Marysville Appeal-Democrat

How judges in Florida stop teens from having abortions

- Tribune News Service Tampa Bay Times

TAMPA, Fla. — A new report from Human Rights Watch found that Hillsborou­gh County judges denied abortion requests for teens at a higher rate than anywhere else in Florida.

Currently, Florida law requires minors, or people under 18, to get parental consent before they can access abortions. But teens can get that requiremen­t waived if they appear before a judge. The process is called a judicial bypass.

The process can be invasive — young people have to stand before a judge and detail the circumstan­ces that led to their pregnancy and why they can’t ask a parent for consent, among other things.

It can be traumatizi­ng and intimidati­ng, reproducti­ve rights advocates say, and in the end, the minor could still be denied access. In Florida, that’s happening with increasing frequency, according to data analysis by Human Rights Watch, a nonprofit that investigat­es rights abuses globally.

Margaret Wurth, a researcher with the organizati­on, said the report released Thursday aimed to understand what was causing the high denial rate, which has increased over the last 15 years.

In 2007, the denial rate across Florida was 3.3%. In 2022, that climbed to 8.6%. The highest denial rate was in 2020, when it hit 13.3%.

“What we found was that it’s this extremely arbitrary decisionma­king process where judges have the power to determine young people’s access to abortion care based off of things like their grades, their personalit­y, and how they present themselves in this extremely intimidati­ng hearing,” Wurth said.

A key factor — researcher­s found — was where a minor lived.

The report requested data from state and county courts on waivers to see how many were denied each year. Seven counties in Florida received 10 or more petitions from minors each year in 2020 and 2021. The denial rate varied drasticall­y by county.

In Miami-dade

County, for instance, 26 waivers were requested in 2021. None were denied.

However, in Hillsborou­gh County that same year, 21 waivers were requested but more than half were rejected.

At 52.4%, Hillsborou­gh County had the highest denial rate in Florida in 2021. The next highest among counties with 10 or more requests was Palm Beach, which had a denial rate of 10% that year.

“The way the statute is written, it grants significan­t power to judges to make these decisions for young people,” Wurth said. “It really shows that where you live is going to significan­tly determine your access to care.”

Through analyzing court records, the report found that reasons listed for waiver denials included misspelled words in the petition, presenting as being “nervous” or lacking maturity.

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