DOJ to join Dominicansâ suit on NY gender identity law for long
DOJ to join Dominicansâ suit on NY gender identity law for long-term care facilities June 23, 2026By Kurt Jensen OSV News Filed Under: Feature, News, Religious Freedom, World News WASHINGTON (OSV News) â The Department of Justice has moved to become a co-plaintiff in a lawsuit against New York state filed by the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne, who operate a 42-bed palliative care program for the dying poor. A 2024 New York law, known as the Long-Term Care Facility Residentsâ Bill of Rights for LGBTQ+ New Yorkers and People Living with HIV, requires long-term care facilities to use preferred pronouns and assign rooms based on gender identity. The sistersâ facility, Rosary Hill, serves cancer patients. The lawsuit was filed April 6 in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York in White Plains by the Idaho-based law firm of First & Fourteenth. Named as defendants are New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and four administrators in the New York State Department of Health. A hearing date has not been set, and the state is expected to ask the court to dismiss the suit.In a June 18 statement, U.S. Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dillon said, âStates should take notice that they cannot require Americans to abandon their religious beliefs in the name of woke gender ideology.â The intervention is being handled by the Justice Departmentâs Civil Rights Division, headed by Dillon. The Justice Department focus âwill be on New Yorkâs violation of the (14th Amendmentâs) Equal Protection Clause (of religious groups) by discriminating against religion and discriminating between religions,â L. Martin Nussbaum, a senior partner in First & Fourteen, told OSV News. âBy devoting its resources to help correct New Yorkâs burden on the sistersâ religious exercise, the United States is saying that this case is one (included under federal law) of âgeneral public importance.'â The Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne operate âin accordanceâ with the U.S. Catholic bishopsâ âEthical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Servicesâ and âthe teachings of the Catholic Church,â the lawsuit states. âThey cannot comply with the mandate without violating these sincerely held religious beliefs.â The state law mandates that nursing homes use a residentâs chosen name/pronouns and honor rooming requests based on gender identity. It took effect May 28, 2024. ââTransgender medicineâ can change surface appearance but never sex. And Scripture forbids lying to another about reality,â the lawsuit says. âRequiring a person to identify another by a sex other than his or her God-gifted sex would therefore require such a person to act against central, unchangeable and architectural teachings of the Catholic faith. It would contradict the teachings of the Bible concerning Godâs creative sovereignty, contradict reason and truth, and betray our sacred obligation not to knowingly harm other persons, particularly the most vulnerable.â Additionally, it said, âthe implications are so much greater than whether to utter the words âheâ or âshe.â Indeed, to demand that a Catholic deny anotherâs sex is to require him or her to affirm another religious worldview.â Guidance from the state Department of Health just before the law took effect told nursing homes they were required to âensure that at least once every two years, each facility staff member who works directly with residents receives training on cultural competency focusing on residents who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender and/or residents living with HIV.â The lawsuit notes that the mandate âdiscriminates between religious groups by exempting the Church of Christ, Scientist and its affiliates while denying any exemption to Catholic organizations.â It says that âIf the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne and Rosary Hill Home do not comply, they face fines, injunctions, potential loss of licensing, and imprisonment.â Doug Wilson, CEO of the Catholic Benefits Association, said, in a June 22 statement, âWeâre glad to have the DOJ support our arguments. If religious freedom does not protect the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne, who does it protect? âThese are real people serving dying patients. They accept no government or insurance funds. Shouldnât they be allowed to conduct their ministry consistent with the Catholic values that inspired them to undertake this holy work in the first place?â Mother Marie Edward Deutsch, the Hawthorne Dominicansâ superior general, said in a statement the order was âgrateful the Department of Justice sees the injustice in this matter. This gives us hope that the countryâs founding principles are still strong after 250 years.â Rose Hawthorne Lathrop (1851-1926), a daughter of author Nathaniel Hawthorne, founded the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne, Congregation of St. Rose of Lima, in 1900. She took the name Mother Mary Alphonsa. The orderâs apostolate is the Servants of Relief for Incurable Cancer. Mother Mary Alphonsa is a candidate for sainthood, and on March 19, 2024, the Vatican issued a decree declaring her âVenerable.â Read More World News Pakistan Catholics counter persecution with hope, says bishopsâ human rights director French bishops launch prayer novena ahead of key âassisted-dyingâ vote Despite land transfer, Apache Stronghold continues effort to protect sacred Arizona site Cardinal Pizzaballa prays in the cave where Jesus stopped with his mother Religious, civic leaders join Pope Leo for Liberty Medal award ceremony Worldâs conflicts are âfedâ more readily than people, Pope Leo XIV says Copyright © 2026 OSV News Print
How it works
Once you click Generate, Ollama reads this article and crafts 5 comprehension questions. Your answers are graded against the article content â general knowledge won't be enough. Score 70+ to count toward your certificate.
Questions are cached â you'll always get the same 5 for this article.