The Palm Beach Post

Court won’t take up challenge to Ark. law

- By Robert Barnes Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday turned down a challenge to a restrictiv­e Arkansas law that for now will end the use of medication abortions in the state and could close two of the state’s three abortion clinics.

The law requires doctors who provide medication abortions to have a contract with a specialist who has hospital admitting privileges. Abortion providers say the requiremen­t is burdensome and unnecessar­y because complicati­ons are extremely rare from the twopill regimen that is used in the first nine weeks of pregnancy, and any that do arise can be handled by a local emergency room or hospital.

“Arkansas is now shamefully responsibl­e for being the first state to ban medication abortion,” Dawn Laguens, executive vice president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America said in a statement.

“This dangerous law also immediatel­y ends access to safe, legal abortion at all but one health center in the state. If that’s not an undue burden, what is? This law cannot and must not stand. We will not stop fighting for every person’s right to access safe, legal abortion.”

Planned Parenthood said it was notifying patients that they can no longer come for their procedures. But it said it would ask lower courts to halt the law until the district court can hold a trial on the law to show how many women could be affected by it.

U.S. District Judge Kristine G. Baker had temporaril­y blocked the law, concluding that any medical benefit from the contract requiremen­t would be “incrementa­lly small” while the burden on women’s access to abortion would be substantia­l. The law was “a solution in search of a problem,” the judge said.

Two years ago, the Supreme Court voted 5 to 3 to overturn a similar Texas law that required doctors who provided abortions to have admitting privileges in a local hospital.

The Texas law “provides few, if any, health benefits for women, poses a substantia­l obstacle to women seeking abortions, and constitute­s an ‘undue burden’ on their constituti­onal right to do so,” Justice Stephen G. Breyer wrote for the majority.

The admitting-privileges requiremen­t in Texas cut the number of abortion providers by half.

But a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit upheld the Arkansas law.

That court said Baker had “failed to make factual findings estimating the number of women burdened by the statute”—those who would either forgo or postpone an abortion because of the law.

Planned Parenthood said in its petition to the Supreme Court that was an approach the majority had rejected in the Texas decision, and that the burden in Arkansas would be extreme.

“The restrictio­n would eliminate entirely a safe, common method of early abortion and force all women in the state to travel (twice) to a single provider in Little Rock to have a surgical procedure — thereby preventing many women from obtaining an abortion altogether and delaying many others,” the petition said. “Worse yet, it would do so even where a medication abortion is medically indicated or strongly preferred.”

But the Supreme Court declined to accept the challenge, without noted dissent even from liberal justices who are supportive of abortion rights.

The case is Planned Parenthood of Arkansas & Eastern Oklahoma v. Jegley.

 ?? WASHINGTON POST ?? Two years ago, the Supreme Court voted 5 to 3 to overturn a similar Texas law that required doctors who provided abortions to have hospital privileges.
WASHINGTON POST Two years ago, the Supreme Court voted 5 to 3 to overturn a similar Texas law that required doctors who provided abortions to have hospital privileges.

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