U.S.
appeals court upholds restrictive Texas abortion law
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[June 10, 2015]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - A U.S. appeals
court on Tuesday upheld the main provisions of a restrictive Texas
abortion law including one requiring clinics to have certain
hospital-grade facilities, a regulatory hurdle critics said was designed
to shut down abortion providers.
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The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, based in New Orleans,
permitted the 2013 law to be applied across the state, although it
exempted the application of some provisions to a clinic in the
southern city of McAllen. The exemptions had been granted by a lower
court on the grounds that its distance from other clinics could
cause an undue burden on women in that area.
In its decision, the court said the state's measures were intended
to protect women's health.
Under the "ambulatory surgical center" requirement, clinics must
meet a set of building standards ranging from widening halls to
having facilities for certain surgeries.
Texas, the largest Republican-controlled U.S. state, has been at the
forefront of advancing regulations restricting access to abortion.
Abortion opponents welcomed the ruling. Texas Attorney General Ken
Paxton, a Republican, said the decision would protect women from
substandard abortion facilities.
"I am proud to have both supported this law in the legislature and
defended it in the courts," Paxton said.
Abortion rights advocates have said such requirements are
unnecessary, especially when an abortion is medically induced rather
than performed through surgery.
"Once again, women across the state of Texas face the near total
elimination of safe and legal options for ending a pregnancy, and
the denial of their constitutional rights," said Nancy Northup,
president and chief executive of the Center for Reproductive Rights.
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The court overturned large parts of an August decision by U.S.
District Judge Lee Yeakel, who said the ambulatory center
requirement was unjust and had no compelling public health interest.
Before the law went into effect, there were about 40 licensed
abortion facilities in Texas, a state of about 27 million people.
That clinic number is expected to drop to about eight with the
ambulatory surgical center requirement in effect, Yeakel cited
evidence as saying.
The law also requires doctors who perform abortions to have
admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles (50 kms) of their
clinics.
The Texas Hospital Association, representing more than 400
hospitals, called the requirement unnecessary because women
experiencing abortion complications can go to an emergency room to
be treated, and did not need their abortion doctor hospital staff
for this to happen.
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