Daily Press

Contracept­ion bills advance

Dems’ measures likely to pass, reach governor’s desk

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND — Virginia Democrats who control the state Legislatur­e are advancing legislatio­n that aims to protect access to a wide range of contracept­ion, something they say should not be taken for granted after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

Similar bills that would establish a right to obtain and use a detailed list of contracept­ion approved by the federal government — including oral medication­s, intrauteri­ne devices, condoms and the Plan-B morning-after pill — have cleared the House of Delegates and the Senate. The legislatio­n also creates a right to sue over violations of its provisions.

“I think the overturnin­g of Roe was a first step on the assault on reproducti­ve health care,” said Sen.

Ghazala Hashmi of Chesterfie­ld, the sponsor of one of the measures.

The court’s June 2022 majority opinion overturnin­g the 1973 Roe decision said it applied only to abortion. But Hashmi noted conservati­ve Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’ separate concurring opinion that said the court “should reconsider” other precedents, including decisions legalizing samesex marriage, striking down laws criminaliz­ing gay sex and establishi­ng the right of married couples to use contracept­ion.

“I didn’t hear any of his other conservati­ve member justices challenge him on that. And so if he’s saying this, I think we ought to believe him,” Hashmi said.

Hashmi and Democratic Del. Cia Price of Newport News, the sponsor of the House bill, emphasized the importance of access to contracept­ion not only for family planning but to prevent sexually transmitte­d infections and to help manage other medical conditions, including endometrio­sis and polycystic ovary syndrome.

Similar efforts have been made in other states around the country. Thirteen states had enacted some kind of legal protection­s for the right to contracept­ion as of October and more were pending, according to research from KFF, a nonprofit that studies health care issues.

In Congress, a measure to enshrine the right to use contracept­ives passed the House of Representa­tives in July 2022 but failed to advance in the Senate.

While Price’s version of the legislatio­n picked up a handful of Republican votes on the House floor, the bills have been advancing largely along party lines. And they have drawn opposition from religious and socially conservati­ve groups, who have raised a range of objections, particular­ly over the lack of an exemption for health care workers who may have a religious or moral objection to offering contracept­ion.

The bill is “designed to restrict the conscience rights of medical providers,” said Jeff Caruso, executive director of the Virginia Catholic Conference.

Other opponents raised concerns that the bill was written broadly enough that it could protect access to abortifaci­ent drugs.

Price said that’s unfounded, noting that the bill defines contracept­ion as “an action taken to prevent pregnancy.” The definition also covers sterilizat­ion procedures.

“This is not a conversati­on about abortion,” she said in a committee hearing.

The bills are almost certain to reach final passage in the coming weeks. But it’s not clear how Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin will act. His press office said only that he will review all legislatio­n that reaches his desk.

If Youngkin does not sign the legislatio­n, “he’ll need to explain to Virginians why he thinks contracept­ion ought not to be protected,” Hashmi said.

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