A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld Texas' strict abortion
restrictions that could soon leave only seven abortion clinics open in a
state of 27 million people.
The decision by the 5th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals allows Texas to enforce Republican-backed restrictions
that require abortion clinics to meet hospital-level operating
standards, a checklist that includes rules on minimum room sizes,
staffing levels and air ventilation systems. The restrictions, approved
in 2013, are among the toughest in the nation.
Owners of
traditional abortion clinics, which resemble doctor's offices more than
hospitals, say they would be forced to close because the new rules
demand millions of dollars in upgrades they can't afford. That would
mark the second large wave of closures in as many years in Texas, which
had 41 abortion clinics in 2012, before other new restrictions took
effect that require doctor admitting privileges.
"Not since before Roe v. Wade has a law or court
decision had the potential to devastate access to reproductive health
care on such a sweeping scale," said Nancy Northrop, president and CEO
of the Center for Reproductive Rights. "We now look to the Justices to
stop the sham laws that are shutting clinics down and placing countless
women at risk of serious harm."
Texas will be able to start
enforcing the restrictions in about three weeks unless the U.S. Supreme
Court agrees to halt the decision, said Stephanie Toti, an attorney for
the center. Only seven abortion facilities in Texas, including four
operated by Planned Parenthood, meet the more robust requirements.
Abortion-rights groups said they will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, which temporarily sidelined the law last year.
If
the law takes effect, some women in the state would live hundreds of
miles away from a Texas abortion provider. But that argument didn't sway
the three-judge panel making the decision for the New Orleans-based
appeals court, which is considered one of the most conservative in the
nation. The judges noted that a New Mexico abortion clinic was just
across the Texas border, and said clinic owners in Texas failed to prove
that a "large fraction" of women would be burdened.
Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, whose office argued before the appeals court in January, praised Tuesday's ruling.
"Abortion
practitioners should have no right to operate their businesses from
sub-standard facilities and with doctors who lack admitting privileges
at a hospital," Paxton said.
Republican Gov. Greg Abbott and other
conservatives say the standards protect women's health. But
abortion-rights supports say the law is a thinly veiled attempt to block
access to abortions in Texas, which has been the site of one of the
nation's largest abortion fights for two years. Toti said roughly a
half-dozen other states require similar standards for abortion clinics,
but unlike in those states, the Texas law doesn't allow clinics to be
grandfathered or seek waivers.
About 18 abortion clinics are
currently open in Texas, though the number fluctuates depending on
whether a facility has a doctor with hospital admitting privileges.
Under
the new restrictions, the only remaining abortion facilities in Texas
would be in major cities. One exception would be a Whole Woman's Health
clinic in McAllen, near the Texas-Mexico border, which the 5th Circuit
exempted from some restrictions — but Toti said even those exemptions
are so limited that it may not be practical to keep that clinic open.
For
women in El Paso, the closest abortion provider in Texas would require a
1,200-mile round trip to San Antonio, or they would have to cross state
lines. The appeals court found that option suitable, noting that a
clinic was just across the border in Santa Teresa, New Mexico.
"Although
the nearest abortion facility in Texas is 550 miles away from El Paso,
there is evidence that women in El Paso can travel the short distance to
Santa Teresa to obtain an abortion and, indeed, the evidence is that
many did just that," the court wrote.
Attorneys for the state
dismissed opponents' arguments about women being burdened by fewer
abortion facilities, saying that nearly 9 in 10 women in Texas would
still live within 150 miles of a provider.
Associated Press
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