Bill to make Calif. public universities offer abortion pill won’t be law

821 0

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (CNS) — California Gov. Jerry Brown said Sept. 30 he would not sign a measure passed by the state Senate that would have required student health centers at public universities to offer abortion-inducing drugs.

By not signing the bill, known as S.B. 320, he essentially vetoed it.

“Access to reproductive health services including abortion, is a long-protected right in California,” he said in a letter to members of the state Senate. “According to a study sponsored by supporters of this legislation, the average distance to abortion providers in campus communities varies from five to seven miles, not an unreasonable distance.”

“Because the services required by this bill are widely available off campus, this bill is not necessary,” added Brown, a Catholic who supports keeping abortion legal.

Under the measure, every student health center at the University of California and California State University campuses would have had to offer abortion-inducing drugs, including the “abortion pill,” as RU-486 is known, by Jan. 1, 2022.

If it had become law, California would have become the first state to require all public universities to offer abortion medication at their student health centers.

The California Catholic Conference, the public policy arm of the state’s Catholic bishops, said early on when state senators first introduced the measure that it threatened “the health of the very college-age women it purports to support.”

Abortion-inducing drugs, like RU-486, “operate by causing women to have miscarriages during the first 10 weeks of pregnancy,” it said.

“These drugs may result in painful and serious medical complications, including hemorrhaging. Moreover, use of these drugs may result in the delivery of fetal remains in students’ homes, dormitory rooms, and public restrooms, placing them at greater risk for complications,” the conference said.

“In addition,” it said, “S.B. 320 threatens women’s health care by having college health clinics provide chemical abortifacients, something they are ill-equipped to provide.”

Related Post

Sister Patricia Jean, a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph the Worker of Walton, Ky., listens to a participant July 1 during a Fiat Days discernment retreat at Mount St. Mary's Seminary in Emmitsburg, Md. The vocations office of the Diocese of Harrisburg, Pa., hosts the retreat each year for young women ages 15-25 to learn about consecrated life and better discern God's call. (CNS photo/Jen Reed, The Catholic Witness)

For young women and religious, joy radiates at Fiat Days retreat

Posted by - July 21, 2018 0
EMMITSBURG, Md. (CNS) — Counting on her fingers to keep track of points in an ice-breaker game she was playing…
A tapestry portrait of St. Josephine Bakhita, an African slave who died in 1947, hangs from the facade of St. PeterÕs Basilica during her canonization in 2000 at the Vatican. St. Bakhita was born in the Darfur region of what is now Sudan. Her feast day is Feb. 8, the International Day of Prayer and Awareness against Human Trafficking. (CNS photo/LÕOsservatore Romano via Reuters)

Pope encourages worldwide prayer in fight against trafficking

Posted by - February 16, 2019 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The International Day of Prayer and Awareness Against Human Trafficking invites people to host or attend…