The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Ruling means Missouri’s last clinic stays open

- By Jim Salter and Summer Ballentine

O’FALLON, MO. » Missouri’s only abortion clinic will be able to keep operating after a state government administra­tor decided Friday that the health department was wrong not to renew the license of the Planned Parenthood facility in St. Louis.

Missouri Administra­tive Hearing Commission­er Sreenivasa Rao Dandamudi’s decision means Missouri will not become the first state without a functionin­g abortion clinic since 1974, the year after the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision.

“In over 4,000 abortions provided since 2018, the Department has only identified two causes to deny its license,” Dandamudi wrote, adding that Planned Parenthood has “substantia­lly complied” with state law.

“Therefore, Planned Parenthood is entitled to renewal of its abortion facility license,” Dandamudi wrote.

A Planned Parenthood spokeswoma­n said the decision will mean the St. Louis clinic’s license is renewed through May 2021.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether the state would ask a court to overturn the decision. A spokesman for the attorney general’s office, which is defending the health department’s decision in court, said the office was “reviewing the ruling and deciding on next steps.”

An email message seeking comment from the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services was not immediatel­y returned.

Yamelsie Rodriguez, president and CEO of Reproducti­ve Health Services of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region, said in a statement that the ruling “is vindicatio­n for Planned Parenthood and our patients who rely on us.” But she said Missouri’s abortion laws continue to make it difficult for women seeking abortions.

“An abortion license, while critical to our ability to provide care, still cannot undo the harm that medically unnecessar­y policies in our state inflict on patients,” Rodriguez said.

The state refused to renew the license for Planned Parenthood’s St. Louis clinic in June 2019, after an investigat­ion turned up four instances of what the state called “failed abortions.” Planned Parenthood officials contend the state “cherry-picked” a handful of difficult cases out of thousands of otherwise successful abortions. They have accused the state of using the licensing process as a tool to end abortions in Missouri, the conservati­ve state with a decidedly anti-abortion governor in Republican Mike Parson.

Planned Parenthood’s challenge led to an administra­tive hearing in October.

The wrangling over the license began after an investigat­or in March 2019 found that a woman had undergone an abortion that took five attempts to complete. William Koebel, director of the section of the health department responsibl­e for abortion clinic licensing, testified that the clinic failed to provide a “complicati­on report.”

That led the health department to launch an investigat­ion of other instances where women underwent multiple procedures to complete an abortion, Koebel said.

As part of that investigat­ion, the state obtained the medical records of women who had abortions at the clinic. They found four who required multiple procedures, including one in which the physician apparently missed that a woman was pregnant with twins. The woman underwent two procedures five weeks apart.

The Administra­tive Hearing Commission agreed with the health department that Planned Parenthood should have filed a complicati­on report for one of the patients and should have documented what it did to address the physician who missed the twins.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Louis will be able to keep operating.
JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Louis will be able to keep operating.

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