logo
Baltimore Catholic charity violated gay man's rights by not paying spousal benefits, court rules

Baltimore Catholic charity violated gay man's rights by not paying spousal benefits, court rules

Yahoo29-04-2025

A federal judge in Baltimore has decreed that Catholic Relief Services must pay $60,000 to a gay, married information technology employee after it refused to continue providing health care benefits to his husband. The judge said the charitable organization had violated Maryland's antidiscrimination law.
Keep up with the latest in + news and politics.
U.S. District Judge Julie Rubin found last week that the Catholic agency's decision not to provide coverage to Doe's spouse directly violated the Maryland Fair Employment Practices Act. Rubin agreed the group did not qualify for a religious exemption because the employee's activities were not directly tied to its religious activities.
'I'm very happy with Judge Rubin's ruling and am honored to be part of such a precedent-setting case that has helped clarify, for employers and employees alike, the legal protections Maryland law provides, especially for LGBTQ+ workers,' the employee, identified only as "John Doe," said in a press release from the law firm representing him, Brown, Goldstein, and Levy. 'I truly hope that CRS will see this ruling as an opportunity to promote the human dignity of employees in same-sex marriages by providing them the same opportunities and benefits granted to their straight counterparts.'
RELATED: Insurer illegally discriminated against trans teens
The employee was identified for employment by a CRS recruiter in mid-2016, according to court documents. Doe traveled to Baltimore to interview for the position, which would focus solely on the IT side of CRS activities and would not be involved with the charitable functions of the organization.
Doe specifically inquired about the benefits packages offered by CRS.
The eligibility provision of CRS's Group Insurance Plan stated that 'dependent[s]' are covered, and the Plan defined '[d]ependent' as 'wife or husband; children to age 26; regardless of student status,' according to Doe's lawsuit.
During a follow-up conversation via telephone initiated by the recruiter, Doe inquired further about health care and benefits and whether his husband would also be covered. The pair are in a legal marriage.
'The recruiter responded, 'All dependents are covered.''
Doe accepted the offer and relocated his family to Baltimore. He received a package from Aetna shortly after he started working at Catholic Relief Services. The package specifically noted that his spouse was eligible for health benefits. Multiple representatives from CRS also confirmed his spouse's eligibility during the onboarding process.
RELATED: Judge approves settlement in landmark LGBTQ+ fertility case
The couple received insurance cards, and both men sought medical attention during the following 16 months, which was covered without issue by Aetna.
All that changed in 2017 when CRS informed Doe that his husband had been improperly provided health care and other spousal benefits, and that it would cease all coverage beginning on October 1 of the same year.
Doe appealed the decision but was told by one senior official that some people within the organization wanted him fired and advised him not to press the issue.
The official was more threatening in a later meeting.
'During the meeting, the senior CRS official clarified that, if Mr. Doe were to pursue legal action, he would most likely be terminated,' Doe claimed in the lawsuit.
'CRS's retaliatory actions were malicious, intentional, and repeated,' Rubin wrote in her ruling.
RELATED: Ohio Supreme Court hears LGBTQ+ parental rights case
Doe was represented by Anthony May, Eve Hill, and Lauren DiMartino of Brown, Goldstein, and Levy along with co-counsel from Gilbert Employment Law.
'The court thoughtfully weighed all of the circumstances and correctly concluded that while [Mr. Doe] was dedicated to assisting CRS provide humanitarian relief to vulnerable individuals around the world, his specific job duties did not permit CRS to compensate him lesser than his colleagues merely because of who he loves,' Anthony said in the press release.
CRS officials said they were reviewing their options, including an appeal of the decision.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Granholm: Democrats must ‘do a better job' selling clean energy
Granholm: Democrats must ‘do a better job' selling clean energy

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Granholm: Democrats must ‘do a better job' selling clean energy

