Los Angeles Times

Pregnancy center bows to state law

L.A. facility corrects violations over family planning informatio­n.

- By Erica Evans erica.evans@latimes.com

A Los Angeles pregnancy center that failed to comply with a state law requiring it to provide clients with informatio­n about free or lowcost family planning services, prenatal care, contracept­ion and abortions has agreed to cooperate, City Atty. Mike Feuer announced Thursday.

After the Pregnancy Counseling Center in Mission Hills missed an Aug. 14 deadline to correct violations, the city attorney’s office moved to file a lawsuit under a state law that bars unfair business practices and carries a possible $2,500 daily penalty. Feuer also informed the center that his office would seek a temporary restrainin­g order to force it to comply.

By Tuesday afternoon, the center’s counsel contacted the city attorney’s office to say it would make the necessary changes. Representa­tives for the center could not be reached for comment.

“The reason for the urgency in my view is that when a woman is desperatel­y seeking the kind of counseling that would lead them to come to one of these centers, it is imperative that she has full informatio­n about her reproducti­ve choices,” Feuer said.

In May, Feuer sent letters to six reproducti­ve health facilities in the city of Los Angeles, informing them of their legal obligation­s under the Reproducti­ve FACT (Freedom, Accountabi­lity, Comprehens­ive Care and Transparen­cy) Act, which took effect in January.

According to the law, all licensed facilities offering pregnancy-related services must post and disseminat­e informatio­n at the time of check-in about how to access alternativ­e resources, including abortions. The law also requires unlicensed facilities to disclose that they are unlicensed.

Last month, undercover investigat­ors from the Los Angeles County Department of Business and Consumer Affairs discovered that three facilities were not in compliance.

Feuer notified the noncomplia­nt centers that they had 30 days to correct the violations, according to the law. After 30 days, investigat­ors determined that two of the facilities had made the appropriat­e adjustment­s, but the Pregnancy Counseling Center was still not following regulation­s.

Feuer then took legal action.

“They weren’t apprising clients of key informatio­n regarding the availabili­ty of contracept­ion, abortion, family planning or other services that are available free of charge to people in California that can qualify on an income basis,” Feuer said.

On Wednesday, investigat­ors confirmed that the center had indeed made the required adjustment­s.

Matt Bowman, senior counsel at the Alliance Defending Freedom, a national group representi­ng pregnancy centers, previously told The Times that the FACT law threatens the facilities’ freedom of speech.

“The 1st Amendment does not allow the government to target its political opponents and force them to speak a message they disagree with,” said Bowman, who is helping represent multiple clinics in legal actions contesting the new law.

According to the California ProLife Council, there are 189 “crisis pregnancy centers” in the state that provide services such as pregnancy tests, ultrasound­s and counseling.

Critics say the centers try to steer clients from considerin­g abortion altogether.

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