Abortions are being done on your
dime
What
you should know about Planned
Parenthood, health reform
Part Three of Three
By Bill Poehler
Editor's note. This appeared
in Sunday's (Minneapolis)
Star-Tribune.
Last week's announcement that
Planned Parenthood will build a
large new abortion center in St.
Paul's Midway neighborhood
brings to light the contentious
issue of government funding of
elective abortions. While it is
true that Planned Parenthood
will use private donations of
approximately $18 million to
construct its new complex, its
day-to-day operations will
continue to rely heavily on
taxpayer funds.
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This photo is of the
site of a new Planned
Parenthood abortion
mega-clinic in Houston,
Texas. Planned
Parenthood of Minnesota
has just announced plans
for its own huge
abortion clinic in St.
Paul. |
Many Minnesotans still do not
realize that they fund abortions
every day simply by paying state
taxes -- sales tax, income tax
and other taxes. This is the
result of the Minnesota Supreme
Court's 1995 Doe vs. Gomez
decision, in which the court
"found" a right to
taxpayer-funded abortion in the
state Constitution. Since the
ruling, abortion centers have
been reimbursed with $15.6
million for 50,000 abortions,
according to the Minnesota
Department of Human Services.
In 2008, the most recent figures
available, taxpayers paid $1.5
million for 3,754 abortions.
Roughly 99 percent of these
abortions are elective, meaning
they are performed for reasons
other than to save the mother's
life, or in cases of reported
rape or incest.
In addition to direct abortion
funding, Planned Parenthood
Federation of America (PPFA),
the nation's largest abortion
business, received a staggering
$349 million in taxpayer dollars
in the form of federal and state
government grants and contracts
in 2007 (latest figures).
Planned Parenthood of Minnesota,
North Dakota, South Dakota
received $5.26 million from
federal, state and local
governments in 2008.
Abortion providers are poised to
receive even more federal funds
under President Obama's new
health care overhaul, which PPFA
hailed as "a huge victory."
Not only does the law subsidize
health plans that cover
abortion, it also opens the door
to direct federal funding of
abortions at community health
centers, or CHCs. The law
appropriates $11 billion over
five years to approximately
1,250 different CHCs; on its
website, Planned Parenthood says
that 850 CHCs are run by Planned
Parenthood affiliates.
There are no restrictions to
prevent that money from paying
for abortions, according to
legal experts, including
Columbus School of Law Prof.
Robert A. Destro, who is an
authority on abortion funding,
who helped to write the amicus
brief filed by 218 members of
the U.S. House of
Representatives in Harris vs.
McRae (1980), and who has
written: "The history of
abortion funding litigation
since Roe v. Wade in 1973
demonstrates conclusively that
the Secretary [of Health and
Human Services] will be forced
by the courts to pay for
abortions with the CHC money
appropriated by the Senate
health care bill."
This is true, primarily because
the CHC funds are a direct
appropriation in the health care
bill itself and will not flow
through the annual
appropriations bill for the
Department of Health and Human
Services. These funds would not
be covered by the Hyde
Amendment, which only prohibits
use of annual HHS appropriations
to fund abortions.
Indeed, the Reproductive Health
Access Project and the Abortion
Access Project have produced an
"administrative billing guide"
to help CHCs integrate abortion
into their practices within the
confines of federal and state
restrictions.
The sad truth is that this will
lead to more abortions performed
on low-income and vulnerable
women. Statistics show that when
public funding of abortion is
instituted or expanded, the
numbers of abortions increase
very significantly. A study by
the Guttmacher Institute, a
prochoice research organization,
found that the abortion rate
among Medicaid recipients was
more than twice as high in those
states that publicly funded
abortion through Medicaid.
The bottom line is that abortion
is about money. Abortion, which
ends the life of a developing
human being, is now the most
common surgical procedure in the
United States. It has become an
enormously profitable
enterprise, marketed to ethnic
and immigrant populations in
their native-language
newspapers; to students and
young people as the solution to
the "problem" of pregnancy, and
to women everywhere as their
absolute "right" without regard
for the life that is destroyed.
Bill Poehler is the
communications director for
Minnesota Citizens Concerned for
Life, NRLC's Minnesota
affiliate.
Please be sure to also read
"National Right to Life News
Today" (www.nationalrighttolifenewstoday.org)
and please send your thoughts
and comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
Part One
Part Two |