Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Texas shutting teens’ legal window

Getting judge’s OK for abortion now infinitely harder

- By Astrid Galvan and Lindsay Whitehurst

PHOENIX — Veronika Granado anxiously stood before the judge knowing that if she said something wrong, things could end badly for her.

But the 17-year-old hadn’t committed a crime. She had not filed a lawsuit. Granado was in a Texas court that day to ask permission to get an abortion.

She was among thousands of teens burdened with additional hurdles to legal abortion care, especially if they are of color or live in states where abortion access is already severely limited. Thirty-eight states require some form of parental consent or notice for anyone under 18 to get an abortion. Of those, nearly all including Texas, offer an alternativ­e: pleading with a judge for permission to bypass that consent.

But the latest restrictio­ns in Texas that essentiall­y ban abortion past the six-week pregnancy mark have made such requests almost impossible; the process to go before a judge includes a required sonogram and setting a hearing can take weeks. By then, women are often past the six-week mark. And as other states set their own restrictio­ns modeled on Texas’, those few avenues are getting shut off.

Supporters of parental-consent laws say parents should have a say in the medical procedure. But teens often face abuse or threats of homelessne­ss if they tell their parents or guardians they are pregnant, said Rosann Mariappura­m, executive director of Jane’s Due Process, the nation’s first organizati­on dedicated to helping youths navigate the process of going through

a judge, and one of only a few nationwide. They work with about 350 women a year in Texas. Roughly 10% are in foster care and 80% percent are youths of color.

Most are past six weeks when they first come in. Young girls who have only been getting their period for a few years are not likely to track it. Athletes tend to have irregular periods. And sometimes when girls go on birth control, they experience spotting, which they may confuse for a period. All of these factors often lead minors — and adults, too — to miss early signs of pregnancy.

Kenzie Reynolds was 17 and a high-school junior when she found out she was pregnant. Her relationsh­ip was toxic and deeply controllin­g, and her family are devout Christians and opposed to abortion, she said.

She found Jane’s Due

Process, but it would be four weeks before she could even see a judge to make her case.

“The worst part of the entire thing was how terrible I felt and how isolated I felt,” she said.

A month later, she stood before the judge and told him about her toxic relationsh­ip, her desperatio­n and terror. But the judge denied the request.

“He walked by me like I wasn’t even there,” she said.

While she could have appealed, she was 10 weeks along at that point, too late to take an abortion pill, and the appeal was still uncertain. Instead, she connected with the group Lilith Fund for a flight to New Mexico where she got the procedure, and flew back the same day.

“At the end of all it, I realized I was considered too young to have an abortion, but old enough to raise a child,”

said Reynolds, who shared her story through WeTestify, a group dedicated to representi­ng people who have had abortions. Now 21, Reynolds was eventually able to break free of her relationsh­ip, something she might not have been able to do if they shared a child, and go to college.

Already, calls to the group have plummeted, while requests for the birth control services they provide have tripled, said Mariappura­m.

Each state has its own rules governing how teenagers can bypass consent through a judge. Fifteen require judges to use standard of “clear and convincing evidence” to determine whether a teen is mature and that the abortion is in their best interest, according to the Guttmacher Institute, which advocates for reproducti­ve rights. Some states require judges to make a decision

within 48 hours, while others get several days.

Judges have full discretion to make a decision and they can ask pretty much anything they want, she said.

A few states are reconsider­ing their policies. Massachuse­tts lowered its age for required parental consent last year to 16. In Illinois, lawmakers who support abortion rights are pushing to repeal a parental notificati­on law in order to ensure people have access to safe abortion services.

On the other hand, Cathi Herrod, president of Center for Arizona Policy, which advocates for abortion restrictio­ns, said abortion is a life-changing medical procedure that parents should have a say in. While she opposes the option to bypass consent, she says courts have repeatedly upheld it.

“Parents should not be denied the ability to oversee that decision by their daughter,” Herrod said.

Making the decision to end the unplanned pregnancy wasn’t difficult for Granado, whose own mother birthed her at 17.

But she feared her mom would kick her out if she found out about her pregnancy and decision to get an abortion. She stumbled upon Jane’s Due Process while researchin­g her options, met with an attorney, got the required sonogram and a court date.

“Basically my life was in the hands of this judge,” Granado said.

The judge, an older Hispanic man, told her his religion frowned upon abortion, but he had to be impartial as a judge.

He granted the request. A week and a half later, she ended the pregnancy.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? Student Veronika Granado had to put her“life in the hands of a judge”to sign off on her abortion without parental consent.
ERIC GAY/AP Student Veronika Granado had to put her“life in the hands of a judge”to sign off on her abortion without parental consent.

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