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Judge Considering Temporary Block of Florida’s New 24-Hour Abortion Waiting Period

June 24, 2015 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

enernest ludwig kirchner sleeping woman abortion waiting period florida
Ernest Ludwig Kirchner’s ‘Sleeping Woman’ (1911-12).

Only days before a new Florida law would start requiring 24-hour waits before women can have abortions, a Leon County circuit judge is considering whether to place a hold on the law while a constitutional challenge goes forward.


The law (HB 633), which passed in April, is slated to go into effect July 1. The day after Gov. Rick Scott signed the law, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a constitutional challenge and sought an emergency injunction.

On Wednesday, Chief Circuit Judge Charles Francis heard arguments from the ACLU and the Attorney General Pam Bondi’s office and then said he’d issue a ruling quickly on whether to grant an injunction.

Both sides are expected to appeal an adverse ruling.

The new law adds to the information that physicians performing abortions must provide to women to obtain their consent. Under the law, the information must be provided in person to women at least 24 hours before the procedures are performed — requiring women to make two trips to abortion clinics.

Supporters of the law contend it will give women more time to reflect on their decisions. Opponents contend it will place obstacles before women seeking abortions, especially women who are victims of violence and women who are low-income and live in rural areas.

In a one-hour hearing Wednesday, ACLU attorney Renee Paradis pointed to Florida’s “explicit” constitutional right to privacy as the basis for challenging HB 633.

“Florida is one of only five states with this kind of strong privacy protection in the Constitution,” she said. “None of those five have a waiting period. The only one that tried to have a waiting period was struck down by the courts in Montana.”

But Blaine Winship, special counsel to the attorney general, said the state has a vested interest in its residents’ well-being.

“The state wields the police power to protect the health and safety of the people,” he said.

Winship also contended that nothing in the new law removes a woman’s right to get an abortion.

“The question of whether there is a 24-hour wait for her to contemplate the full impact and ramifications of her decision is obviously what we’ve been talking about today,” he said. “It’s what the Legislature aimed to try to protect.”

Lawmakers included in the law exceptions to the 24-hour wait for victims of rape, incest, domestic violence and human trafficking. To qualify, however, those victims must produce police reports, restraining orders, medical records or other documentation — and Paradis said most victims do not seek those.

The Republican-led Legislature rejected Democrats’ attempts to allow women to consult with doctors online or to have nurses explain the procedure on the first visit.

“This is all just about informed consent,” Winship said. “The Legislature took great care in building in a number of exemptions.”

But Paradis said the second-trip requirement threatens a woman’s privacy by increasing the risk that other people — from loved ones to employers and co-workers — will learn that she is having an abortion.

The two sides also sparred over the strength of Florida’s constitutional right to privacy. Winship pointed to a 2006 Florida Supreme ruling that upheld the informed-consent provision in a 1997 law, the “Women’s Right to Know” Act, which required doctors to explain the medical risks of abortion and to obtain consent from women seeking them.

Paradis, however, noted that the language in a landmark 1989 case had provided Floridians with stronger privacy protections than most states.

“The state may think it knows better, but that doesn’t matter,” Paradis said. “It matters what the woman decides.”

Francis said he would not rule Wednesday, but soon thereafter.

–Margie Menzel, News Service of Florida

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Patriot76 says

    June 25, 2015 at 10:37 am

    The right wing agenda in this State (led by the Koch brothers) has proven only one truth – it is ok to defy the Constitution of State and Nation as long as it follows their religious beliefs. These TRAP laws are designed to set extra regulations almost supplanting precedent set by the U.S. Supreme Court rulings. These laws passed by the extreme religious right are both Unconstitutional and unprecedented. They should be challenged in every corridor and courtyard.

    Americans in Florida need to stop voting only for a party that is intolerant of other religions values. Thomas Jefferson and various other federalists warned citizens in their time the danger of following one dogma and the terrible role religion may play in legal policy. I hate saying vote Democrat as I am not fond of the Democrats in this State, but religious zealots are far more dangerous to Democracy and the rule of law.

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