San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

MARYLAND LAWMAKERS OVERRIDE GOV’S VETO OF ABORTION EXPANSION

Measure allows nurses, midwives to perform procedure

- BY BRIAN WITTE Witte writes for The Associated Press.

Republican Gov. Larry Hogan’s veto of a measure to expand access to abortion in Maryland was overridden on Saturday by the General Assembly, which is controlled by Democrats.

The state will end a restrictio­n that only physicians can provide abortions. The new law will enable nurse practition­ers, nurse midwives and physician assistants to provide abortions after undergoing training. It creates an abortion care training program and requires $3.5 million in state funding annually. It also requires most insurance plans to cover abortions without cost.

Delegate Emily Shetty said she was supporting the measure on the House floor as a mother who had experience­d a high-risk pregnancy. She also described being a sexual assault survivor in college and the difficulti­es she experience­d “with the weight of what had happened after that incident.”

“And thankfully, the incident did not result in pregnancy but had it, it would have drasticall­y changed my life if I had not been able to access the care that I needed at that time,” Shetty, a Democrat, said.

Hogan wrote in his veto letter that the legislatio­n “endangers the health and lives of women by allowing non-physicians to perform abortions.”

The measure comes at a time when the conservati­ve majority on the U.S. Supreme Court is weighing whether to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that banned states from outlawing abortion.

If they do, at least 26 states are likely to either ban abortion outright or severely limit access, according to the Guttmacher Institute,

a research and policy organizati­on that supports abortion rights.

“In this context, it’s very important that we keep in mind that the strategies that this bill is using is ensuring that people can access the care that they need, when they need it, no matter what happens with the rest of the country — no matter what happens with the Supreme Court,” said Delegate Ariana Kelly, a Democrat who was the lead sponsor of the bill.

Republican lawmakers criticized the provision allocating $3.5 million of taxpayer money annually to pay for the training. Delegate

Haven Shoemaker, the House minority whip, described the bill as “the most radical expansion of abortion in Maryland’s history in a state that already has some of the most liberal abortion laws in the country.”

“Madam speaker, this bill is too extreme, even for Maryland,” Shoemaker, a Republican, said, referring to House Speaker Adrienne Jones, a Democrat.

Kelly said the measure is modernizin­g the choice the state’s voters made in 1992, when they approved the right to abortion in a statewide vote with 62 percent of voters supporting it.

“It is making sure that people have access to care, particular­ly people of color, particular­ly low-income people, particular­ly rural people,” Kelly said. “We know that physician-only restrictio­ns exacerbate health inequaliti­es, and we are trying to reduce health inequaliti­es in the state of Maryland with this bill.”

The measure takes effect July 1. The insurance provisions apply to all policies, contracts, and health benefit plans issued, delivered, or renewed in the state on or after Jan. 1.

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