Abortions aren’t free. Neither is what’s called “abortion tourism.”
The initiative was put on the ballot by Gov. Gavin Newsom and the Legislature after the U.S. Supreme Court last June overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion nationally.
California’s abortion laws are not in jeopardy and Proposition 1 is not only unnecessary—it is recklessly ambiguous, extreme and expensive ... as a Black woman who is currently pregnant, I am seriously troubled about the impact Proposition 1 could have on California’s health systems.
The United States holds one of the highest maternal morbidity rates in the world, with rates for Black women at 2.5 times the national average. This is before we overrun state health systems with unlimited passes for neighboring states to join as they see fit to utilize California abortion services and laws. And this is before we further exacerbate our health system and our quickly-depleting healthcare worker pool.
What’s the Cost?
An exact number is impossible to figure out right now, but we still can get some idea of the cost of Prop. 1. Let’s start with California Healthline, a news service of the California Health Care Foundation, a philanthropic organization created when Blue Cross of California became a nonprofit. California Healthline will be heeded as an objective source.While it could lead to more people coming to California for abortion services, that’s already happening, even before voters decide on the measure. ...
No Direct Fiscal Effect. Proposition 1 would change the California Constitution to expressly include existing rights to reproductive freedom. Because these rights already exist in California, the proposition would have no direct fiscal effect. However, whether a court might interpret the proposition to expand reproductive rights beyond existing law is unclear. If a court finds that the proposition expands these rights, there could be fiscal effects to the state.That last sentence is the key wording: What the courts decide could mean “fiscal effects to the state.”
Legal Interpretations
Currently, California law limits abortions to 24-25 weeks. Would Prop. 1 expand that up to a second before birth? On Oct. 31, Calmatters ran an article discussing both sides. My conclusion: The initiative is purposely vague, so the California Supreme Court, now dominated by liberal Democrats appointed by Govs. Jerry Brown and Gavin Newsom, would interpret it as unlimited, right up to just before birth. But we won’t know for years.This bill would delete the requirement that a coroner hold inquests for deaths related to or following known or suspected self-induced or criminal abortion, and would delete the requirement that an unattended fetal death be handled as a death without medical attendance. The bill would prohibit using the coroner’s statements on the certificate of fetal death to establish, bring, or support a criminal prosecution or civil cause of damages against a person who is immune from liability based on their actions or omissions with respect to their pregnancy or actual, potential, or alleged pregnancy outcome, or who aids a pregnant person in exercising their rights under the Reproductive Privacy Act, as specified.Critics have charged AB 2223 would legalize infanticide, because no inquiries could be made by law enforcement if a post-birth baby was killed.
Advertising for Abortions
Back to Prop. 1. Let’s assume that the most broad interpretation, that it allows abortion right up to a second before birth. Anticipating Roe v. Wade being overturned, last December Gov. Gavin Newsom proclaimed, “We’ll be a sanctuary,” for those seeking abortions from other states. “We are looking at ways to support that inevitability and looking at ways to expand our protections.”People who live outside of California
If Prop. 1 passes, and is interpreted as liberally as possible, potentially all of those 6,298 could come to California for an abortion vacation in the Abortion Sanctuary State. If it’s only a “procedure,” as abortion proponents claim, why not throw in a vacation paid for by California taxpayers?
Word gets around quickly on these things, especially in these days of social media. So we can expect some response to the generous California offer. How many? Let’s just guess 10 percent of that figure, or 630 a year coming to California for a late-term abortion.
Abortion After 27 Weeks California. Facts About Induction Procedure (25 Weeks And Up): This is normally a 3 day procedure depending on your medical history.They don’t provide a cost estimate, but according to the Orlando Women’s Center in Florida, “late term” abortions can cost up to $35,000, compared to up to $2,000 for first-trimester abortions. According to TheCut, part of New York magazine, it could be “$8,000 to $15,000 or more” for a third-trimester abortion.
Let’s assume a $10,000 average for late-term abortions. Add $200 a day for a seven-day stay in California, or $1,400. That comes to $11,140 for each abortion vacation.
Our estimated number of late-term abortions in California was 630. Multiplied by $11,140, that comes to $7,018,200 a year.
Yes, There Will Be a Cost
Perhaps my numbers are too high—or too low. Again, we won’t know the exact number for a couple of years—assuming the state even compiles the number. As noted above, the CDC didn’t even have overall abortion numbers for California for 2019.But even with a conservative estimate, the number will be at least in millions. Even in a time of state budget surpluses, soon to evaporate, money isn’t free.
So Tak Allen is right: Prop. 1, if it passes, will divert scarce resources and scarcer OB-GYN specialists from California mothers, to performing abortions for abortion vacationers, risking the lives of California mothers and babies.
By the way, Tak, congratulations on your new baby. God bless both of you.