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New York finishes at bottom of 50 state list on religious freedom

Religious Liberty In The States, a statistical index and data catalog reflecting free-exercise protections, provides ranking for every state using six primary metrics.

Published: September 19, 2022 12:31pm

Updated: September 19, 2022 11:21pm

(The Center Square) -

Religious liberty as preserved by a state is the worst in New York, a new study says.

Religious Liberty In The States, a statistical index and data catalog reflecting free-exercise protections, provides ranking for every state using six primary metrics inclusive of 29 yes/no questions. It originates from the Center for Religion, Culture & Democracy's First Liberty Institute and was published late last week.

The index “captures the extent to which people have the freedom to practice their religion in everyday life based on their state’s laws, not just their ability to gather for worship,” its website says.

Subject matter in the 29 questions included absentee voting; childhood immunization requirements; employer exemption from health insurance contraceptive mandate; Religious Freedom Restoration Act; exemptions in health-care provision; and exemptions for marriage solemnization and wedding participation. Abortion, sterilization and contraception questions were in the health-care provision section.

New York’s score was 16%. At 82%, Mississippi was No. 1, followed by Illinois at 81%, and New Mexico at 61%. The average score was 39%.

The Empire State scored “no” for absentee voting, exemptions from childhood immunization requirements, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and employer exemption from the contraceptive mandate. In the marriage and wedding questions, New York was 3-of-5, and it was 5-of-20 in exemptions for health-care providers.

Religious Liberty in the States, its website says, “is a statistical index and data catalog reflecting the free-exercise protections that each of the 50 states codifies in its laws.” Further, RLS says, “While the First Amendment establishes a right to the free exercise of religion at the national level, RLS captures and communicates how many safeguards each state has in place for religious exercise.”

“Not only do we construct an index that gives each state a single score and a place in our ranking, making interstate comparisons straightforward, we also have compiled a dataset like nothing else that is out there,” said Sarah M. Estelle, director of the CRCD’s Religious Liberty in the States project.

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