Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Abortion hearing called moot after rules change

- JOHN MORITZ

LITTLE ROCK — A hearing scheduled for this morning to consider a Little Rock abortion clinic’s arguments against the state’s temporary ban on surgical abortions has been canceled after the state officials indicated they were preparing to lift the ban.

U.S. District Court Judge Kristine Baker canceled the hearing in an order handed down Thursday afternoon.

She did so at the request of Little Rock Family Planning Services. Attorneys for the abortion clinic said in a court filing the announceme­nt by Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Wednesday the Health Department would lift its ban on elective

surgical procedures starting Monday potentiall­y made the matter moot.

The Health Department ordered Little Rock Family Planning Services to stop doing surgical abortions April 10 in order to comply with its prohibitio­n on elective procedures.

A few days later, Baker blocked the order, allowing the clinic to continue performing surgical abortions. Baker was overruled on Wednesday by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which reinstated the ban.

The Health Department has yet to issue its official directive on how elective surgeries will resume. A spokeswoma­n for the agency said the directive would likely be issued today .

In the meantime, the ban on surgical abortions remains in place.

“We’re waiting for the final directive, we’re not resuming anything,” Bettina Brownstein, an attorney for the clinic, said Thursday.

Health Secretary Nate

Smith said at the governor’s daily press briefing Wednesday all medical procedures resuming Monday will have to be done following certain guidelines, including the patient must be tested ahead of time for covid-19. Asked specifical­ly if that meant surgical abortions would be allowed to resume, Smith suggested the decision would be left with the clinic.

“I think that will really depend on what the facility decides to do in terms of whether they can comply with these points in the directive,” Smith said Wednesday.

Little Rock Family Planning Services is one of two abortion providers in the state, and the only one doing surgical abortions.

The other operating clinic, a Planned Parenthood facility in Little Rock, only does medication-induced abortions, also known as the abortion pill.

The pill is typically used in the first 11 weeks of pregnancy, and accounted for fewer than a third of the total abortions performed in the state in 2018, according to Health Department records.

Surgical abortions can be legally obtained in Arkansas

until the 20th week of pregnancy.

In a court filing late Wednesday, attorneys for Little Rock Family Planning Services asked Baker to block the state’s elective-surgery prohibitio­n as it applies to women who would be too far along in their pregnancie­s to legally receive an abortion once the restrictio­n is lifted. That request was due to be considered at the hearing today, before it was canceled.

Baker ordered attorneys for the state to reply to Little Rock Family Planning Services’ motion for an injunction by Monday.

“I am pleased that public health officials will not be distracted and look forward to filing a brief Monday,” Attorney General Leslie Rutledge said Thursday.

In a similar move on Thursday, abortion providers in Texas withdrew their request to have a judge block a prohibitio­n after Gov. Greg Abbott issued new guidelines for elective procedures the clinics were able to abide by, the Dallas Morning News reported.

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