A bill for an act relating to the exercise of religion, and including effective date and applicability provisions.(Formerly HSB 614.)
If enacted, HF2454 would mean that individuals whose religious expression is burdened by state action can pursue legal claims, seeking remedies such as actual damages and attorney fees. Such a framework would enable considerable judicial scrutiny of laws and policies that may inadvertently enforce constraints on religious practices. Additionally, this bill would explicitly prohibit local governments from enacting laws that would infringe upon this right, thus extending its impacts across both state and local jurisdictions, with potential implications for how local laws interact with the exercise of religion.
House File 2454, also known as the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, is designed to reinforce protections for individuals' free exercise of religion against governmental actions. The bill asserts that government entities cannot substantially burden an individual's religious practices unless they can demonstrate a compelling governmental interest and that the burden is the least restrictive means of achieving that interest. This criterion aligns legal review processes with heightened scrutiny standards for cases involving religious freedoms, which was previously not mandated under existing laws.
The bill has sparked dialogue regarding the balance between the rights of individuals to practice their religion freely and the government's interests in regulating behavior for the common good. Critics may argue that broad interpretations of such protections could lead to misuse, allowing individuals to circumvent compliance with certain laws under the guise of religious freedom. Proponents, on the other hand, contend that the bill is a necessary safeguard against governmental overreach into personal liberties.