Supreme
Court mulls California law on anti-abortion facilities
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[March 20, 2018] By
Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court on Tuesday tackles a dispute over whether a California law
requiring Christian-based facilities that counsel pregnant women against
abortion to post signs disclosing the availability of state-subsidized
abortions and birth control violates their right to free speech.
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The nine justices are set to hear an hour of arguments in an appeal
by a group of non-profit facilities called crisis pregnancy centers
of a lower court ruling upholding the Democratic-backed 2015 law.
The case represents a crossroads of two contentious issues: abortion
and the breadth of the right to freedom of speech under the U.S.
Constitution's First Amendment. The Supreme Court legalized abortion
in 1973, and the wider issue of abortion rights is not at issue in
the case.
Crisis pregnancy centers say they offer legitimate health services
but that it is their mission to steer women with unplanned
pregnancies away from abortion. They accuse California of forcing
them to advertise for abortion even though they oppose it.
California says some crisis pregnancy centers mislead women by
presenting themselves as full-service reproductive healthcare
facilities and the law helps ensure these clients are made aware of
abortion services available elsewhere.
The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the
law in 2016 after it was challenged by some of these facilities,
finding the statute did not discriminate based on viewpoint.
California's Reproductive FACT Act, passed by a Democratic-led
legislature and signed by Democratic Governor Jerry Brown, requires
centers licensed as family planning facilities to post or distribute
notices that the state has programs offering free or low-cost birth
control and abortion services. The law requires unlicensed
facilities with no medical provider on staff to disclose that fact.
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Abortion rights advocates say the roughly 2,700 U.S. anti-abortion
pregnancy centers, including around 200 in California, far outnumber
facilities providing abortions.
The California challengers are the National Institute of Family and
Life Advocates, an umbrella group for crisis pregnancy centers, and
two such facilities in San Diego County. The plaintiffs had told the
lower courts that they would not comply with the law.
A win for them could make it harder for Democratic-governed states
to impose rules on crisis pregnancy centers, but also could help
abortion rights advocates challenge laws in Republican-governed
states that impose certain requirements on abortion clinics.
California said its law does not force crisis pregnancy centers to
refer women for abortions, nor does it prevent them from voicing
their views on abortion. The state told the justices in legal papers
that some centers use incomplete or false medical advice to try to
prevent women from having an abortion. Some resemble medical
clinics, down to lab coats worn by staff, to try to confuse women
into thinking they are at a center offering all options, the state
added.
The facilities deny using deceptive tactics.
A ruling is due by the end of June.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)
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