
The
2006 Rhode Island legislative session started in January and
continued through June. Although Rhode Island is
an overwhelming 63% pro-choice state (SurveyUSA poll, September
2005), the Rhode Island State House is a hotbed of anti-choice
support, with an anti-choice House, Senate and Governor. Indeed,
anti-choice bill sponsor, Senator Leo Blais, R. Dist.
24 of Coventry summarized it during anti-choice bill
debate on the RI Senate floor last June 29, 2005, "They
[pro-choice supporters] are scared to death that Rhode Island
will be the first state to over Roe v. Wade."
Two
anti-choice bills go to hearing in the House. Both
H6795, the so-called "Women's Right to Know Act",
and H6791, the "Forced Abortion" bill went to hearing
before the House Health, Education, and Welfare committee
on April 6, 2006. H6792 mandates a 24-hour waiting period,
after review of state produced and taxpayer financed biased
"counseling " materials, before a woman can access
abortion services. Last year the Senate version of this bill,
S0275, sponsored by Senator Stephan Alves, D. West Warwick,
was voted off the Senate floor by a 27-9 vote, and sent over
to the House where it died. In 2005, 2004, and 2001, this
bill went to hearing before House Judiciary. Each year it
died in committee. According the bill sponsor, Rhode Island
women apparently need the RI General Assembly to require that
they think longer about their decision to access an abortion:
"The
point [of making women wait] is having an appropriate amount
of time to think about it. And I know the next thing out of
your mouth is going to be: 'Don't you think they've [women]
already thought about it?' And that's
debatable." Representative Arthur
Corvese, D. Dist. 55 of North Providence, during the House
Judiciary hearing, April 12, 2005.
H6791,
so-called "Forced Abortion" bill, again
sponsored by Rep. Corvese, assumes that women who have abortions
are often "forced" or "required " to do
so, and allows for civil action to be taken against doctors
and counselors. Both the "Women's Right to Know"
and "Forced Abortion" bills remain in House HEW.
Neither has yet to receive an HEW committee vote or Senate
hearing thus far in the 2006 session. To read Rhode Island’s
informed consent for abortion laws, visit www.rilin.state.ri.us/Statutes/TITLE23/23-4.7.
Comprehensive
Sex Education v. Abstinence-Only-Until-Marriage battle
produced a victory this spring for teen health. RI Education
Commissioner, Peter McWalters, banned abstinence-only-until-marriage
programs or accompanying materials from RI public schools,
as it fails to meet RI Health Education Standards. Please
click on the March 28th GetActive message at the bottom of
this page to read full advisory and related press. For more
information on RI Education Health Standards, visit www.ridoe.net.
For more information on teen sexuality and health, visit www.advocatesforyouth.org
or www.teenpregnancy.org.
Supreme
Court. PPRI is part of a state coalition, Rhode Islanders
for a Fair Judiciary (RIFJ), organized to raise awareness
regarding the many issues affected by U.S. Supreme Court decisions.
RIFJ vigorously opposed the Roberts and Alito nominations.
Visit www.rifj.org
to learn more and to sigh up for RIFJ alerts.
This
fall, the Supreme Court will hear Gonzales v.
Carhart, which challenges the federal abortion
ban passed by Congress and signed by President Bush in 2003
criminalizing abortions as early as 12 to 15 weeks in pregnancy;
abortions that doctors say are safe and often the only way
to protect a woman's health. For more information visit www.saveroe.com.
Get
Involved. Stay Informed. Become a Political Powerhouse. Stay
in touch with the latest choice news online. Visit us at:
http://www.ppaction.org/ppri/home.html.
To
access bill text, go to:
www.state.ri.us, click 'general assembly', click 'GA legislative
info', click 'bill text', click 'search', enter bill number.

|