ReportWire

Tag: Florida abortion law

  • Wrongful deaths for fetuses, pregnancy crisis center bills filed for 2026

    [ad_1]

    Credit: via Erin Grall for Florida/Facebook

    A pair of reproductive-related bills have been filed in the Florida Legislature in advance of the 2026 legislative session that starts Jan. 13.

    One proposal, filed by Vero Beach Republican Sen. Erin Grall, would let parents file wrongful-death lawsuits for the death of a fetus at any stage of development.

    As of this publication, Grall’s bill, SB 164 lacked a House companion.

    SB 164 would not allow civil suits to be brought against medical personnel providing assistive reproductive technology, or procedures that involve the handling of human eggs, sperm, and embryos to help achieve pregnancy.

    Neither could lawsuits be filed against a patient seeking reproductive assistance.

    Grall filed similar legislation last year but that bill faced opposition from powerful Sen. Kathleen Passidomo, the former Senate president and chair of the Rules Committee. Passidomo took issue with the bill’s definition of “unborn child” as a “member of the species Homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb.”

    The 2026 version of the bill uses the same definition of unborn child.

    The second proposal, HB 6001, was filed by Boca Raton House Democrat Kelly Skidmore. That bill would eliminate from statute the “Florida Pregnancy Support Services Program,” established in 2005 as an initiative of then-Gov. Jeb Bush with the Legislature agreeing to appropriate $2 million for its operations.

    In 2018, the Legislature codified the program into statute passing HB 41.

    Now the program is housed in the Department of Health and legislators have agreed in the current year state budget to allocate $29.5 million to help it operate.

    Skidmore argues that the program is no longer needed because of the state’s six-week abortion ban which, for the most part, bans terminations before many patients know they are pregnant.

    “When we live in a state that has a six-week ban, how many crisis pregnancies do you think there are that we still need to fund $29.5 million for these centers?” Skidmore asked. “What crisis pregnancies are they helping with? There aren’t any, because there are no options for pregnant women. So, this is just false. All of it is false and a misuse of taxpayer dollars.”

    HB 6001 doesn’t have a Senate companion because it is a “repealer bill.” Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez implemented a rule allowing representatives to file one repealer bill per session that does not count toward their seven-bill limit.

    Skidmore said she took advantage of the opportunity.

    “And what surprises me is that the emphasis on the new DOGE office has not raised this as a red flag of inappropriate spending of taxpayer dollars, particularly since there was a recent news story that the lawyer that represents many of these networks gave advice to not provide ultrasounds to pregnant women suspected of having an ectopic pregnancy because it was a high risk of being sued,” Skidmore said, referencing a Massachusetts lawsuit.

    Meanwhile, the most recent available data show that during state fiscal year 2022-23, 21,372 women were provided 132,395 counseling services and 18,238 pregnancy tests were provided by the centers.


    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook Bluesky | Or sign up for our RSS Feed


    The language is similar to oaths taken by lawyers, doctors, and public officials

    The legislation would reduce the minimum to buy a firearm in the state from 21 to 18 years of age



    [ad_2]

    Christine Sexton, Florida Phoenix
    Source link
  • DeSantis appoints ‘pro-life’ radiologist to the Florida Board of Medicine

    DeSantis appoints ‘pro-life’ radiologist to the Florida Board of Medicine

    [ad_1]

    click to enlarge

    photo via the Governor’s Office

    As abortion rights advocates in Florida step up their campaign for a November ballot measure that would strengthen abortion rights in Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis once again on Friday showed residents exactly which side he’s on.

    Gov. DeSantis, who launched his own political committee this year in part to help defeat the abortion rights ballot measure, appointed to the Florida Board of Medicine on Friday Steven Christie, a local radiologist, attorney and author of a book titled Speaking for the Unborn: 30-Second Pro-Life Rebuttals to Pro-Life Arguments.

    The Florida Board of Medicine is a 15-member board of Governor appointees established to “ensure that every physician practicing in this state meets minimum requirements for safe practice,” according to its website. Twelve of the members must be licensed physicians in good standing, while the other three must be state residents who have never been licensed as a healthcare practitioner. All appointments are subject to approval by the Florida Senate, which is dominated by Republican lawmakers who approved the state’s six-week abortion ban before it was signed into law.

