Catholic monthly. He is the author of six books and his articles and comments have been published in many newspapers and magazines.
Belmont
Abbey College is one of the few Catholic colleges in the southeastern
United States, located about ten miles west of Charlotte, North Carolina.
Unfortunately, its president and chancellor are currently embroiled
in a defense of the colleges Catholic identity against eight
faculty members who insist on insurance coverage for voluntary sterilization,
abortion, and contraception.
Founded by Benedictine Monks in 1876, Belmont Abbey College has 120
faculty and 1,200 students. Under its new president, Dr. William Thierfelder,
the college has begun to get national attention with an aggressive
and innovative advertising campaign (found on InsideCatholic.com and
numerous other Catholic publications).
I talked with Ken Davison, Vice President for College Relations, about
the sequence of events that led to the present controversy.
The college asked its insurance carrier, Wellpath, to meet with faculty
and staff to brief them on their various insurance options. Following
the meeting, a faculty member, reading the documents closely, discovered
the coverage for voluntary sterilization, abortion, and contraception,
and alerted the administration by e-mail.
The president immediately asked Wellpath to remove this coverage,
since they ran contrary to Catholic teaching. The faculty and staff
then received an e-mail memo explaining that the coverage had been
changed and why. (While the state requires this coverage, it offers
an exemption for religious institutions.)
The Vice President of Administration and Finance then received an
e-mail complaining about the changes in insurance coverage. As Davison
says, The next thing we knew our legal counsel received notice
from EEOC [Equal Employment Opportunity Commission] that a complaint
had been filed that the changes in insurance coverage were discriminatory
on the basis of sex and religion."
The charges had been filed by eight Belmont Abbey faculty -- six men
and two women. In addition, the college found out that one faculty
member had complained to the Department of Insurance about the insurance
changes and the religious exemption.
Unfortunately for the community of Belmont Abbey College, this all
broke out during the Christmas holidays.
On January 16, a letter was mailed by the National Womens Law
Center to the president threatening a lawsuit on behalf of the eight
faculty. The letter demanded that the college reinstate the coverage,
and pay any damages and out-of pocket costs.
Two days later, the president and chancellor held a meeting of faculty
and staff and explained why Belmont Abbey College could not offer
this coverage. As Davison told me, "This insurance coverage is
contrary to the clear moral teaching of the Catholic Church so we
will not offer nor will we subsidize these medical services. To do
so would be contrary to our stated Catholic mission and identity."
On January 25, the professor who had complained to the Department
of Insurance received a letter stating that Belmont Abbey College
qualified for the religious exemption. The response of this faculty
member was to ask the National Women's Law Center to contest the decision.
This is where things stand at present: Belmont Abbey College has hired
legal counsel to reply to the EEOC complaints. Thus far, no lawsuit
has been filed by the National Women's Law Center, and the decision
of the state insurance department has not been reversed.
President Thierfelder recently sent a letter to faculty and staff
addressing the controversy. He was asked why he and the chancellor
did not consult the faculty or other administrators in making changes
to the insurance coverage. Here is what he wrote:
The teaching of the Catholic Church on this moral issue is clear.
The responsibility of the College as a Catholic College sponsored
by the monks of Belmont Abbey to follow Church teaching is equally
clear. There was no other course of action possible if we were to
operate in fidelity to our mission and to our identity as a Catholic
College. Therefore, consultation was not an option. However, Abbot
Placid and I have publicly and repeatedly expressed a willingness
to discuss the matter at any time with anyone who would like to talk
to us.
Catholics have been crying out for Catholic colleges to reaffirm their
identity. In President Thierfielder and Abbot Placid Solari, we have
examples of leadership committed to following the moral teachings
of the Church wherever they lead.
Such bold leadership should be applauded.


