Editorial: New Abortion Bill an Insult to Women

August, 18, 2011 , by Whitney Ayres Kenerly

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When I was a senior in high school and applying to colleges, I wrote my admission essay about a book that had changed me, The Cider House Rules, by John Irving.  The book isn’t exactly a hallmark of the Western canon or intellectually tantamount to the prose of Swann’s Way, but it made me think about reproductive rights in a more complex way, and with more empathy.  I realized that despite my Christian conservative upbringing where certain things were not to be questioned or qualified, that people – especially women – were diverse in their experiences and hardships, and that I could never understand, and therefore judge, another human being’s personal choices.  I recognized that it was not my right to project moral absolutes on another person’s private decisions.  I was 17.

Apparently, the current North Carolina General Assembly has not experienced a similar epiphany. This past session - the first with a Republican majority in both houses since 1870 - passed a controversial bill  forcing any woman seeking an abortion to see an ultrasound, listen to the heartbeat as other vital organs are indicated and described, listen to a state-sponsored script about alternative options to abortion, sign a document stipulating that she understands she is terminating the life of a unique human being, and then wait an additional 24 hours before retuning to the clinic again for the actual procedure.

“It is a sad day for the women of North Carolina,” said Representative Deborah Ross from Raleigh.  The bill was vetoed by Governor Bev Perdue before the Senate overrode the veto with a vote of 29-19.  With overwhelmingly Republican partisan support from Representatives such as bill sponsor Ruth Samuelson of Mecklenburg County, and Raleigh Representative Paul Stam, the extreme measures of this bill were part of an unapologetically polarizing conservative itinerary.  “The bill has been introduced many many many times before, but it never has gotten this far,” Ross explained, “Speaker Tom Tillis made it very clear at the beginning of this session that this was one of his agenda items for the new Republican majority.”

Advocates for reproductive rights see this bill as an affront to freedom of choice in health care and as an attack on women.  “These additional restrictions and regulations were completely unwarranted, and frankly, a blatant unnecessary intrusion into personal private decision-making,” said Jessica Barden, a spokesperson for Planned Parenthood.  Barden also commented on the tone of the debate in the General Assembly, “Consistently through the debate, there was a subtext that women are not capable of making serious decisions about their own lives and their own healthcare without interference from the government.”

Ross is worried that there has been a pattern of legislation in this General Assembly that disproportionately affects the women of North Carolina in a negative way.  She explained, “It’s a disturbing development in the spectrum for how we’ve dealt with women’s issues this session of the General Assembly,” in reference to recent cuts in education, childcare, and other institutions with predominately female employees. 

To add insult to injury, evidence suggests that the required actions of this bill would not even be successful in changing a woman’s mind about getting abortion, but simply causes the procedure to be more difficult and expensive.  “They feel that women make this decision flippantly,” Barden said of the legislature, “What we know is that, on average, a woman will wait about 10 days between finding out that she’s pregnant and calling to schedule an appointment with an abortion provider.  And during this 10 days she is weighing her options, she’s talking with her loved ones, with her clergy if she has one, and really thinking about what’s the best decision for herself and for her family.  And I don’t think that any of the information that this bill requires women to hear could change any of the circumstances that lead her to that decision.”

“I don’t know that the bill will change their minds, it will certainly make it harder for them for them to get abortions, and more expensive,” said Ross.

Barden pointed to the inappropriate condemnatory nature of the bill in its treatment of women, “It is just setting up additional roadblocks, and frankly shaming them, and making them feel like the state disapproves of their decision.”

The forced ultrasound is perhaps the cruelest and most invasive aspect of the bill, and a requirement that Barden feels is unnecessary.  “About 60% of women who have an abortion in the United States already have at least one child,” Barden commented, “they’ve already seen an ultrasound, they are making a decision that they think is best for themselves and for their existing children.”

The bill also stipulates that the ultrasound must be performed by a licensed sonographer, potentially making the procedure more expensive. “That’s additional training and qualifications that we will have to absorb the cost of,” Barden explained while adding that Planned Parenthood was still making determinations about the adjusted cost of services.

The ultrasound requirement applies to all women, even if they have already seen a previous ultrasound of the same pregnancy.  Ross remarked, "There is a group of women that have abortions when they find out that they’re carrying a fetus with sever severe fetal deformity, and clearly they’ve seen that ultrasound before, but this bill would mandate that they have yet another ultrasound.”

The bill would also make getting abortions more difficult by creating ways to make it easier to sue abortion doctors for malpractice, and consequently discouraging medical professionals from performing the procedure.  “This bill has a whole separate section that allows, not just the woman, even the father of an unborn child, even a rapist can sue the doctor if the doctor did not follow the state-sponsored script directly,” stated Ross, “and it’s disrespectful.”

Barden also felt that the legislature made inept assumptions about the need for interference in communication between doctors and patients, noting, “There was this feeling underlying the debate that physicians who perform abortions are somehow withholding information from their patients, which is simply not the case.”

This amount of regulation seems like a hypocritical contrast to a party that typically decries the perceived tendency for government to be too big and domineering.  Ross commented on the disconnect between this bill and previous Republican discourse: "They're saying we need less government regulation, and of course they are regulating the most personal private communications people can have, and they are regulating it both for women and for their physicians.”

