Groups
push to make California a haven for abortion rights
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[December 09, 2021]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - California
must prepare for an influx of women seeking abortions in the liberal
state if the U.S. Supreme Court ends the constitutional right to the
procedure, dozens of women's health and rights groups said in a report
released on Wednesday.
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The report by the Future of Abortion Council is aimed at positioning
California as place where women from conservative states can get
abortions. It comes as the Supreme Court considers overturning or
weakening its landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, which legalized
the procedure nationwide.
Last week, the conservative-dominated court signaled a willingness
to dramatically curtail abortion rights in America and possibly
overturn Roe during oral arguments for a Mississippi case.
"It is imperative that California take the lead, live up to its
proclamation as a 'Reproductive Freedom State,' and be ready to
serve anyone who seeks abortion services," Democrat Toni Atkins,
president pro tem of the state Senate, wrote in a letter introducing
the report.
The council made more than 40 recommendations, including a call for
the state to fund programs to train additional abortion providers
and legal protections for women from states where abortion becomes
illegal.
Twenty-six states are certain or likely to ban abortions if the
court limits or overturns Roe, according to the Guttmacher
Institute, which studies abortion rights.
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More than 40 health care
providers, women's rights groups and Democratic
politicians formed the council in September
after the Supreme Court refused to block a Texas
law that effectively bans abortion at about six
weeks and allows people to sue doctors or others
who have helped a woman end a pregnancy after
fetal cardiac activity can be detected.
The Guttmacher Institute predicted in September that as many as 1.4
million women may drive in to California for abortion services if
neighboring states outlaw or severely limit access to the procedure.
That estimate doesn't include women who might fly to the West Coast
for abortions.
When the new Texas law took effect in September, Planned Parenthood
clinics in California began treating two to three Texans per day,
said Brandon Richards, a spokesperson for the clinics.
"We started to see an immediate impact on our health centers in
California," Richards said.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and David
Gregorio)
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