Yuma Sun

Ducey OKs abortion bill requiring more questions

- BY HOWARD FISCHER CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES

PHOENIX — Women who want to terminate a pregnancy are going to be asked some questions first. But they don’t have to answer. Gov. Doug Ducey on Friday signed a measure into law that spells out a new list of things that doctors and clinics are required to ask. The law takes effect this summer.

Existing law contains an openended question that health care providers are supposed to ask about the reason for the abortion. That includes whether the procedure is elective or due to some issue of maternal or fetal health.

But Sen. Nancy Barto, R-Phoenix, said that doesn’t provide sufficient informatio­n, at least not in a form where it can be classified into categories and published in annual reports by the Department of Health Services.

As originally crafted by Cathi Herrod of the anti-abortion Center for Arizona Policy, the list of choices women would have be given when asked about why they want an abortion would have included economic reasons, a decision not to have children at this time, the pregnancy was due to rape or incest, or whether there were “relationsh­ip issues, including abuse, separation, divorce and extramarit­al affairs.”

That gained Senate approval over the objections of Senate Minority Leader Katie Hobbs, DPhoenix.

“If I get an abortion, it is no one’s business,” she told colleagues.

“It is not this Legislatur­e’s business, it is not the governor’s business or anyone in state government,” Hobbs continued. “The Catholic Church does not need to know why I am getting an abortion, and not the Center for Arizona Policy.”

But when several House Republican­s balked at the list, Herrod was forced to pare down the list.

As signed by Ducey, women will be asked whether the abortion is elective or whether it was due to one of a list of medical conditions.

Other questions include whether the procedure is being sought because the pregnancy is due to rape or incest. And women also will be questioned whether they are being coerced into the abortion, whether they are the victim of sex traffickin­g and whether they are the victim of domestic violence.

Rep. Eddie Farnsworth, R-Gilbert, defended in particular the questions on sex traffickin­g and coercion. He said it gives women, who will be taken into a separate room, a chance to seek help.

Nothing in the measure requires a woman to answer in order to have her pregnancy terminated. House approval came after Republican­s rejected a bid by Rep. Daniel Hernandez, D-Tucson, to also ask women if they were seeking an abortion because they lacked access to affordable family planning. Farnsworth said that question is irrelevant.

Ducey, in a prepared statement, said the bill simply updates existing reporting requiremen­ts by requesting informatio­n, which women need not provide, on whether a crime has occurred and provides informatio­n on services to women on how to report that crime. The governor did not address the other questions women will be asked that are not related to crimes.

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