Abortions to resume in Missouri after a judge blocks restrictions
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[February 15, 2025]
By SUMMER BALLENTINE and HALLIE GOLDEN
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Abortions are set to resume in Missouri after a
judge blocked regulations that had restricted providers even after
voters approved enshrining abortion rights into the state’s
constitution.
Friday's ruling came after a Kansas City judge ruled last year that
abortions were now legal in the state but kept certain regulations on
the books while a lawsuit by abortion-rights advocates played out.
That meant abortion facilities still had to be licensed by the Missouri
Department of Health and Senior Services. Planned Parenthood argued that
the licensing law required providers to give “medically unnecessary and
invasive” pelvic exams to anyone receiving an abortion, including
medication abortions, according to court documents. It also included
“medically irrelevant” size requirements for hallways, rooms and doors.
The plaintiffs said some of the regulations on Planned Parenthood
centers were so strict, “most health centers or doctors’ office simply
do not meet” them.
Jackson County Circuit Judge Jerri Zhang said in her ruling that the
licensing requirement is “facially discriminatory because it does not
treat services provided in abortion facilities the same as other types
of similarly situated health care, including miscarriage care.”
Voters approved the measure adding abortion rights to the constitution
in November. That amendment did not legalize abortion in the state
outright but instead required judges to reconsider laws that had almost
completely banned the procedure.
Planned Parenthood and other advocates sued to overturn Missouri’s
near-total abortion ban almost immediately after voters amended the
constitution to protect reproductive rights. Republican Attorney General
Andrew Bailey is fighting the lawsuit.
There was no immediate response to a voice message seeking comment from
a spokesperson for the attorney general.
Margot Riphagen, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Rivers,
said the group is working quickly to start providing the procedure again
in the coming days.
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People at a election night watch party react after an abortion
rights amendment to the Missouri constitution passed on Nov. 5,
2024, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)
 “Today’s decision affirms what we’ve
already long known — the state’s abortion facility licensing
requirements were not about patient safety, but rather another
politically motivated barrier to prevent patients seeking abortion
from getting the care they need,” she said in a statement.
Missouri is one of five states where voters approved ballot measures
in 2024 to enshrine abortion rights in their constitutions. Nevada
voters also approved an amendment but will need to pass it again in
2026 for it to take effect.
Friday's ruling is a temporary order pending the outcome of the
lawsuit by abortion-rights advocates.
Mallory Schwarz, executive director of Abortion Action Missouri,
said clinic partners are ready to start providing abortions as soon
as next week.
“With this change the landscape for Missourians and the entire
Midwest region will be transformed, as patients will have greater
access to abortion care than they have had in years,” she said in a
statement.
Missouri’s constitutional amendment allows lawmakers to restrict
abortion after viability with exceptions to “protect the life or
physical or mental health of the pregnant person.”
The term “viability” is used by health care providers to describe
whether a pregnancy is expected to continue developing normally or
whether a fetus might survive outside the uterus. While there is no
defined time frame, doctors say it is generally sometime after the
21st week of pregnancy.
Missouri was among the first states to implement a prohibition on
most abortions after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June 2022
overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision establishing a nationwide
right to abortion.
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Golden reported from Seattle.
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