    Christie, the local radiologist newly appointed by DeSantis, is also scheduled as a featured speaker at the upcoming “Culture of Life Conference” being presented by the Catholic Charities of Central Florida in October. The CCCF is a ministry of the Diocese of Orlando that, according to state campaign finance records, has donated at least $50,000 to a political committee created to advocate against Florida’s abortion rights measure, which will appear on the ballot this fall as Amendment 4.

    If approved by more than 60 percent of Florida voters, the measure would add to the Florida Constitution that “no law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.” Viability is generally interpreted by medical practitioners as roughly 24 weeks of gestation, or pregnancy.

    The political committee funded in part by Catholic Charities, dubbed Florida Voters Against Extremism, is one of four political committees that have been created in an effort to defeat Amendment 4, which is being led by a political committee bankrolled by liberal organizations that support abortion access, including reproductive healthcare provider Planned Parenthood, the Tides Foundation (a progressive nonprofit), the American Civil Liberties Union and wealthy philanthropists, as well as an extensive list of individual donors who have contributed anywhere from $5 to $25.

    Catholic Charities is a faith-based nonprofit organization that, granted, does more than explicitly oppose abortion rights and offer “post-abortive healing.” The nonprofit also runs community-based housing, health and social assistance programs that are often funded in part by state or local government money.

    Some of the local chapters in the state, including chapters in St. Petersburg, Boynton Beach and Palm Beach, also run state-funded anti-abortion programs that aim to convince pregnant people not to seek out abortion services, luring pregnant people into their “clinics” with free pregnancy tests, sonograms or free items for babies like diapers.

    The Florida Pregnancy Care Network, a state-funded “alternatives to abortion” program, gave Catholic Charities-run programs a total of $410,000 in 2022, according to the nonprofit’s latest tax filing. Altogether, the state allocates millions of taxpayer dollars to such programs each year. Many don’t even have medical professionals on staff. Most, if not all, do not have a state medical license, meaning they are not bound by HIPAA privacy laws. 

    Dr. Steven Christie specializes in oncology and body imaging, according to Catholic Charities, and claims to be “pro-science.” “There is overwhelming scientific consensus that life begins at conception,” Dr. Christie wrote, in a blog post for the St. Paul Center, a faith-based nonprofit research and educational institute, even though the concept of “life at conception” is largely viewed as a philosophical or religious concept rather than one based in scientific fact.

    “The court said that when life begins is up to whoever is running your state — whether they are wrong or not, or you agree with them or not,” Mary Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California-Davis, told NPR after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade decision.

    Christie was appointed to the board Friday along with Dr. “J” Matthew Knight, a dermatologist and founder of the Knight Dermatology Institute; Dr. Scot Ackerman, medical director of the Ackerman Cancer; and Dr. Hector Vila, the managing partner and anesthesiologist at Pediatric Dental Anesthesia Associates.

    Vila formerly served on the Board of Medicine under former Gov. Rick Scott’s administration, and was reappointed by DeSantis to the board in 2019. Ahead of his reappointment that year, Vila argued in support of a restrictive abortion-related law in an appeals court case between the state and a Gainesville abortion clinic. The latter challenged the state over a law that requires patients obtaining an abortion procedure to schedule two separate appointments with an abortion provider that includes a minimum 24-hour waiting period between appointments.

    Vila argued at the same that a less-than-24-hour waiting period between appointments for an abortion procedure “would fall below the acceptable medical standard of care.” Critics of the law have described it as unnecessarily restrictive and a barrier to care, especially as the state further limits abortion access.

    The Florida Board of Medicine has been criticized in the recent past for advancing rules on prohibiting gender-affirming care for transgender youth, which state lawmakers and DeSantis later codified into law before a federal judge struck the ban down as unconstitutional. In 2022, the board and DeSantis faced criticism after DeSantis was caught appointing two new members to the board who support conversion therapy for trans and gender-nonconforming children and oppose gender-affirming care.

    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | or sign up for our RSS Feed

    [ad_2]

    McKenna Schueler

    Source link

  • New anti-abortion pregnancy center opens in Kissimmee

    New anti-abortion pregnancy center opens in Kissimmee

    [ad_1]

    Choices Friends/Instagram

    A new anti-abortion pregnancy center opens in Kissimmee.

    As people with an unwanted pregnancy in Florida face ever greater barriers to abortion care, a new “clinic” for pregnant people that aims to persuade people not to seek abortion care has opened up in Kissimmee.

    Choices Women’s Clinic, located at 213 E. Oak St. in Kissimmee, is the third location in a chain of facilities operated by Choices Women’s Clinic, a local nonprofit founded and operated by anti-abortion Christians.

