Fairview Heights facility to help make abortion care more accessible
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[January 22, 2022]
By GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Hoping to make abortion care
more accessible, a facility near St. Louis is set to be the “first of
its kind” in providing financial assistance for travel-related costs.
A Regional Logistics Center was opened Friday in a Planned Parenthood
clinic in Fairview Heights. Using private funds, the center will pay for
travel and lodging arrangements and connect patients to resources and
support organizations in all 50 states.
“Together, we are breaking down the silos anti-abortion politicians have
created, and proving that … with innovation and determination … we can
secure a future with abortion access,” Yamelsie Rodriguez, president of
St. Louis Planned Parenthood, said during an opening event Friday.
Rodriguez said the RLC will be operated by Planned Parenthood and the
Granite City-based Hope Clinic for Women in response to more restrictive
abortion laws in other states and to the lack of access for women in
rural areas.
Planned Parenthood and Hope Clinic have been planning for the center
since 2019, when Gov. JB Pritzker signed the Reproductive Health Act
which guarantees that reproductive health, including abortion, is a
fundamental right in Illinois.
“The idea that we’re protecting those rights with the Reproductive
Health Act in the state is vital,” Pritzker said Friday.
Since a soft opening in December, the center has provided 138 rides and
flights and housed dozens of women in need of overnight stays.
Rodriguez is projecting an additional 14,000 women from conservative
states are likely to travel to the region for abortion care if Roe v.
Wade, the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court case that legalized abortion
nationwide, is overturned.
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Yamelsie Rodriguez, president of St. Louis Planned
Parenthood, introduces the Regional Logistical Center in Fairview
Heights that will provide financial assistance for out-of-state
women seeking abortion care. (Credit: Office of Gov. JB Pritzker)
“With reproductive rights under attack across the United States, it’s
never been more vital for the state of Illinois to ensure access to
reproductive services,” Pritzker said. “Let’s be loud and clear –
abortion restrictions endanger women.”
Saturday is the 49th anniversary of Roe v. Wade. Abortion access in
conservative states such as Missouri, Texas and Arkansas has become more
restrictive in recent years, leading women to travel in search of
reproductive health care services.
“The hardest part is knowing that these hurdles have been systematically
manufactured by anti-abortion politicians whose goals are to ban
abortion,” said Kawanna Shannon, director of Patient Access for RLC.
“Access to abortion doesn’t have to be like this.”
Rodriguez said Planned Parenthood of St. Louis has seen steady annual
increases in out-of-state patients traveling for abortion care. Since a
Texas abortion ban took effect in September 2021, Rodriguez said, more
than $73,000 in financial assistance has helped more than 800 women
travel to the southern Illinois facility. There has been a 40 percent
increase in patient visits, she said.
“This law just had a rippling effect that is causing all patients, even
in states where abortion is still legal and available, to travel outside
of their home state in order to find appointments,” Rodriguez said.
There is no income or distance requirement to access RLC services.
Patients must schedule an appointment with Reproductive Health Services
or Hope Clinic for Women before contacting the RLC for logistical
support.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering
state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation.
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