The Norwalk Hour

Planned Parenthood in state rejects federal funding under new Trump rules

- By Jenna Carlesso

Planned Parenthood of Southern New England will stop accepting federal family planning funds instead of adhering to new rules that bar the organizati­on from referring women for abortions.

The Trump administra­tion this week pledged to begin enforcing regulation­s that prohibit Title X grant recipients from counseling patients about abortion. Under the new rules, providers are still able to perform abortions, but must do so in separate clinics and abide by the requiremen­t that they not refer patients to those facilities.

Faithbased groups that oppose abortions and birth control are now eligible for funding under the regulation­s.

Planned Parenthood of Southern New England, which runs 16 clinics in Connecticu­t and one in Rhode Island — 12 of which receive Title X funds — will forfeit about $2.1 million annually by rejecting the federal money.

“Our patients are our primary concern and to be able to give them accurate informatio­n and complete informatio­n is our priority,” said Kafi Rouse, a spokeswoma­n for the organizati­on’s southern New England locations. “They deserve honest health care and transparen­t health care and we will continue to provide that.”

Critics of the Title X overhaul have called the move a “gag rule” and said it creates barriers for women, especially women of color and lowincome women, who are seeking abortions. Connecticu­t Attorney General William Tong is part of a multistate coalition suing to reverse the regulation­s. Planned Parenthood and the American Medical Associatio­n are also challengin­g the new rules.

“The Trump administra­tion is stubbornly plowing ahead despite these legal challenges, and needlessly sowing chaos and confusion for healthcare providers and women,” Tong said Friday. “The gag rule is a partisan attack on the private relationsh­ip between a woman and her doctor, with immense public health and economic implicatio­ns.”

The Title X overhaul has been on hold since it was finalized in February. Several federal judges had blocked it from taking effect, but a threejudge panel in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals last month allowed the regulation­s to proceed. The appeals court, which will rehear the case, denied a request from Democratic states to put the new rules on hold while the legal battle is underway. The Supreme Court could have final say over the case.

In Connecticu­t, about 43,000 Planned Parenthood patients rely on that federal funding for access to services such as cancer screenings, testing and treatment for sexually transmitte­d diseases, and birth control. Sixtyone percent of patients who qualify for Title X funding are people of color, the group has said. Twentynine percent are African American and 32 percent are Latino.

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