    These facilities lure in people with few resources by offering free pregnancy tests, free ultrasounds, and information about your options as a pregnant person. Critics call them “fake abortion clinics.”

    While Choices Women’s Clinic explicitly mentions “abortion” on its main website, and claims to be “all about offering you choices,” a second website the nonprofit maintains specifically for donors reveals their overarching mission: to “CHANGE abortion in Orlando. Until there are ZERO.”

    The new center just south of Orlando is located about a half-mile from the city’s only licensed abortion clinic, a Planned Parenthood health center. This isn’t a coincidence.

    Locating anti-abortion facilities near actual abortion clinics is an intentional tactic that is commonly used by anti-abortion activists to confuse and misguide pregnant people who are searching for safe and legitimate abortion services.

    Choices Women’s Clinic, in a recent email newsletter, admitted that they see patients who come to them believing their facilities are legitimate abortion clinics. This includes a person they identify only as “Amy.”

    “‘Amy’ thought we were an abortion clinic and was not happy when she realized she could not get her abortion,” reads the newsletter, emailed out on May 28, 2024.

    “She did not want an ultrasound to prove how far along she was and left angry and feeling the panic of needing to have an abortion before 6 weeks,” the newsletter continues. “Amy returned 45 minutes later and asked for an ultrasound because, after making calls, she realized she could not get into the abortion clinics.

    “She is now undecided, and we are praying for a breakthrough.”

    Screenshot of a May 2024 email newsletter sent by Choices Women's Clinic executive director Vicky Matthews. - Google Mail

    Google Mail

    Screenshot of a May 2024 email newsletter sent by Choices Women’s Clinic executive director Vicky Matthews.

    As of May 1, 2024, abortion is banned in Florida after six weeks of pregnancy, with few and questionable exceptions. Previously, under a law approved in 2022, Florida had a 15-week abortion limit, with no exceptions for rape or incest.

    After the U.S. Supreme Court issued a decision overturning the landmark Roe v. Wade in the summer of 2022, many states moved to either restrict or ban abortion procedures entirely. From Florida, the closest state to get an abortion after six weeks of pregnancy is now either North Carolina or Virginia.

    Another person that visited Choices Women’s Clinic, whom they describe in their newsletter as “Emily,” came to the nonprofit for abortion pills, according to their newsletter. “She said she didn’t care if she experienced medical complications with abortion because her life is hard, and she needs to work to send funds to her family in another country,” the newsletter reads.

    Abortion, even prior to the fall of Roe v. Wade, can be expensive without insurance coverage. Medicaid won’t cover the cost of getting an abortion, and abortions can easily exceed $500 if paying out of pocket. Birthing a child in Florida without health insurance, too, can set you back tens of thousands of dollars.

    Emily refused to allow staff to perform an ultrasound on her, according to the newsletter, but allowed them to hug her. The newsletter notes that Emily “just melted in our arms.”

    Choices Women’s Clinic, and its executive director Vicky Matthews, have declined to comment when reached by Orlando Weekly in the past.

    According to the nonprofit’s website, Choices Women’s Clinic saw nearly 3,000 “patients” last year, and received 3,732 calls related to abortion. Just over 400 pregnant people in 2023, their website notes, “chose life.”

    As Orlando Weekly reported last summer, this is the third pregnancy center location owned by Choices Women’s Clinic, which was first founded as “True Life Choice” in 1983. The chain, which reported $2.67 million in contributions and grants in its most recent tax filing, has two other locations, one located near downtown Orlando and another near the University of Central Florida.

    “There’s a Planned Parenthood there [near the university], so that’s where we went,” shared Vicky Matthews, executive director of Choices Women’s Clinic, in an interview with an anti-abortion website in 2021.

    Amy Weintraub, the reproductive rights program director for Progress Florida, told Orlando Weekly she believes it’s “very clear that they’re targeting college students,” based on where they decided to locate their facilities.

    A webpage specifically set up for updates on the new Kissimmee center also explicitly mentions the city’s racial and ethnic makeup, noting a majority of the population is Hispanic and according to their calculations, Hispanic people are the second-largest demographic seeking abortion — demonstrating a racial targeting strategy.

    “They do that because they know that racialized groups tend to be the most uninsured, lower-income groups, and they know that people are looking for resources when they are pregnant,” Aurelie Colon Larrauri, a reproductive justice activist and policy advisor for the Southern Poverty Law Center, told Orlando Weekly last year.

