Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee AG sues feds over abortion rule

- BY KIMBERLEE KRUESI

NASHVILLE — Tennessee’s top legal chief says the federal government is wrongly withholdin­g millions of dollars in family planning funds after the state refused to comply with federal rules requiring clinics to provide abortion referrals due to its current ban on the procedure.

Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti filed a complaint in U.S. District Court in Knoxville earlier this week seeking to overturn the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services decision.

“We are suing to stop the federal government from playing politics with the health of Tennessee women,” Skrmetti said in a statement. “Our lawsuit is necessary to ensure that Tennessee can continue its 50-year track record of successful­ly providing these public health services to its neediest population­s.”

An HHS spokespers­on said the department does not comment on pending litigation.

Earlier this year, Tennessee was disqualifi­ed from receiving millions of federal dollars offered through a family planning program known as Title X. Tennessee has been a recipient of the program since it launched in 1970, recently collecting around $7.1 million annually to help nearly 100 clinics provide birth control and basic health care services mainly to lowincome women, many of them from minority communitie­s.

However, the program has also become entangled with the increasing­ly heated fight over abortion access. In 2021, the Biden administra­tion reversed a ban on abortion referrals by clinics that accept Title X funds. The restrictio­n was initially enacted during the Donald Trump administra­tion in 2019, but the department has swung back and forth on the issue for years.

Under the latest rule, clinics cannot use federal family planning money to pay for abortions, but they must offer informatio­n about abortion at the patient’s request.

Then, last year, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, allowing many Republican-led states like Tennessee to impose abortion bans. The lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges HHS never informed officials how its 2021 rule would apply in states with abortion restrictio­ns.

In March, HHS informed Tennessee health officials that the state was out of Title X compliance because of its policy barring clinics from providing informatio­n on pregnancy terminatio­n options that weren’t legal in the state — effectivel­y prohibitin­g any discussion­s on elective abortions. The state defended its policy and refused to back down, causing the federal government to declare in a March 20 letter that continuing Tennessee’s Title X money was “not in the best interest of the government.” The state later appealed the decision and that appeal is ongoing.

Meanwhile, in September, HHS announced that Tennessee’s Title X funds would largely be directly funded to Planned Parenthood, the leading provider of abortions in the United States, which would distribute the money to its clinics located in Tennessee.

At the time, Republican Gov. Bill Lee called the move “wrong on many levels” and accused the federal government of withholdin­g federal money from families in order to support a “radical political organizati­on.”

Skrmetti’s office is asking a federal judge to reinstate Tennessee’s Title X money and to rule that HHS can’t withhold funds based on a state’s abortion ban, arguing that the federal appeals process over the issues has stalled. The state also is seeking “clarity” on whether it needs to use state funds to backfill the federal portion.

Tennessee has increasing­ly called for rejecting federal funding rather than comply with requiremen­ts over LGBTQ+ rights, abortion access and other hotbutton issues. Already this year, the Volunteer State has rebuffed federal funding for a program designed to prevent and treat HIV after initially attempting to block Planned Parenthood from participat­ing in the program.

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