Posted on 05/05/2014 4:10:10 AM PDT by markomalley
When Texas Gov. Rick Perry signed a sweeping anti-abortion law in 2013, he did so knowing the measure faced an uncertain future. Indeed, the law is already winding its way through the legal system, and if its opponents have their way, Texas's reproductive legal code will land in the hands of the Supreme Court.
But such a decision is likely a year or years a way, and back in the Lone Star State, the final judicial score won't much matter.
The law has already had tremendous success in closing abortion clinics and restricting abortion access in Texas. And those successes appear all but certain to stickwith or without the Supreme Court's approval of the law that created them.
There were more than 40 clinics that provided abortions in Texas in 2011. There are now 20 still open, and after the law's last steps of implementation are taken in September, all but six are expected to close. Most of the closed clinics will never reopen, their operators say.
Few businesses could survive a years-long hibernation, and that's all the more true for clinics, providers say. The added difficulty of finding qualified doctors, getting new licences, and navigating state health department regulations is a hurdle higher than most closed clinics are likely to clearespecially in a state where a sizable portion of the public is vehemently opposed to abortion and unwilling to aid it in any way.
"I can't find anyone to deliver water or resurface the parking lot, because they're against abortion. I can't get someone to fix a leak in the roof," said Amy Hagstrom Miller, CEO of Whole Women's Health.
In March, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuitwhich covers Texas, Mississippi, and Louisianaupheld the law as constitutional. Additionally, the court declined a request to keep two of the law's provisions, both of which were instrumental in the clinic closures, from taking effect before the legal struggle over the law is completed.
The clinic closures will increase as the law phases in a set of requirements for abortion facilities. The first set, which included a requirement that doctors performing the procedure have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles, went into effect last November, prompting many clinics to close. The final set of restrictionsthat all abortions, including drug-induced, be performed in ambulatory surgical centerstakes effect in September.
Hagstrom Miller's company had five abortion facilities and one ambulatory surgical center in Texas in 2013. Two closed as a result of the admitting-privilege requirement in March, and it's likely that only the surgical center in San Antonio will remain by September.
"The opposition has been extremely strategic," Hagstrom Miller said. "This law is perfectly crafted."
Ambulatory surgical centers are facilities that conduct outpatient or same-day surgical procedures, and must meet specific requirements regarding infrastructure, procedures, and equipment. The centers cost far more to run than abortion clinics, and would cost several million dollars to build from the ground up.
Hagstrom Miller also said it has been impossible to find hospitals that will agree to give admitting privileges to abortion providers, or ambulatory surgical centers that will sell or lease their facilities. Leasing or buying the space itself is expensive and difficult, and Hagstrom Miller currently has mortgages on three buildings, which she will have to sell. She purchased those under a different name, and did construction without associating them with Whole Woman's Health out of concern that she wouldn't get permitting or might attract protests.
The antiabortion coalition that backs the law sees all of this as sound public policy, arguing that the law's restrictions were put in place to protect women seeking medical care, and if the centers can't meet them, then they should be closed and stay closed.
"If the state is passing regulations that are similar or equivalent to those that all other medical facilities provide, and some [clinics] close because they're not meeting standards that other medical facilities have to meet, I don't see a problem with that," said Dan McConchie, vice president for government affairs at Americans United for Life, an advocacy group that worked on parts of the Texas legislation.
The six remaining abortion clinics come September will be clustered in major cities, which opponents of the law argue unfairly disadvantages women in rural areasparticularly the Rio Grande Valleywho tend to be poorer and less able to travel long distances for an abortion. Those clinics that remain will be serving more women with fewer doctors, leading to longer wait times and delayed procedures, the opponents say.
The legal struggle over the law continues, but in Texas, the law's challengers are looking beyond their state's borders. Following a broad Republican conquest of statehouses in 2010, a wave of state-level antiabortion laws have been passedincluding in states whose circuit courts abortion rights groups hope will be more sympathetic to their arguments.
As challenges to those laws work their way up the legal system, opponents of the Texas law are hoping for a circuit-court ruling that is incompatible with the 5th Circuit appeals decision. Such a contradiction would open the possibility of the entire issue being elevated to the Supreme Court, wheredepending on the scope of the decisionTexas's law could either be upheld or struck down.
But the U.S. judicial system is a deliberative one, and with the request for a stay denied, the Texas law is unlikely to be voided anytime soon.
