Miami Herald (Sunday)

Utah governor plans to sign bill to close abortion clinics

- BY SAM METZ Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said Friday that he plans to sign a measure that would effectivel­y ban abortion clinics from operating in the state, meaning hospitals will soon be the only places where they can be provided in the state.

After passing through the state Senate on Thursday with minor amendments, it returned to the Utah House of Representa­tives on Friday morning, where it was approved and then sent to the governor for final approval.

The move comes less than a year after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the Roe v. Wade decision, returning the power to regulate abortions to states.

Cox told reporters that he will sign the legislatio­n, which also clarifies the definition of abortion to address legal liability concerns providers voiced about the way exceptions are worded in state law — a provision that he and Republican lawmakers called a compromise.

“One of the concerns with the trigger bill that medical providers had across the state was there was a lack of clarity that would have made it hard for them to perform legal abortions,” Cox said.

The measure is one of several that members of Utah’s Republican-supermajor­ity statehouse has passed this year while abortion restrictio­ns approved in years past are on hold because of a state court injunction.

It has faced fierce opposition from business, civil liberties and abortion rights groups, including Planned Parenthood Associatio­n of Utah, which operates three of the four abortion clinics in the state.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Utah sent Cox a letter on Friday demanding he veto the legislatio­n, with its executive director writing it interferes with people's rights and “pushes essential abortion care out of reach.”

Republican lawmakers’ push to shutter abortion clinics comes as red states throughout the country work to implement restrictio­ns after the overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court decision that enshrined a constituti­onal right to abortion for nearly 50 years.

In Utah, the ruling triggered two previously passed laws — a 2019 ban on abortion after 18 weeks and a 2020 ban on abortions regardless of trimester, with several exceptions included for instances of risk to maternal health as well as rape or incest reported to the police.

The state Planned Parenthood affiliate sued over the 2020 ban, and in July, a state court delayed implementi­ng it until legal challenges could be resolved. The 18-week ban has since been de facto law.

The clinic-centered push in Utah is unique among states with trigger laws, where many abortion clinics closed after last year’s Supreme Court decision, including in

West Virginia and Mississipp­i.

The measure mirrors a raft of proposals passed in red states in the decade before Roe was overturned when anti-abortion lawmakers passed measures regulating clinics, including the size of procedure rooms and distances from hospitals.

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