    These anti-abortion pregnancy centers, also known as crisis pregnancy centers, are largely unregulated, with little oversight. State records show Choices Women’s Clinic locations are not state-licensed medical facilities, and therefore cannot legally be held to privacy provisions under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).

    Unlike some other anti-abortion CPCs, where there are no licensed medical professionals on staff, Choices Women’s Clinic does have a medical director on staff (who tried to run for state office in 2020), as well as two registered nurses, three sonographers, and other nursing staff, according to their website.

    However, Orlando Weekly could not verify the license of at least one named RN on staff, which is searchable through the Florida Department of Health’s online portal. All sonographers listed on the site were verifiable through the American Registry for Diagnostic Medical Sonography.

    Many of these facilities, often operated by religious nonprofits, are taxpayer-funded through an “alternatives to abortion” program set up by former Gov. Jeb Bush.

    Florida Gov. DeSantis signed into law a bill last year that increased the amount of taxpayer funds that will go to such facilities more than fivefold, from $4.45 million in 2022 to $25 million in 2023. A review of the state budget approved by DeSantis this week shows this program, dubbed the “Florida Pregnancy Support Services Program,” will receive $29.5 million over the next year.

    According to Weintraub, those funds will be restricted to certain activities, including marketing materials and a new website the state will be building, in part to promote these anti-abortion facilities, under a new law approved by the Republican-dominated state Legislature earlier this year.

    “It’s clear that this is state-funded misinformation,” said Weintraub.

    Choices Women’s Clinic does not receive funding through this state program, according to tax filings reviewed by Orlando Weekly. Their most recent 990 tax form, filed last August, reports no government grants or contributions.

    These anti-abortion pregnancy centers, also known as crisis pregnancy centers, are largely unregulated, with little oversight.

    tweet this

    Democratic State Rep. Kelly Skidmore filed legislation (HB 343) during the 2024 legislative session that would have required greater oversight of the crisis pregnancy centers that do receive state funds. Democratic Sen. Lauren Book filed identical legislation (SB 256) in the state Senate.

    Neither bill was given even a single hearing. Florida’s state Legislature has a Republican supermajority, with most committees chaired by Republicans who have decision-making authority on which bills are heard or voted on and which are not.

    Choices Women’s Clinic is just one of over 160 anti-abortion pregnancy centers in the Central Florida region, and comes highly recommended by the motley crew of anti-abortion activists who regularly protest outside the Center of Orlando for Women, an actual abortion clinic south of downtown Orlando.

    They don’t call themselves “protesters,” and several have bristled at the term in conversations with Orlando Weekly. The Instagram page for Choices Women’s Clinic recently mourned the passing of one of these anti-abortion activists, John Barros, who previously told Orlando Weekly he had spent nearly every weekday “counseling” people outside of the Orlando abortion clinic for 20 years.

    “John’s compassionate spirit led thousands of women and men to our clinic, offering them hope and support in their times of crisis,” an Instagram post reads. “His legacy as a faithful servant will forever live in the hearts of those he has impacted.”

    click to enlarge A volunteer clinic escort (left) mocks the daily "yell" of anti-abortion "sidewalk counselor" John Barros (right) outside an Orlando abortion clinic. - photo courtesy Stand With Abortion Now (SWAN)

    photo courtesy Stand With Abortion Now (SWAN)

    A volunteer clinic escort (left) mocks the daily “yell” of anti-abortion “sidewalk counselor” John Barros (right) outside an Orlando abortion clinic.

    Expose Fake Clinics, affiliated with Abortion Access Front, has identified at least 168 crisis pregnancy centers in Florida, and over a dozen in the Central Florida region alone.

    According to Expose Fake Clinics, there are at least three pregnancy centers already operating in Kissimmee: Beyond Pregnancy Care Center, Osceola Pregnancy Center, and JMJ Pregnancy Center. There are others in Orlando and surrounding areas.

    Abortion resources for Floridians

    For legal questions, or questions regarding Florida’s abortion laws, visit reprolegalhelpline.org.

    You can find information on PlanCPills.org for how to access abortion medication.

    You can find a state portal with real, licensed abortion clinics in Florida here.

    For financial assistance and logistical help, organizations like the National Network of Abortion Funds, the Florida Access Network and Tampa Bay Abortion Fund have resources to help people with few resources pay for abortion services and travel out of state, as needed, to safely and legally terminate their pregnancy.

    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | or sign up for our RSS Feed

    [ad_2]

    McKenna Schueler

    Source link