San Diego Union-Tribune

CALIF. ABORTION AMENDMENT PROPOSED

Senate bill seeks to enshrine right in state Constituti­on

- BY MELODY GUTIERREZ Gutierrez writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Democratic legislativ­e leaders, hoping to solidify the long-term right in California to abortions and contracept­ives, introduced a bill Wednesday asking voters to enshrine those protection­s in the state Constituti­on.

Senate Constituti­onal Amendment 10 by Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins, D-San Diego, is the latest countermea­sure from California Democrats to reports that the U.S. Supreme Court is poised to overturn Roe v. Wade, the nearly 50year-old landmark decision that bars states from criminaliz­ing the procedure.

Atkins’ amendment would not expand California’s already progressiv­e reproducti­ve health care laws that ensure a woman’s right to abortion and birth control, including the rights of minors to access services without parental notificati­on or consent. However, she said the challenges to abortion access in other states made it clear to her that California’s case law and statutory laws may not be enough.

“This is a health care decision,” Atkins said. “And we should look at it as such. You don’t always think about needing this until you need it. And that’s maybe the privilege we’ve had for 50 years, but now a whole generation of women are going to have to think about it and particular­ly those that don’t live in California or states like California.”

The timeline for the passage of SCA 10 is tight. The proposal must pass the state Senate and Assembly with two-thirds approval in each house before the June 30 deadline to place a measure on the November statewide ballot. Democrats hold enough seats in both houses to pass the amendment without Republican support.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, Atkins and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, D-Lakewood, first announced that they would seek the constituti­onal amendment last month. Atkins and Rendon are coauthors of the bill, along with dozens of other Democrats.

“California will not stand idly by as women across America are stripped of their rights and the progress so many have fought for gets erased,” Newsom said in a written statement co-signed by Atkins and Rendon. “We will fight.”

If the measure makes its way to the November ballot, the debate over abortion rights could boost voter turnout and be a key issue that candidates are forced to reckon with in contested statewide and legislativ­e races. Among likely voters in the state, 76 percent said they did not want Roe v. Wade overturned, according to a poll earlier this year by the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California.

Newsom wrote on Twitter last month that abortion rights will be “the defining issue of the 2022 election.”

Erwin Chemerinsk­y, dean of University of California Berkeley Law, said the question of abortion access raised at the ballot box could drive voter turnout, but “that could go either way.”

“The reality is this is more symbolic than anything else,” Chemerinsk­y said, adding that it allows California politician­s to be on record with their support for abortion access.

The brief descriptio­n of SCA 10 says the measure “would amend the California Constituti­on to prohibit the state from denying or interferin­g with an individual’s reproducti­ve freedom in their most intimate decisions, which includes their fundamenta­l right to choose to have an abortion and their fundamenta­l right to choose or refuse contracept­ives.”

“The California Constituti­on explicitly protects the right to privacy, which has been interprete­d as protecting the right to abortion,” Chemerinsk­y said. “This constituti­onal amendment, therefore, would not change the law in California. It would be more explicit so if ever there were a conservati­ve California Supreme Court, it could not eliminate abortion rights. But the reality is that if ever there is a federal law prohibitin­g all abortions, it would supersede and preempt California law.”

California’s Democratic leaders began mobilizing last year in response to perceived threats to Roe v. Wade, with Newsom asking Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California and others to develop a plan for the state to become a sanctuary to anyone denied abortion services in other parts of the country.

The coalition, the California Future of Abortion Council, recommende­d 45 changes in December to improve access and create additional capacity should other states outlaw abortion. Lawmakers have introduced more than a dozen bills this year related to the abortion council’s recommenda­tions.

One bill signed into law by Newsom in March will require health insurers licensed by the state to cover the full cost of an abortion, without a copay, deductible or other cost-sharing that can, on average, range from $300 for a medication abortion to nearly $900 for a procedural abortion, according to the California Health Benefits Review Program.

Newsom’s current budget proposal includes $125 million earmarked to expand access to abortions and to prepare for more women traveling to California for reproducti­ve care. He also included $40 million for abortion service providers to help cover those who are uninsured.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP FILE ?? State Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins has introduced a bill seeking to enshrine abortion rights in the California Constituti­on.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP FILE State Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins has introduced a bill seeking to enshrine abortion rights in the California Constituti­on.

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