Another frustrating irony of this bill is that while making abortions more financially and emotionally difficult for women, this legislature has also made major cuts to family planning programs, as well as cuts to programs for single mothers and children.  

“We’re spending all this time paying attention to whether or not a woman gets an abortion while we’re cutting family planning money, outlawing Planned Parenthood from providing health services, cutting Medicaid for women and children, cutting Smart Start  and More at Four for at-risk children,” Ross noted. "There is no care for the mother, no care for preventing an unwanted pregnancy, and then obviously after the child is born services have been cut, but meanwhile we’re giving her a state-sponsored speech about all the services we’ll be providing.  It’s more than ironic.”

While the legislature is cutting funding to family programs, it will be spending money on creating the informational pamphlets that this bill requires, in English and in Spanish. 

The punitive nature of this bill raises concerns that this legislature may try to pass even more harmful legislation for the women of North Carolina.  “There are certainly more restrictions that the legislature could place on this procedure that would make it extremely difficult for women in North Carolina, and I have no doubt that they’ll attempt to if they maintain the majority in the state legislature,” said Barden.

For North Carolinians opposed to the passing of this bill who want to know what, if anything, they can do about it now that it has been passed, Ross advised, “They need to know who voted  to put this in place and make sure that those senators and representatives understand that their constituents do not like this bill, either by getting their senator or representative committed to changing parts of the bill, or all of it, or just voting against them the next time [they run for office] so that we can get a new majority that might be able to repeal it.”

The choice to get an abortion is a profoundly personal one, with situational complexities as varied as the women of North Carolina.  It is for that reason that the choice should belong to the woman who is not only carrying the child in her own body, but who is also the one who is faced with the responsibility of caring and providing for its future in a time of limited upward mobility and shrinking support from government programs.  This bill is an insensitive insult to these women and their right to autonomy.  It is an unnecessary attempt by legislators to judge and control the lives of their female constituents, instead of representing them and their rights.  The people of North Carolina deserve better, and if our current legislators continue to be incapable of demonstrating the same logic possessed by a 17-year-old high school girl, then the empowered women and men of this state will have no choice but to demand better, until we are forced to seek out new representation. 

Wake County Representation

Voted For House Bill 854 — House

Voted For House Bill 854 — Senate

  • Neal Hunt (http://www.ncleg.net/gascripts/members/viewMember.pl?sChamber=S&nUserID=200) - Republican – District 15

Voted Against House Bill 854 — House

Voted Against House Bill 854 — Senate

* Senator Richard Stevens, Republican, chose not to vote on the bill and was absent.  If Stevens had voted against the bill then his vote could have prevented the veto override and the passing of the bill.

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Politics , Other posts by Whitney Ayres Kenerly.

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  • Bill
    08/18 08:38 AM

    This bill is outrageous.  The forced 4-hour waiting period between the ultrasound and the abortion procedure is designed purely to inconvenience and subject patients to shame and exposure to protestors outside the clinics.  It reveals the hypocrisy of the Republican stance that government shouldn’t get between a doctor and patient.  Get ready to read more about women having problems with Misoprostol, the $2 abortion pill available on an internet near you.

  • Kelly
    08/18 09:04 AM

    This is another good example of how the right-wing Republicans want to find ways in insert themselves into private lives. They yell that they want smaller government but continuously try to find ways of using government powers to control how citizens behave and how the private citizen can live.

    I’d guess they’re also into seeing unwanted, low income children put into the the welfare system.

    I’ll bet when they realize that they now have to spend tax dollars supporting an extra 5000 unwanted, malnourished, potentially under educated, welfare recipients per year they might start thinking it’s far better to encourage a population reduction.

  • raleighrob
    08/18 10:45 AM

    Very well-written editorial!  Thank you so much for the time and hard work put into it. 

    Obviously instead of working on economic issues, the Republicans would rather waste time dictating what people do with their own bodies.  Republicans are hypocritical fascists, plain and simple.

  • sally
    08/18 11:10 AM

    Plus - if they really wanted to reduce the number of abortions, you’d think there would be increased availability of birth control and more support for the services that Planned Parenthood provides.

  • JeffS
    08/18 11:17 AM

    Kelly’s comments mirror what I have been saying.


    The Republicans agenda consists on removing restrictions on businesses and imposing them on individuals. The motivation for the former is obvious. They’re looking out for their own. The latter is more about using social issues to motivate their voters.


    You see, the average middle class Republican voter doesn’t benefit from removing regulation; from lower corporate taxes, or increased environmental pollution. They can only benefit by trying to impose their imaginary morality on others, allowing them a false sense of superiority. Religion has always been an effective tool for motivating the sheep.

  • frank
    08/18 11:28 AM

    the General Assembly is now being run by (ALEC American Legislative Executive Council) and their “insert your state” legislation packets that are created by the Koch Brothers, Exxon and Phillip Morris cigarettes.