Democrats failed to properly sell clean energy jobs to voters on the campaign trail last year, former Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said Tuesday. 'Democrats have to do a better job of speaking to all channels and being fearless about going to places that may not be allies,' she said at POLITICO's annual Energy Summit in Washington. Granholm, who served as Energy secretary under former President Joe Biden, said she regrets that Democrats didn't prioritize new energy jobs in campaign messaging. The Biden administration made investments in wind, solar and electric vehicles a priority, but President Donald Trump returned to the White House while promoting fossil fuels. 'In the social media ecosystem, Joe Rogan has 38 million listeners,' said Granholm, who also was Michigan's governor for eight years. 'We have to go to places where people are listening.' Granholm called on Republicans to walk back some of the biggest restrictions on clean energy projects in high-profile budget reconciliation legislation that now awaits Senate action after passing the House last month. She urged Republicans to loosen rules against foreign company involvement in projects and to extend a 60-day requirement to begin construction to get tax credits for many clean energy projects. She also called on Republicans to keep transferability, a provision in law that allows companies to sell clean energy credits. Meanwhile, Granholm weighed in on a public fight between Trump and Elon Musk, the CEO of electric vehicle producer Tesla and the former face of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. She said Musk has been a positive force for clean energy, labeling his electric vehicle company Tesla 'amazing.' 'The later part of his journey has been more challenging,' she said. Musk has recently criticized Republicans for killing a $7,500 EV consumer tax credit in the budget bill. Granholm said his criticism could 'further cement' Republican plans to remove the credit. 'The projections are that taking away those credits will reduce the EV sales by 40 percent,' she said. She added that China sees 'our pullback' on clean energy as 'their opportunity.' When she led DOE, Granholm oversaw a dramatic transformation. New funding and authorities provided to DOE in the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law and 2022 Inflation Reduction Act supercharged the department from an early seed funder for next-generation energy technologies to a full-scale commercialization enterprise. Under Biden, the department announced billions of dollars of funding for carbon capture, hydrogen, direct air capture, industrial decarbonization and other technologies. DOE's Loan Programs Office also closed more than $60 billion in loans, much of them for the electric vehicle sector. But since the inauguration of Trump in January, DOE has signaled it will rein in much of that spending. In late May, the department axed nearly $4 billion in grants for carbon capture, cement decarbonization and other projects. Meanwhile, new Energy Secretary Chris Wright, a former CEO of a fracking services company, recently forced a coal plant to stay open in Michigan, citing insufficient power and the risk of disruption. 'It is deeply concerning how many billions of dollars were rushed out the door without proper due diligence in the final days of the Biden administration,' Wright testified to Congress on Tuesday. 'DOE is undertaking a thorough review of financial assistance that identifies waste of taxpayer dollars, protects America's national security and advances President Trump's commitment to unleash American energy dominance.' Granholm found new gigs in the private sector shortly after Trump's return to the Oval Office. Granholm joined the boards at electric utility holding company Edison International and its Southern California Edison subsidiary. And she joined the advisory firm DGA Group as a senior counselor. There, she advises multinational corporations and investors and will not register to lobby, according to the firm.

O-I, GPI decry federal funding walkback for glass decarbonization projects
O-I, GPI decry federal funding walkback for glass decarbonization projects

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

O-I, GPI decry federal funding walkback for glass decarbonization projects

This story was originally published on Packaging Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Packaging Dive newsletter. O-I Glass said Friday it is disappointed by the U.S. Department of Energy's announcement a week prior that it was terminating a more than $57 million award to the company. That money was supposed to go toward enhancements at the company's Zanesville, Ohio, glass manufacturing facility. 'The Zanesville project was designed to be a generational investment in American manufacturing, the state of Ohio, and to make our industry more competitive,' O-I Glass said in an emailed statement. 'With support from the DOE's Industrial Demonstrations Program, this pilot project aimed to integrate five proven, cutting-edge furnace technologies—waste heat recovery, gas/oxygen firing, batch and cullet pre-heating, and electric boost—into a single transformative system.' O-I said that this would have been 'the first time all five proven technologies were deployed together,' which the company said would have had energy reduction and economic benefits, and increased the use of recycled material. Specifically, the project could have added more than 300 contracting jobs and reduced emissions by 49%, also helping customers reach their scope 3 targets. O-I did not comment on the status of the project in the wake of the federal funding reversal. The company did, however, say in the statement it is 'evaluating all available options before the company due to this reversal.' 'O-I stands by the viability and potential impact of this project that was vetted and agreed upon by DOE's team of experts,' the company wrote. 'While the DOE's decision cites a shift in policy priorities and a reassessment of emissions accounting methodology, we believe the project remains aligned with the broader goals of strengthening domestic manufacturing, making American made products more competitive and sustainable.' O-I's project was one of 24 decarbonization awards on the chopping block in DOE's notice. Some others in the glass space were also affected, including Gallo Glass, which had planned to install a demonstration hybrid electric furnace at its Modesto, California, site, backed by a $75 million award. The list also extended far beyond glass; other companies affected included Exxon Mobil, Eastman, Kraft Heinz and Diageo. DOE said in its announcement that it 'found that these projects failed to advance the energy needs of the American people, were not economically viable and would not generate a positive return on investment of taxpayer dollars.' The Glass Packaging Institute railed against these cuts, what it called a 'surprising decision to abruptly terminate funding for multiple industrial decarbonization projects — including shovel-ready initiatives from U.S. glass manufacturers — while allowing projects from other material sectors, such as steel and aluminum to move forward.' 'Glass manufacturing recipients were informed that their projects did not 'effectuate current priorities' and lacked full-scope emissions modeling — despite providing shovel-ready, technologically sound, and financially responsible decarbonization strategies in support of the next generation of American manufacturing careers,' GPI said in an emailed statement. GPI said that other federal agencies have recognized the pressure domestic suppliers are under from Chinese competition. Such issues have previously prompted trade investigations by the U.S. Department of Commerce and International Trade Commission. 'Glass is an often overlooked American success story, and it's unacceptable to see vetted projects that advance American manufacturing competitiveness cut,' said GPI President Scott DeFife. 'The Department should lean into glass, not ignore it." GPI called on DOE to meet with industry stakeholders 'to ensure future opportunities reflect the full range of American manufacturing.' Recommended Reading DOE cancels $57M award for O-I Glass furnace project

