Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Abortion protection­s enacted in Illinois

Pritzker signs expanded safeguards for patients, workers

- By Angie Leventis Lourgos Associated Press and Chicago Tribune’s Dan Petrella contribute­d. eleventis@chicagotri­bune. com

Reproducti­ve rights advocates celebrated Friday after Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed legislatio­n expanding protection­s for abortion patients and health care workers, as well as widening the pool of abortion providers, to help meet the recent spike in demand.

The law — which shields patients and providers from legal actions taken by other states — comes as Illinois faces a massive surge in out-of-state abortion patients following U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade in June.

Pritzker called the measure “nation-leading legislatio­n,” and added that Illinois has an obligation to support reproducti­ve freedoms “for our residents and those who seek safe haven.”

“We’ve seen out-of-state patients who’ve been denied their rights in other states coming to Illinois for abortion care,” he said. “Our clinics have been doing their best to serve the people seeking to exercise their rights, but they’ve been overwhelme­d. The U.S. Supreme Court has forced women, especially those most marginaliz­ed, to flee their home states in search of safe health care.”

The legislatio­n also includes protection­s for transgende­r patients seeking gender-affirming health care in Illinois, medical treatment that has come under fire in many GOP-led states across the country. So far this year, more than two dozen bills to restrict transgende­r health care access have been introduced in 11 states, primarily in the Midwest and South.

The new Illinois law, dubbed the Patient and Provider Protection Act, prevents health care providers from losing their Illinois medical licenses if they’ve had a license revoked in another state for performing a procedure that’s legal in Illinois. The legislatio­n also bars health insurance companies from charging more for out-of-network care if in-network providers object to medical care for moral reasons.

Additional­ly, the law allows advanced practice nurses and physician assistants to perform surgical abortions that don’t require general anesthesia.

About a dozen states have laws that permit advance practice clinicians to provide procedural abortions, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports reproducti­ve rights.

“Allowing advanced practice clinicians to provide abortion care will help increase access to safe, effective abortions,” Dr. Nisha Verma of the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts, said in an

email.

Illinois reproducti­ve rights advocates and abortion clinics have urged lawmakers to expand the pool of abortion providers ever since the demise of Roe ended federal abortion rights, leaving the matter up to individual states.

Illinois has strong reproducti­ve protection­s, with some of the most liberal abortion laws in the nation. The 2019 Reproducti­ve Health Act establishe­d abortion as a “fundamenta­l right” in Illinois. Pritzker has also urged the next General Assembly to offer voters in 2024 a proposal that would guarantee the right to abortion in the state constituti­on.

Yet after the fall of Roe, many states in the Midwest and beyond have either banned terminatin­g a pregnancy or severely restricted abortion access.

Illinois abortion providers say they’re seeing an unpreceden­ted number of abortion seekers crossing state lines to terminate a pregnancy here, and those patients are traveling greater distances from a larger number of states.

One clinic in southern Illinois said patients have had to wait roughly three weeks to schedule an abortion, when appointmen­ts used to take several days. Wisconsin health care providers over the summer began traveling to Illinois to provide abortion care and help meet the growing demand.

With widespread Democratic support, the bill had passed the Senate 41-16 and the House 70-39.

Outgoing state Sen. Darren Bailey of Xenia, who unsuccessf­ully challenged Pritzker in the November election, has called the measure “pure evil.”

“This is wrong,” the Republican lawmaker said during the Senate debate, which took place before his term ended Wednesday. “God help us.”

Pro-Life Action League Executive Director Eric Scheidler cautioned that the state’s “shameful record will only get worse under this new measure allowing non-physicians to do surgical abortions.”

But Planned Parenthood President and CEO Jennifer Welch praised the law for protecting the “health care refugees forced to flee their

home state to receive abortion and gender-affirming therapy in Illinois.”

“Last year, when the Supreme Court took away our freedoms when they overturned Roe, Illinois immediatel­y felt the impact as state after state moved to ban or severely restrict abortion access,” she said. “Sometimes it looks like a race to the bottom in our neighbor states.”

She added that those same states are “hostile to the LGBTQ community,” and restrict access to gender-affirming health care, marriage equality and other rights.

Bill sponsor state Rep. Kelly Cassidy, a Chicago Democrat, called the measure “the first step” in what will likely be “a long journey.”

“As legislatur­es reconvene across the country, we will have to respond to the new ways that bully states will come up with to attack patients and providers,” she said. “We have to continue to build our capacity to meet the needs for care in both the reproducti­ve and gender-affirming care spaces. … This is the fight of my life.”

Pritzker and the legislatur­e’s Democratic leaders had said they would call a special session immediatel­y following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe, though they never followed through, opting instead to address reproducti­ve rights in the just-completed lame-duck session.

This most recent abortion legislatio­n was considered another political victory for Pritzker, who was already in the national spotlight after signing into law one of the country’s toughest bans on military-style firearms earlier this week.

That measure immediatel­y prohibited the sale of these types of weapons and required current owners to register gun serial numbers with Illinois State Police by Jan. 1. The legislatio­n comes months after a Fourth of July mass shooting in Highland Park; the alleged shooter’s weapon was an AR-15 style of rifle.

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Just days after his inaugurati­on on Jan. 9, 2023, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs a law safeguardi­ng abortion protection­s and expanding the pool of providers amid a surge in out-of-state patients.
BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Just days after his inaugurati­on on Jan. 9, 2023, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs a law safeguardi­ng abortion protection­s and expanding the pool of providers amid a surge in out-of-state patients.

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