Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Women’s Caucus sets priorities for year

Bills to increase access to abortion, get consent for pelvic exams on the agenda

- By Saja Hindi shindi@denverpost.com

More than seven months have passed since the U.S. Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, but this is the first chance Colorado lawmakers have had to work on legislatio­n in its aftermath.

Last year, the Colorado Legislatur­e passed the “Reproducti­ve Health Equity Act,” guaranteei­ng the right to abortions in state law. But lawmakers say that was just the first step, and just because residents have the right to get abortions doesn’t mean they have the access.

That’s why the Colorado Democratic Women’s Caucus — made up of a historic number of women and people of diverse background­s — made a package of three abortion bills one of its policy priorities for 2023. The bills have a high likelihood of passing with a Democratic-controlled statehouse, and caucus co-chair Sen. Lisa Cutter noted that the group passed all of its priorities last year.

The state General Assembly only meets from January-may each year and the U.S. Supreme Court Dobbs v.

Women’s Organizati­on decision was released in June, so Colorado lawmakers have looked to laws passed in other states that have full-time legislatur­es and advice from advocacy groups.

“I think the question is, ‘how do we build something better than Roe? How do we move beyond legal and into a place where health care is accessible and affordable for all people?’” said Jack Teter, policy director for Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains.

This package of bills will address the changing landscape across the U.S. and the “unique and nefarious actions” in surroundin­g states, said Rep. Meg Froelich, a Greenwood Village Democrat.

“It’s a moving target,” she said. “It’s much more complicate­d. You’re really addressing what true access means and there were so many barriers in existence even before Roe fell.”

The women’s caucus has identified four priorities for legislatio­n in 2023: three bills related to safe access for protected health care, including abortions; a bill to guarantee a fair workweek, or predictabl­e schedules for employees; a bill to strengthen the state’s 2019 Equal Pay Act; and a bill to require informed consent for intimate medical exams.

Part of the criteria for choosing these bills includes improving the lives of women and families and making advancemen­ts for women and families of color as well as trans women and those of other intersecti­onalities, said co-chair Rep. Naquetta Ricks, an Aurora Democrat.

Abortion and gender-affirming care rights

After increasing abortion restrictio­ns and bans across the country, a flood of patients have come to Colorado from other states. But patients and medical profession­als worry about legal consequenc­es as other states try to punish those who seek or assist in getting abortions.

Gov. Jared Polis signed an executive order in July saying Colorado won’t cooperate with other states’ abortion investigat­ions, and now lawmakers want to codify that for providers and patients of abortions, other reproducti­ve care and gender-affirming care.

Karen Middleton, executive director of Cobalt, said the reproducti­ve rights group has received reports of doctors in Colorado getting called by doctors in Texas threatenin­g to report them because a patient had mentioned they’d provided them with an abortion. The proposed bill would protect the privacy of both the doctors and their patients from potential lawsuits and criminal charges.

“We’re seeing more legislatio­n like what we passed last year and more of a push to actions in some states, and we’ll continue to see outrageous bills in states that already have no access to abortion,” Middleton said.

Another bill would require commercial insurers to cover abortions, sexually transmitte­d infections treatment and ongoing monitoring for HIV prevention. It would also expand the state reproducti­ve health care program to cover family planning services for people who are undocument­ed and allow Medicaid to reimburse for transporta­tion services for abortion as it does for other health services.

It’s not a fundamenta­l right if only certain people can afford it, said one of the bill’s sponsors, Democratic Rep. Dafna Michaelson Jenet of Commerce City.

The third bill in the package, spearheade­d by the Colorado Organizati­on for Latina Opportunit­y and Reproducti­ve Rights, seeks to regulate crisis pregnancy centers, often faithbased facilities that provide counseling and limited ultrasound­s while attempting to steer women away from abortions. Critics argue that the facilities use deceptive advertisin­g to attract women and families.

The proposal seeks to bar the facilities from using these practices and crack down on abortion-pill reversal — a controvers­ial and unproven treatment that purports to halt a medication-induced abortion.

Lawmakers expect to unveil the package of bills later this month.

Despite the legislatur­e’s makeup, Republican­s have introduced bills attempting to ban abortion, require medical providers to give patients informatio­n about abortion pill reversal and require abortion providers to administer pain killers to “an unborn child.”

Informed consent for intimate exams

Lawmakers have viewed access to abortion as a choice patients should be able to make for their own bodies, and on that same principle, the women’s caucus has made House Bill 231077 another priority.

The bill would require a patient’s consent before a medical profession­al could perform an intimate exam and would require consent for students or trainees to be present during such exams, including pelvic, rectal, prostate and breast exams.

“Our bodies are extremely personal and so we want to ensure that consent extends beyond when a patient is able to give to consent as well as when they’re under anesthesia,” said Rep. Jenny Willford, a Northglenn Democrat and sponsor.

Fair Workweek

The caucus is also supporting House Bill 23-1118, “Fair Workweek employment standards,” which is scheduled for its first hearing Feb. 16.

This legislatio­n aims to give employees, particular­ly in the food and beverage sectors, more predictabi­lity with work schedules. That includes providing schedules with two weeks advanced notice, 12 hour minimums between shifts and “predictabi­lity” pay if employees’ schedules change abruptly.

Equal pay for equal work The caucus is also backing Senate Bill 23-105, aimed at strengthen­ing the 2019 Equal Pay Act — ensuring women get paid the same as men for the same work.

This bill would give the Department of Labor the authority to investigat­e claims, increase the number of years women could receive backpay for being underpaid from three to six and clarify some language about job postings.

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