CEDAR PARK ASSEMBLY OF GOD OF KIRKLAND, WASHINGTON V. KREIDLER, No. 23-35560 (9th Cir. 2025)
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A church in Washington, Cedar Park Assembly of God, challenged the state's Reproductive Parity Act (Parity Act), which mandates insurance carriers to cover all federally approved contraceptives and, if maternity care is included, abortions. The church argued that this law violated its First Amendment rights and religious autonomy because it could not find a comparable health plan that excluded abortion coverage after its insurer, Kaiser Permanente, stopped offering such a plan.
The United States District Court for the Western District of Washington granted summary judgment in favor of the state officials, Myron Kreidler and Jay Inslee, who were sued in their official capacities. The district court found that the church did not have standing to challenge the Parity Act because it could not demonstrate that its inability to obtain a suitable health plan was directly caused by the Act.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reviewed the case de novo and vacated the district court's summary judgment, remanding with instructions to dismiss the action for lack of standing. The Ninth Circuit held that Cedar Park Assembly of God failed to establish that its injury was traceable to the Parity Act or that invalidating the Act would redress its injury. The court noted that Washington's conscientious-objection statute allows insurers to accommodate religious objections, and nothing in the Parity Act prevents insurers from offering plans that exclude abortion coverage. The court concluded that the church's injury was due to the independent decisions of insurers, not the Parity Act, and thus, the church lacked standing to sue.
Court Description: Standing/Free Exercise. Vacating the district court’s summary judgment for Washington state defendants and remanding with instructions to dismiss the action, the panel held that the Cedar Park Assembly of God of Kirkland, Washington, lacked standing to challenge Washington’s Reproductive Parity Act (the “Parity Act”) under the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
The Parity Act, enacted in 2018, requires insurance carriers to provide health coverage for all federally approved contraceptives and, if maternity care is covered, for abortions. The Act’s 2019 implementing regulations do not diminish or affect any rights provided under Washington’s existing conscientious-objection statute, which enables insurance carriers to accommodate an employer’s religious objections to an insurance plan. The conscientious- objection statute also provides that employees can obtain coverage for abortion services through their employer’s insurance carrier, even when the plan itself does not include that coverage.
Cedar Park asserts that after the enactment of the Parity Act, but before its implementing regulations clarifying the availability of conscience-based exemptions, its insurer stopped accommodating the abortion exclusion. Cedar Park alleged that although Cigna has since offered a health plan that excluded abortion, the plan was not comparable, and Cedar Park has been unable to secure a substitute plan that would accommodate its religious objections.
The panel first held that its earlier determination that Cedar Park adequately pleaded an injury in fact to survive a motion to dismiss did not bind it under the law-of-the-case doctrine when reviewing a ruling on summary judgment. After full discovery, Cedar Park failed to establish causation.
The panel held that Cedar Park failed to establish that its claimed injury was traceable to the Parity Act or redressable. Taken together, the Parity Act, its implementing regulation, and Washington’s conscientious- objection statute and regulations operate to make Cedar Park’s desired no-abortion group health coverage possible. Nothing in the challenged law prevents any insurance company from offering Cedar Park a health plan that excludes direct coverage for abortion services. Cedar Park’s injury is premised on the alleged acts and independent decisions of non-parties to this action—independent health insurers. And nothing in the record suggests that Cedar Park’s alleged injury would be redressed if the Parity Act was struck down because invalidation of the Parity Act could not and would not force insurers to offer a no-abortion plan to Cedar Park.
The panel rejected Cedar Park’s contention that an employer purchasing a no-abortion plan in Washington still indirectly facilitates the provision of abortion services because employees can still obtain abortion coverage through the employer’s insurance carrier, and that this kind of facilitation is injurious. The panel held that general disapproval of the actions that others might decide to take does not create standing, even when some tenuous connection may exist between the disapproving plaintiff and the offense-causing action. Even were the panel to accept the basic premise of Cedar Park’s theory, it still would lack standing because its claimed injury was premised entirely on speculation.
Dissenting, Judge Callahan stated that Cedar Park has standing to challenge the Parity Act. Although Cedar Park can choose not to purchase abortion coverage for its “benefits package,” the Parity Act still requires it to facilitate access to abortion coverage simply by entering into a contract with an insurer servicing the State of Washington, in violation of its Free Exercise of religion. Moreover, Cedar Park’s insurer stopped providing a health plan that excludes abortion coverage, and Cedar Park cannot procure a comparable replacement.
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