Granholm: Democrats must ‘do a better job' selling clean energy
Granholm: Democrats must ‘do a better job' selling clean energy

Politico

time8 hours ago

  • Politico

Granholm: Democrats must ‘do a better job' selling clean energy

Democrats failed to properly sell clean energy jobs to voters on the campaign trail last year, former Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said Tuesday. 'Democrats have to do a better job of speaking to all channels and being fearless about going to places that may not be allies,' she said at POLITICO's annual Energy Summit in Washington. Granholm, who served as Energy secretary under former President Joe Biden, said she regrets that Democrats didn't prioritize new energy jobs in campaign messaging. The Biden administration made investments in wind, solar and electric vehicles a priority, but President Donald Trump returned to the White House while promoting fossil fuels. 'In the social media ecosystem, Joe Rogan has 38 million listeners,' said Granholm, who also was Michigan's governor for eight years. 'We have to go to places where people are listening.' Granholm called on Republicans to walk back some of the biggest restrictions on clean energy projects in high-profile budget reconciliation legislation that now awaits Senate action after passing the House last month. She urged Republicans to loosen rules against foreign company involvement in projects and to extend a 60-day requirement to begin construction to get tax credits for many clean energy projects. She also called on Republicans to keep transferability, a provision in law that allows companies to sell clean energy credits. Meanwhile, Granholm weighed in on a public fight between Trump and Elon Musk, the CEO of electric vehicle producer Tesla and the former face of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. She said Musk has been a positive force for clean energy, labeling his electric vehicle company Tesla 'amazing.' 'The later part of his journey has been more challenging,' she said. Musk has recently criticized Republicans for killing a $7,500 EV consumer tax credit in the budget bill. Granholm said his criticism could 'further cement' Republican plans to remove the credit. 'The projections are that taking away those credits will reduce the EV sales by 40 percent,' she said. She added that China sees 'our pullback' on clean energy as 'their opportunity.' When she led DOE, Granholm oversaw a dramatic transformation. New funding and authorities provided to DOE in the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law and 2022 Inflation Reduction Act supercharged the department from an early seed funder for next-generation energy technologies to a full-scale commercialization enterprise. Under Biden, the department announced billions of dollars of funding for carbon capture, hydrogen, direct air capture, industrial decarbonization and other technologies. DOE's Loan Programs Office also closed more than $60 billion in loans, much of them for the electric vehicle sector. But since the inauguration of Trump in January, DOE has signaled it will rein in much of that spending. In late May, the department axed nearly $4 billion in grants for carbon capture, cement decarbonization and other projects. Meanwhile, new Energy Secretary Chris Wright, a former CEO of a fracking services company, recently forced a coal plant to stay open in Michigan, citing insufficient power and the risk of disruption. 'It is deeply concerning how many billions of dollars were rushed out the door without proper due diligence in the final days of the Biden administration,' Wright testified to Congress on Tuesday. 'DOE is undertaking a thorough review of financial assistance that identifies waste of taxpayer dollars, protects America's national security and advances President Trump's commitment to unleash American energy dominance.' Granholm found new gigs in the private sector shortly after Trump's return to the Oval Office. Granholm joined the boards at electric utility holding company Edison International and its Southern California Edison subsidiary. And she joined the advisory firm DGA Group as a senior counselor. There, she advises multinational corporations and investors and will not register to lobby, according to the firm.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store