The Columbus Dispatch

Idaho universiti­es disallow abortion, contracept­ion referral

-

BOISE, Idaho – Idaho universiti­es are warning staffers not to refer students to abortion providers, and at least one public university is barring employees from telling students how to obtain emergency contracept­ion or birth control as well. It’s the latest restrictio­n in a state that already holds some of the strictest abortion laws in the nation.

“This is going to have a very broad impact,” said Mike Satz, an attorney and former faculty member and interim dean at the University of Idaho’s College of Law. “It’s going to have a very strong chilling effect on free speech and it’s going to scare people. I’m afraid it’s going to scare people from going to school here or sending their kids to school at Idaho institutio­ns.”

The prohibitio­n against referring students to abortion providers or “promoting” abortion in any way comes from the “No Public Funds for Abortion Act,” a law passed by Idaho’s Republican-led Legislatur­e in 2021. Boise State University,

like the University of Idaho, told faculty members in a newsletter earlier this month that they could face felony charges for violating the law. Idaho State University did not respond to phone messages from The Associated Press asking if it had issued similar guidance.

The law also bars staffers and schoolbase­d health clinics from dispensing or telling students where to obtain emergency contracept­ion, such as the Plan B pill, except for in cases of rape. Emergency contracept­ion drugs prevent pregnancy from occurring and do not work in cases where someone is already pregnant.

The University of Idaho’s guidance released Friday goes a step further, also warning employees about a law written in 1867, 23 years before Idaho became a state. That law prohibits dispensing or “advertisin­g” abortion services and birth control – leading to UI’S advice that condoms be distribute­d only to prevent sexually transmitte­d diseases, but not to prevent pregnancy.

Idaho’s lawmakers could fine-tune the laws to ensure they don’t violate 1st Amendment free speech rights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States