    The nice thought is that NC House Speaker Thom Tillis was given an award by ALEC for making the corporate agenda our state’s brand new laws.  This is what happens when we elect stupid people who are more beholding to SuperPacs than actual citizens of their districts.

  • JK
    08/18 11:58 AM

    I especially like how they appear to think women are too impetuous or simple-minded to decide whether or not they want an abortion and yet consider those same women to be capable of caring for a child. Right-wingers keep harping on about ‘small government’, but so far they haven’t managed to explain how controlling another person’s rights over their own body displays a lack of government intrusion.

  • JeffS
    08/18 12:11 PM

    JK, when you’re against abortions, the people who aren’t don’t matter.


    The details of the bill are largely irrelevant and are there only to provide the lies they can use to publicly justify it. Both sides know it’s a lie - I’m surprised they even bother.

     

  • Michael
    08/18 03:09 PM

    A Stenographer is a court reporter. Sonographers perform ultrasounds. In your zeal to wow us with your young adult literary prowess you neglected to look into the actual medial language and definition of those professionals who perform ultrasounds for a living vs. those that report courtroom dialogue.

  • Hipstater
    08/18 04:58 PM

    Thank you, Michael!

  • Joe
    08/19 11:02 AM

    So much for “less government” the GOP loves to talk about all the time.

  • Kristin Brewer
    08/19 11:58 AM

    a sad, sad day.

  • Fraiser Lyon
    08/19 04:29 PM

    I’m glad you all feel this way and I hope you all will join me in helping to repeal the licensure/permitting requirments for purchasing a handgun in North Carolina.  It is a real pain and causes lot of expense, same for the background checks. I hope Planned Parenthood will join in on the fray too.  It’s pretty clear that it doesn’t stop gun violence you can just get a gun in a back alley if you want one. True these laws might prevent someone from purchasing a handgun and committing a rash violent act that could lead to the death of another person but hey its my body and my decision to purchas a handgun or not.  How dare the government stand in the way. 

    For the life of me I can’t see how the General Assembly could think this new abortion law will do any good - I mean who exactly is it itended to benefit? I guess maybe the people that may be born as a result of the law, but why should we care about them, its the woman’s body after all.

  • Jeff S
    08/19 04:57 PM

    Please… you don’t care about fetus any more than you care about the tens of thousands our military slaughters every year, the 30k accidental poisonings, or the fact that our gun homicide rate is 25 times that of comparable countries.


    And as for the people who may be born, if your party cared about them, they would be working to improve their quality of life, not restrict their healthcare, education and personal freedoms for the benefit of a corporation.


    Your morality stance is bogus and we both know it.

  • Donna Bailey
    08/19 06:35 PM

    Thank you for writing so a well written article about the plight of women in NC. This is a total embarasment and a very sad state.

  • Fraiserlyon
    08/21 09:46 PM

    Funny I voted for Obama. I just happen to think it should be harder to get an abortion than it should be to buy a gun or get a drivers license. Not completely pro life but have always been a little sad that people kill or abort fetuses just because they are female. See china and India.  I’ve met very few people that wish they had been aborted and meet many happy people that came from dire awful circumstances.

  • A Britt
    08/25 02:38 PM

    Seems odd to me that all my friends who had abortions years ago or in college are still grieving the decision and believe that they rushed into the decision out of desperation or were pushed into it by a boyfriend, parent, or a planned parenthood “counselor” who gave them no other information or options.  Why would waiting a few days for a clearer head be a big deal?  Who rushes into marriage, college, buying a car, career or any important decision?  Maybe a fesus (which BTW means “baby” in latin) just isn’t as important as my most recent car purchase which took several days of locating and paperwork to complete.

  • Jennifer
    08/26 10:54 AM

    I think many people would agree that a waiting period is not offensive.  What is offensive is implying that doctors do not already fully inform the woman of what is going to take place, and that a very invasive sonogram is required before an abortion is allowed.  Completely unjustified waste of money.  I also think it is interesting that the documetns required to be given to the women must be avaialble in Spanish and other languages, while the same majority passes legislation that would disallow information about voting to be distributed by the government in any language other than English.

  • A Britt
    08/27 08:41 AM

    Early sonograms are invasive (prior to 10 weeks), but a D & C is much more so.  I’ve had both.  They are really not on the same level.  From reading these comments and the traditional prochoice comments, the real issue seems to come down to inconvenience for the mother or assuming that all of these women are getting any kind of professional counseling.  Those that I have incountered have not been to an ob/gyn at all but have only had a home pregnancy test.  The information at abortion centers is dated and limited.  I challenge you to go to Planned Parenthood as an undercover client and find out for yourself.  You would be shocked.  Then go to a crisis pregnancy center.  Compare the two.

  • Jeff S
    08/27 01:30 PM

    A Britt… maybe we should mandate professional counseling for all women who become pregnant. Afterall, many may not be emotionally ready to have a baby.


    We need to make sure we present them with “all the options” right?

     

  • A Britt
    08/27 02:38 PM

    Why not?  I think it could only benefit a mom and would be a welcome addition to family planning.

  • Blessing
    02/08 04:06 PM

    This is best eaxmple that facts do not matter its only about the political agenda. This legislation will negatively affect every American.

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