The Arizona Republic

Ducey signs bill to mandate post-abortion care

- ALIA BEARD RAU AND MARY JO PITZL

Gov. Doug Ducey has signed into law a bill regulating how doctors must care for a baby born alive during an abortion.

His office announced the action on Senate Bill 1367 without any comment. It was folded into a list of 12 other bills the governor acted on.

“It’s a great day for babies in Arizona,” said Cathi Herrod, president of the Center for Arizona Policy, which supported the bill. The conservati­ve center has convinced lawmakers to enact a number of abortion-related bills.

However, Herrod contended the bill is not about abortion, since if a baby survives an abortion, it is a living human being.

The bill was sponsored by Sen. Steve Smith, RMaricopa, and passed with unanimous Republican support. Only one Democrat, Sen. Catherine Miranda, D-Phoenix, voted for it.

Debate over the bill was emotional — both in the Legislatur­e and among the public. Opponents, including most Democrats as well as obstetrici­ans and gynecologi­sts, said the bill would force doctors to perform pointless procedures during what could be an infant’s final few minutes of life.

Supporters say they believe it will ensure all babies born get at least a chance at life.

Due to Arizona’s definition of abortion, the bill applies not only to what most consider a traditiona­l elective-medication or surgical abortion, but also to any instance in which something is done to cause the early delivery of a baby when the baby is not expected to live.

This would include mothers who are induced early because of a fatal fetal anomaly or because something has gone wrong with the fetus or the pregnancy.

Under current law, if a baby is “delivered alive” during an abortion, it is the duty of any doctors present to see that “all available means and medical skills are used to promote, preserve and maintain the life” of the baby. “Delivered alive” isn’t currently defined in law, and medical experts have said that gives them flexibilit­y to do everything possible to save the life of the fetus only if they believe it has a chance of surviving.

SB 1367 defines “delivered alive” as showing one or more of these signs of life: breathing, a heartbeat, umbilicalc­ord pulsation or definite movement of voluntary muscles.

It requires the Arizona Department of Health Services to set policies that clinics, hospitals and physicians must follow to care for a baby delivered alive, including having neonatal emergency equipment and trained staff in the room for all abortions performed at or after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

Physicians say the new definition will require them to perform unnecessar­y procedures on a baby with no chance of survival, instead of the current practice of providing “comfort care” to allow these babies to die in the arms of their parents.

Ducey also signed 11 other bills and issued his second veto of the session. Among them:

» House Bill 2412 sets vastly reduced fees for public access to Arizona’s voter-registrati­on database. Under the schedule set out in the bill, a database of 1 million records could be purchased for about $400, instead of the current fee of $100,000 for an electronic version or $500,000 for a paper version. Sponsored by Rep. Doug Coleman, RApache Junction, the bill was designed to help settle a lawsuit filed last year by Project Vote Smart, which has argued that the prices are exorbitant. It passed with unanimous support.

» Senate Bill 1109, from Sen. Kate Brophy McGee, R-Phoenix, requires fingerprin­t clearance for any contract employee who has access to the Department of Child Safety’s database. It also won unanimous legislativ­e approval.

» Ducey vetoed House Bill 2321, which sought to set limits on how members of homeowner-associatio­n boards can cast their votes. The governor said it’s none of the state’s business to regulate such practices. The bill was sponsored by Rep. Ken Clark, D-Phoenix, and had unanimous support.

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