The Guardian (USA)

Ohio considers tax credits for anti-abortion centers after historic vote

- Carter Sherman

A week after Ohioans voted to enshrine abortion rights in the state constituti­on, members of the state legislatur­e are considerin­g a bill that would give tax credits for donations to anti-abortion facilities.

On Tuesday, the Ohio senate finance committee discussed a bill from the state senator Sandra O’Brien, a Republican, who proposed that individual­s who give to “qualifying pregnancy resource centers” may be eligible for tax credits, at a cost of up to $10m to Ohio.

Anti-abortion counseling centers – which are also known as crisis pregnancy centers – offer free services to pregnant women, are frequently faithbased and aim to convince people to continue their pregnancie­s.

They have also been accused of attempting to mislead the people who walk through their doors. Because these centers areoften located next to abortion clinics and have nameslike “Birth Choice” or “Woman’s Choice”, critics say they purposely lead people seeking abortions to enter them by accidentan­d then give them inaccurate informatio­n about abortion.

A report for the Center for Countering Digital Hate, which supports abortion rights and analyzed 188 centers, found that more than 70% used some kind of misleading technique in their digital advertisin­g. Almost 40% did not say on their homepage that they do not provide abortion, while 10% exaggerate­d the mental health risks of abortion and 7% exaggerate­d the possibilit­y of complicati­ons in future pregnancie­s.

In the committee meeting, O’Brien said that there are more than 175 “pregnancy resource centers” in Ohio. (Her bill would specifical­ly apply to donations to nonprofit centers.) More than 2,500 centers now dot the US; they outnumber abortion clinics three to one.

“Their work and care day in and day out shows their commitment to serving women and families around them, and serving the lives of the unborn,” O’Brien said. “A tax credit is the least we can do.”

Many states have longfunded these centers. After the US supreme court overturned Roe v Wade last year,

that funding increased in multiple states; Ohio’s Republican governor, Mike DeWine, recently increased the two-year budget for a program that awards grant money to anti-abortion centers from $6m to $14m.

In the wake of the vote on abortion rights amendment in Ohio, some Republican­s in the Ohio state legislatur­e have said that they will introduce legislatio­n to remove judges’ ability to interpret the new amendment. Instead, they aim to hand that power back to the state legislatur­e – which is controlled by Republican­s.

The state senator Jerry Cirino, a

Republican, seemed to reference the vote during the Tuesday hearing.

“We need more of these centers because women are in crisis,” Cirino said. “In light of recent initiative­s at the polls, I should say, I think we need to make sure that we are reaching out to women that are in these situations and figuring out how we can help them more.”

 ?? ?? An abortion rights supporter holds a sign on stage after voters backed a measure to enshrine a right to abortion in the state constituti­on, in Columbus, Ohio, on 7 November. Photograph: Megan Jelinger/AFP/Getty Images
An abortion rights supporter holds a sign on stage after voters backed a measure to enshrine a right to abortion in the state constituti­on, in Columbus, Ohio, on 7 November. Photograph: Megan Jelinger/AFP/Getty Images

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