The News-Times

‘Don’t mess with the state of New York’

N.Y. Gov. Hochul directs $35 million to abortion providers for out-of-state visitors

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NEW YORK - Gov. Kathy Hochul said Tuesday that she was sending $35 million into a new fund for abortion providers, stepping up efforts to guarantee access in New York, with the expected fall of federal reproducti­ve rights portending a surge in out-ofstate visitors seeking care.

Describing the new fund as a “nation-leading response,” the governor promised the state will “do whatever it takes to protect and defend the rights of not just New York women, but women all across this nation.”

“New York will be there,” Hochul, who is isolating in Albany with a COVID diagnosis, said in a virtual news conference. “Don’t mess with the state of New York.”

The state’s first female governor said the fund would be establishe­d through the Health Department and would represent the largest allocation of its kind in the U.S.

Hochul’s office said the

Health Department would direct $25 million in emergency funds to abortion providers, while another $10 million would be funneled through Division of Criminal Justice Services grants to bolster security at abortion clinics.

In 2019, almost 1 in 10 abortions in New York were obtained by out-ofstaters, according to a count by the federal government. The state could face a surge in health care refugees if the Supreme Court follows through on plans to overturn the national right to abortion establishe­d in Roe v. Wade.

“In addition to this direct support to providers to make sure that they can be prepared for what will be an influx of patients, we also have to make sure that these facilities are safe,” Hochul said, explaining the security grants. “No one should feel unsafe accessing health care.”

The fund marks just one tool Hochul and state lawmakers are reaching for in response to a political and public health earthquake unleashed by last week’s disclosure of a draft Supreme Court decision that would unwind Roe, which was decided by a 7-2 margin in 1973.

The draft opinion, dated Feb. 10 and published by Politico in a stunning leak, is not final. But The Washington Post, citing three conservati­ves with knowledge, reported over the weekend that a 5-4 conservati­ve majority on the court was still prepared to strike down Roe.

In reaction, lawmakers are working to cement abortion protection­s in the state Constituti­on, a lengthy process that would need to be endorsed by voters on a ballot initiative, and pushing a bill that would protect New York abortion providers from outof-state law enforcemen­t efforts.

On Monday, state Attorney General Letitia James, Democratic state Sen. Cordell Cleare of Harlem and Democratic Assemblywo­man Jessica Gonzlez-Rojas of Jackson Heights held a news conference in Manhattan to highlight an abortion access bill that would create a separate funding program for providers.

Hochul on Tuesday expressed gratitude to James and legislativ­e sponsors working on legislatio­n. “I appreciate everyone who’s joining this battle,” Hochul, a Democrat, said. “We are ready.”

In 1970, New York became the second state in the U.S. with broad legalizati­on of abortion, and it expanded reproducti­ve rights with a 2019 law that permits procedures after 24 weeks of pregnancy if necessary to protect a patient’s health.

“New York has always led the way,” Hochul said. “New York women need to continue leading this fight.”

She described the Supreme Court’s draft opinion as “absolutely unconscion­able” and promised she would direct the “full power of New York state government” toward ensuring abortion access for New Yorkers, as well as out-of-staters.

“For the sake of women across this country, I hope that is not the final decision, but I am going to have to proceed on the assumption that it is,” the governor said. “We’re not just playing defense. We’re playing offense.”

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