NEWSOM BACKS GRANTS FOR SOME ABORTIONS
$40M to clinics would offset costs for those who can’t afford them
California taxpayers would help pay for abortions for women who can’t afford them under a new spending proposal Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Wednesday to prepare for a potential surge of people from other states seeking reproductive care if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade.
California already pays for some abortions through its Medicaid program, the taxpayerfunded health insurance plan for the poor and disabled.
But some women don’t qualify for Medicaid and don’t have private health insurance. When that happens, clinics will sometimes perform abortions for free, known as “uncompensated care.” Newsom wants the state to give $40 million in grants to clinics to help offset those costs.
An abortion can cost between a few hundred dollars and a few thousand dollars in California, depending on how far along the pregnancy is and what kind of insurance a patient has.
“California will not stand idly by as extremists roll back our basic constitutional rights; we’re going to fight like hell, making sure that all women — not just those in California — know that this state continues to recognize and protect their fundamental rights,” Newsom said in a news release.
While the grants could potentially pay for abortions for women from other states, the money would not pay for those women to travel or stay in California.
A bill in the Democratic-controlled Legislature would set up a fund to help pay for the logistics of getting an abortion in California, including things such as travel, lodging and child care. The California Legislative Women’s Caucus has asked Newsom for $20 million to put into that fund. But Newsom’s announcement on Wednesday did not include that money.
Newsom spokesperson Alex Stack said the governor omitting that money from Wednesday’s announcement “doesn’t mean that any of these things are off the table.” Stack said the governor is “working with the Legislature on a wide range of proposals.”
Abortion rights advocates did not appear upset at the omission. Jodi Hicks, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, praised the announcement, saying it will “will go a long way” to protect abortion access “for those who live here and those who may be forced to seek care here.”
The $40 million Newsom announced Wednesday is part of an extra $57 million in proposed new spending on abortion. He announced plans to spend $15 million on a public education campaign, $1 million to create a website listing available abortion services in California and $1 million for research into “unmet needs for access to reproductive health care services.”