The Denver Post

Abortion clinic visits tracked

Denver company says it will stop selling data amid fears over its use

- By Jessica Seaman Jessica Seaman: jseaman@denverpost.com or @jessicasea­man

A Denver-based data broker said Tuesday it will stop selling informatio­n on visits to abortion clinics, including Planned Parenthood facilities, after a report from Vice about how easy it was to access the informatio­n and concerns about how it may be used.

The role that data collection plays in abortion rights is drawing more scrutiny after a U.S. Supreme Court opinion that would overturn Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 ruling that legalized abortions nationwide, leaked and was reported by Politico this week.

There is a concern that informatio­n could be used by “antiaborti­on vigilantes” to harass or target people seeking and providing abortions.

The data gathered by the company, Safegraph, showed where people traveled to a clinic based on their census block, reported Vice.

Colorado abortion providers expect more people to travel to the state for abortions if Roe vs. Wade is overturned officially as other states are poised to ban the procedure outright. Colorado was one of the first states to loosen restrictio­ns on legal abortions and now affirms the right to the procedure in state law.

Safegraph’s data, which it says is aggregated and anonymized, includes informatio­n on where businesses are, when they’re open, what businesses are nearby, the physical shape of a building and how people interact with place, according to a statement by the company.

The data tries to answer “how often people visit, how long they stay, where they came from, where else they go and more,” according to the company’s website.

A representa­tive with SafeGraph declined to comment for this story and instead pointed to the statement on the company’s website, which said it is removing “patterns data” for locations classified as family planning centers “to curtail any potential misuse” of the informatio­n. It still will provide location and operating-hour informatio­n for the centers, such as Planned Parenthood.

“We don’t have any indication that this data has ever been used for bad purposes,” the company said in a statement. “We have had many academics that have used this type of data for really good purposes. Taking away this data will impact many academics that want to study this topic (like understand­ing the impact of legislatio­n on family planning visits).”

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