Pentagon strips travel reimbursement for troops seeking abortions,
fertility treatment
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[February 01, 2025]
By LOLITA C. BALDOR
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Defense Department will no longer reimburse
service members for travel out of state to get reproductive health care,
including abortions and fertility treatments, according to a new memo.
The directive signed this week eliminates a rarely used Biden
administration policy enacted in October 2022, after the Supreme Court
overturned Roe v. Wade and more states began to impose increased
abortion restrictions.
Signed on Wednesday by Jeffrey Register, the director of the Pentagon's
human resources department, the memo simply shows red lines crossing out
the previous regulation and offers no other guidance.
Asked if service members would still be allowed time off to travel at
their own expense, the department had no immediate answer.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., a member of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, called the policy change “shameful.”
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“Our service members go wherever they need to in order to bravely serve
our country — and because President Trump’s extremist Supreme Court
overturned Roe, where they and their families are stationed quite
literally dictates their access to critical reproductive care,” Warren
said in a statement. “Now, Trump is turning his back on our
servicemembers — and our servicewomen in particular — to score political
points. It’s shameful, and will only make our troops and our nation less
safe.”
Then-Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin instituted the policy in October
2022 to ensure that troops who were assigned to states where abortions
or other types of health care such as IVF treatment were no longer
provided could still access those services.
The Defense Department on Friday was unable to say how many times the
reimbursement policy was used, or the costs. But last March, officials
said it had been used by service members or their dependents just 12
times from June to December 2023. And the total cost was roughly $40,000
to cover transportation, lodging and meals.
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks in the James Brady Press
Briefing Room at the White House, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025, in
Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
 The policy did not cover the cost of
abortions, and it’s not clear how many of the 12 trips were for
abortions or other type of reproductive health care, such as IVF
treatment. That specific medical information is protected by health
privacy law.
In his memo at the time, Austin said service members and their
families were worried they may not get equal access to health care,
including abortions. And he noted that service members who often
must move for various missions or training would be forced to travel
farther, take more time off work and pay more to access reproductive
health care.
The problem, Austin said, would create extraordinary hardship and
"interfere with our ability to recruit, retain, and maintain the
readiness of a highly qualified force.”
He ordered the department to allow troops and dependents, consistent
with federal law, to take time off and use official travel to get to
other states for reproductive care not available locally. That care
includes in vitro fertilization and other pregnancy aids that also
may not be accessible close by.
Under federal law, Defense Department medical facilities can perform
abortions only when the life of the pregnant person is at risk or in
cases of rape or incest, and those instances have been extremely
rare. According to the department, there were 91 abortions performed
in military medical facilities between 2016 and 2021.
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