Hartford Courant

GOP touts parent notificati­on bills

Ritter says the abortion measures won’t get called in the House

- By Jenna Carlesso

Anti-abortion advocates, feeling momentum after the reversal of Roe v. Wade, have introduced a series of bills with a common goal this legislativ­e session: requiring minors who seek abortions in Connecticu­t to notify their parents.

At least three bills referred to the legislatur­e’s Public Health Committee would mandate that minors notify their parents when pursuing an abortion. Supporters hope to see at least a public hearing this year on the proposals.

“Things take time,” said Rep. Mark Anderson, R-granby, who helped author two of the bills. “We need the public to get excited about it … that’s the only way change happens. It takes grassroots organizing.”

Two of the measures would require parental notificati­on for abortions; a third would do the same but also require minors to notify their parents when seeking mental health services and other types of medical care, such as testing and treatment for sexually transmitte­d diseases, treatment for drug or alcohol addiction, and obtaining non-permanent birth control.

Proponents of the bills see it as a parental rights issue.

“Going to over 15,000 different doors over the course of the last four years, people are really expressing their concerns about the erosion of parental rights,” said Rep. Brian Lanoue, R-griswold, who introduced one of the proposals. “Parents I’ve talked to — they’re very concerned. They want to know what’s going on with their minor children, and they want to make sure they know what’s being done to their children. I think it’s a very commonsens­e, straightfo­rward proposal.”

The concept has been raised unsuccessf­ully in previous years, though some advocates feel fresh enthusiasm after Roe v. Wade was overturned.

Thirty-six states require parental involvemen­t in a minor’s decision to have an abortion, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research organizati­on that supports abortion rights. Nine states require parental notificati­on (with one mandating the notificati­on of both parents), 21 require the consent of a parent (with three mandating the consent of both parents), and six require both consent and notificati­on.

“What we’re asking for is a public hearing on parental notificati­on,” said Peter Wolfgang, executive director of the Family Institute of Connecticu­t. “This is an issue that should be fully aired at the legislatur­e. … I hope we’ll look at this with fresh eyes and say, regardless of whether you’re pro-life or pro-choice, this is an issue that deserves a hearing.”

“The overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade

— this is what we’ve worked on for 49 years. But we’ve still got a hill to climb,” he said. “It took us 49 years to climb to the top of the Roe v. Wade hill. And we’re going to climb all the hills, including parental notificati­on in Connecticu­t.”

Leaders of the Public Health Committee have signaled, however, that the issue is unlikely to be successful this year. Many Democrats campaigned on a promise last year to preserve abortion rights in Connecticu­t, including Gov. Ned Lamont and legislativ­e leaders.

“We appreciate every legislator when they propose a bill; it is their right. But as a co-chair of Public Health Committee, I do not support this concept,” said Sen. Saud Anwar, D-south Windsor. “It is well recognized and studied that it would be harmful for the person involved. I know there are a few legislator­s who feel passionate­ly about this, but I do not see the leadership or the committee too enthusiast­ic to push [forward] any bill like this.”

“I don’t anticipate at all that we are going to be hearing a parental notificati­on bill,” added Rep. Cristin Mccarthy Vahey, D-fairfield, the committee co-chair. “When it comes to reproducti­ve rights, our goal as a state has been on a bipartisan basis to assure that the people of this state have safe access to reproducti­ve health and to abortion.”

Parental notificati­on laws vary by state. Some states require identifica­tion for parental consent. Others ask for proof of parenthood. Most of the 35 states with these laws allow for judicial bypass, which permits a minor to obtain approval from a court. Some states provide exceptions under certain circumstan­ces, such as a medical emergency, rape or incest.

The bills drafted in Connecticu­t would allow for judicial bypass.

Opponents of parental notificati­on say the requiremen­t would cause harm to minors.

In a post on its website, the American Civil Liberties Union noted that, “most teens who do not involve a parent have very good reasons for not doing so.”

“Many come from families where such an announceme­nt would only exacerbate an already volatile or dysfunctio­nal family situation,” officials from the organizati­on wrote. “Experience shows that teens’ fears are well-founded. For example, one of the very first teens who was forced to notify a parent under Colorado’s parental notice law was kicked out of her home when her mother learned of the pregnancy.”

Advocates for Youth, an organizati­on that advocates for abortion and contracept­ion access and reproducti­ve justice, among other issues, noted that parental involvemen­t laws disproport­ionately affect minors from immigrant families.

“[Some] states require parents and youth to provide government-issued identifica­tion either at the provider or to obtain notarized consent documentat­ion,” officials wrote on their website. “This poses a barrier to immigrant youth with undocument­ed parents who fear immigratio­n enforcemen­t as well as to youth who are unaccompan­ied or whose parents have been detained or deported.”

Liz Gustafson, state director of Pro-choice Connecticu­t, said most young people voluntaril­y tell their parents or guardian about an unplanned pregnancy.

“The small minority of young people who cannot, or choose not to, do so for reasons rooted in their own safety and wellbeing,” she said. “When a young person can’t go to a parent or guardian, and there is a parental involvemen­t law in their state, they are less likely to go to a health care provider, get the informatio­n and resources they need and the care and support they need.”

Even if the concept were to be raised later in the legislativ­e session by amendment or some other strategy, House Speaker Matthew Ritter said it would not get a vote in the House. All three proposals are House bills.

“Any bill that would weaken reproducti­ve rights will not ever be called in the House of Representa­tives,” he said. “The problem with the argument of parental notificati­on is that it assumes a lot of things that aren’t always accurate in people’s lives. Not everybody has the same relationsh­ips; families are not all going to be the same. And so you have to take into account those difference­s.”

Backers of the legislatio­n acknowledg­ed that the proposals have a hard road ahead with slim odds of passage.

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