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Home > 2004 > July (Web-only)Christianity Today, July (Web-only), 2004  |   |  
Army Facing Battle on Benefits
Domestic partners dispute may cripple Salvation Army-New York link.



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Nearly 125 years after a "Hallelujah Army" of eight Salvation Army leaders vowed to lay siege to lower Manhattan and win New York City for Christ, the Salvation Army is facing a possible retreat.

If the New York City Council overrides Mayor Michael Bloomberg's veto of its Equal Benefits Bill, the Army would lose $70 million in service contracts, or roughly half the money it spends on social services yearly in the greater New York area. Currently the Army is one of the city's largest social service charities, providing hundreds of soup kitchens, homeless shelters, and addiction programs. The Army declines to provide health benefits to unmarried domestic partners of employees. The bill would require such benefits for organizations with city contracts. Right now, there may be enough votes on the city council to override the veto. The council voted 43-5 in favor of the bill.

Major George Hood, spokesman for the Army's national headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia, told CT he could not be specific about what the church's response might be. "We can't take any action until we know what's happening. It's not an easy issue." However, Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council told Catholic World News, "The bottom line is that religious organizations will either be forced to compromise their moral principles, or the neediest people in our nation's cities will be deprived of services faith-based organizations can provide."

New York City Councilwoman Christine Quinn (D-Manhattan) told the New York Post that the bill would allow groups such as the Army to make benefits available to "any" adult in a household. Because of that qualifier, she said the bill's provisions make "a very fair accommodation to religious groups."

There has been growing tension in recent years over how Army employees—who are not required to be Salvationists or to profess Army beliefs—can purchase health insurance for others in their households. For years, only legally wedded spouses and dependent children could be covered, at employee expense, under the group's health insurance schemes.

Also, the Army faces a battle on another religious dispute. The New York Civil Liberties Union has sued both the Army and New York government officials. The suit alleges that the Army violates constitutional protection of religious freedom by its requirement that workers "support the Army's mission." The Army contends it merely wants to have employees who agree with its core principles. The Army says that meeting human needs without discrimination is part of its mandate.

Hood said the Army around the nation is facing more fights. "We've got bigger problems in California," he said, pointing to a California Supreme Court ruling that offices of Catholic Charities in California must pay for birth control for employees despite Roman Catholic opposition to contraception. The Army and other religious groups say they are troubled by judicial efforts to tell them how to apportion employee benefits, even if they contradict the tenets of their faith.


An earlier version of this article misstated the Salvation Army's position on providing benefits to homosexual employees. The Salvation Army offers all employees—who are not required to be Salvationists or to profess Army beliefs—the same benefits package. The church would object to a legal requirement to extend those benefits to unmarried "domestic partners" of employees, as that would contradict its Christian beliefs. CT regrets the error.





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