"[A decision] is a ways away," said Jennifer Dalven, director of the Reproductive Freedom Project at the American Civil Liberties Union, which was part of the suit filed against the Texas legislation. "I dont think it would be next year; more likely in the year after that."
Bttt
Well the Sex Pistols wrote a SCORCHER on abortion...blew the roof off with this one.Perhaps this could be Wendy’s campaign song.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9V1SrhZJg0
She was a girl from Birmingham
She just had an abortion
She was a case of insanity
Her name was Pauline, she lived in a tree
She was a no one who killed her baby
She sent her letters from the country
She was an animal
She was a bloody disgrace
Body, I’m not an animal
Body, I’m not an animal
Dragged on a table in a factory
Illegitimate place to be
In a packet in a lavatory
Die little baby, screaming
Body, screamin’, fucking bloody mess
Not an animal, it’s an abortion
Body, I’m not an animal
Mummy, I’m not an abortion
Throbbing squirm
Gurgling bloody mess
I’m not a discharge
I’m not a loss in protein
I’m not a throbbing squirm
F*** this and f*** that
F*** it all and f*** the f****** brat
She don’t wanna baby that looks like that
I don’t wanna baby that looks like that
Body, I’m not an animal
Body, an abortion
Body, I’m not an animal
Body, I’m not an animal
An animal, I’m not an animal
I’m not an animal, an animal
I’m not an animal, I ain’t no animal
I’m not a body
I’m not an animal, an animal
I ain’t no animal, I’m not an animal
I’m not an animal, Mummy
Read more: Sex Pistols - Bodies Lyrics | MetroLyrics
Very Good News!
20 posts and nobody has said it yet?
God Bless Texas!
God bless Christian Texans, who refusee to participate in any way in this evil.
Yes, this is exactly the sort of thing I’ve been saying Conservatives should be doing for years.
Acknowlege that overturning Roe is going to be a long and difficult path. Tell the Left that we’re never going to agree on abortion being legal. But that we’re going to hold them to the “safe and rare” parts of their “safe, legal and rare” mantra.
Basically go Alinsky on them and hold them to their own voiced standards, which will both serve to reduce abortion and also force them to expose what their real standards and goals (”on demand, up to the moment of birth, without apology”) are ...
Call me naive, but I was amazed that abortion clinics were held to a much lower standard than other surgical centers. Setting all questions of morality aside ... it's an outpatient surgical procedure, there *is* risk involved to the patient, and thus, abortions should be treated as such.
Not that you'd ever hear such things in the MSM. I've learned more on FR than I'd ever pick up in the news.
“20 posts and nobody has said it yet?”
If you had waited just 4 more seconds, you would have gotten it.
The courts just ruled that a bakery cannot refuse to bake a wedding cake for a homosexual mockery of a “wedding”,
so what’s to stop them from requiring businesses to provide service for abortion clinics?
Bet the majority of women vote for Hildabeast because of her gender. Feelings too often trump rational thought.
The economics arent there to support it when its held to the same standard. The reason mainstream providers dont already offer it is because of morals and lack of profit.
I just dont think there at all that many healthcare professionals willing to snip the neck of a live baby.
If you like your abortion center, you can keep it.
LOL
I can’t understand why their is opposition to increasing the quality of care requirements for businesses doing abortions. This is a surgical procedure and should be licensed as such.
The old arguments about abortion always centered on the abortions performed in unsanitary conditions by the “coat hanger abortionist’ who wasn’t a doctor.
Requiring better conditions and the ability to admit patients to a hospital if something goes wrong is a logical and progressive manifestation of the ‘safe’ part of the mantra that abortion should be “rare, legal and safe”
NO PROBLEM! Gosh, I sure hope the recipe turns out well. It's tricky, you know, and sometimes people make mistakes.
Like including an LD50 level of salt.
FReepmail me to subscribe to or unsubscribe from the SCOTUS ping list.
I, just for the hell of it, googled gay sites to see if they were afraid of being “poisoned” by bakeries forced to bake cakes for their weddings. Lordy! Lordy! The pantywaists were certainly all a-twitter about that. It seems I wasn’t the only one to think this might be a problem.
No one ever believes me when I say that modern gay men are the dumbest men on the planet.
Just doing to abortion clinics what ObaMao’s policies are doing to other private businesses . . .
Arguing abortion for the womens vote is a lost cause, every study I’ve seen shows its not women that are the strongest supporters of abortion, but young single men....
Not to hard to figure out why.
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