Prohibit Prepayment for Abortion
HB 5971 / SB 1253
Rep. Jerry Vander Roest / Sen. Mike Goschka
Current Status
This legislation was introduced to clarify the meaning of "abortion-related
services" in the Informed Consent law so that abortionists
cannot collect payment for abortion services until after the 24-hour
period has expired.
Both versions of the
bill were introduced on 4/30/02 and referred to the respective
Health Policy Committee. The House committee held a hearing on
5/14/02 and voted H.B. 5971 to the House floor where it was passed
by the full House with 72 votes on 5/29/02. The bill was then
sent to the Senate and referred to the Committee on Health Policy.
Both versions of the bill were discharged from the Health Policy
Committee and re-referred to the Committee on Families, Mental
Health, and Human Services. The Committee reported H.B.5971
favorably on 12/10/02. On 12/12/02, the full Senate voted
on the bill. An unfriendly amendment was offered and defeated
and the bill was passed 24-10. The Governor signed the bill
into law on 12/31/02.
History
In 2000, Michigan passed legislation to tighten the informed consent
law for abortion. The section prohibiting abortionists from collecting
money for "abortion related" activities until after
the 24 hour waiting period has expired was challenged in court.
In February 2002, Judge John O'Meara struck down the prepayment
prohibition because the term "abortion related medical service"
is "unconstitutionally vague," and the Act does not
provide a definition of "abortion related." The Act
required a high standard of legal review because it (unintentionally)
imposed criminal sanctions.
H.B. 5971/S.B. 1253 has been drafted in response to that court
decision. The bill will clarify what services are "abortion
related" so that abortionists will know what they cannot
collect payment for during waiting period. It would also provide
consumer protection to women who are considering abortion. Women
should not be forced to invest financially in the abortion prior
to the passing of the 24 hour waiting period. The law will protect
women from the added pressure of financial obligation when making
a decision about abortion To increases the law's future chances
of approval in court, the bill would decriminalize offenses against
the informed consent law.
You may view the legislation on the Michigan Legislature's website
by going to www.michiganlegislature.org
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