Daily Press

Delegate: Birth control bill ‘gutted’ by Youngkin

Price condemns action, says it makes measure a suggestion rather than law

- By Katie King

A substitute amendment from Gov. Glenn Youngkin would overhaul a bill intended to protect access to birth control in Virginia.

“It gutted it in all senses with enforcemen­t and in actual protection­s,” said Del. Cia Price, a Newport News Democrat who introduced the legislatio­n in the House.

The original bill states that health care providers have the right to prescribe contracept­ives, and individual­s have the right to obtain and use them. The measure did not pertain to abortion and defined contracept­ives as any drug or device legally marketed and intended for use in the “prevention of pregnancy.” It created a right to file a lawsuit over violations and did not have a fiscal impact.

Youngkin struck that language, and put forth a Section 1 bill stating it shall be the “public policy of the Commonweal­th, independen­tly of the requiremen­ts of the Constituti­on of the United

States, that individual­s possess the right to access contracept­ion as set forth in Griswold v. Connecticu­t, and Eisenstadt v. Baird.”

Section 1 bills lack teeth and are an expression of values, said Price, such as when a city council passes a resolution instead of an ordinance.

The Republican governor’s amendment refers to the 1965 Griswold decision, when the Supreme Court ruled that the constituti­onal right to privacy protected the right of married couples to use contracept­ion. The court later extended that right to unmarried individual­s in its ruling on Eisenstadt v. Baird in 1972.

Price urged those who supported the bill not to be discourage­d. She said advocates should continue to reach out to legislator­s or the governor’s office.

“This is just another step in the process,” she said, explaining the legislatio­n now heads back to the General Assembly, which will reconvene next week.

A few Republican­s joined in passing the bill through the House by a 55-44 vote. In the Senate, it passed by a party-line 21-19 vote.

Ghazala Hashmi, a Richmond Democrat, introduced an identical measure in the Senate. Hashmi delivered a petition to Youngkin’s office Saturday with more than

37,000 signatures urging the governor to support the legislatio­n.

In a joint statement with Price, Hashmi slammed the governor’s amendment.

“By introducin­g it as a ‘Section 1’ bill, Governor Youngkin’s substitute would effectivel­y make it a suggestion rather than a law and leave our rights up to the whims of the people in power,” they wrote in a Tuesday release.

When asked for a response, a Youngkin spokespers­on said Wednesday that the governor has been “consistent­ly clear that he supports access to contracept­ion.”

Health care providers in Virginia currently can prescribe birth control, and some methods, such as condoms and the emergency contracept­ive pill, are available over the counter.

But some birth control a d v o c a t e s b e c a m e concerned after Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022. In his concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote that the court should reconsider other landmark cases, including Griswold vs. Connecticu­t.

Republican legislator­s who opposed the bill previously argued the legislatio­n would harm health care providers.

Del. Keith Hodges, R-Urbanna, said it would allow women to “go after” doctors who refuse to prescribe them birth control pills because they have underlying conditions, such as hypertensi­on, that make it dangerous for them to take the pill.

Hodges did not respond to a request from The Virginian-Pilot in February asking if any medical associatio­ns had shared concerns with him about the bill.

During a health subcommitt­ee meeting earlier this year, the American College of Nurses-Midwives and the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts — the nation’s largest organizati­on for OBGYNs — spoke in favor of the legislatio­n. Three organizati­ons with religious ties spoke against the bill, including Pro-Family Women and The Family Foundation.

A 2022 survey from the Kaiser Family Foundation found the majority of women (90%) ages 18-64 have used contracept­ives at some point in their lives. The foundation is a nonpartisa­n organizati­on focused on polling and health policy research.

 ?? KENDALL WARNER/STAFF ?? Health care providers in Virginia currently can prescribe birth control, and some methods, such as condoms and the emergency contracept­ive pill, are available over the counter.
KENDALL WARNER/STAFF Health care providers in Virginia currently can prescribe birth control, and some methods, such as condoms and the emergency contracept­ive pill, are available over the counter.
 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP ?? Del. Keith Hodges, a Republican from Urbanna who voted against the bill, said it would allow women to “go after” doctors who refuse to prescribe them birth control pills because they have underlying conditions, such as hypertensi­on, that make it dangerous for them to take the pill.
STEVE HELBER/AP Del. Keith Hodges, a Republican from Urbanna who voted against the bill, said it would allow women to “go after” doctors who refuse to prescribe them birth control pills because they have underlying conditions, such as hypertensi­on, that make it dangerous for them to take the pill.
 ?? ?? Hashmi
Hashmi
 ?? ?? Price
Price

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