Current:Home > NewsKansas can’t enforce new law on abortion pills or make patients wait 24 hours, judge rules -Secure Horizon Growth
Kansas can’t enforce new law on abortion pills or make patients wait 24 hours, judge rules
View
Date:2025-04-16 21:47:23
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas judge on Monday put a new state law on medication abortions on hold and blocked older restrictions that for years have spelled out what providers must tell patients and forced patients to wait 24 hours to end their pregnancies.
The ruling was another big victory for abortion rights advocates in Kansas, where a statewide vote in August 2022 decisively confirmed protections for abortion access under the state constitution. District Judge K. Christopher Jayaram’s order suspends some restrictions that have been in effect for years. The waiting period had been in place since 1997.
“The Court has great respect for the deeply held beliefs on either side of this contentious issue,” Jayaram wrote in his 92-page order. “Nevertheless, the State’s capacity to legislate pursuant to its own moral scruples is necessarily curbed by the Kansas Constitution and its Bill of Rights.”
Jayaram’s order is set to remain in effect through the trial set for the end of June 2024 for a lawsuit filed by abortion providers, against state officials who would enforce abortion restrictions. The providers filed their case in Johnson County in the Kansas City area, home to two clinics that provide abortions.
The legal battle highlights the importance of state courts in attempts to preserve access a little more than a year after the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson ended protections under the U.S. Constitution and allowed states to ban abortion. In August, a judge in Texas ruled that the state’s ban was too restrictive, and the Utah Supreme Court heard arguments on whether it should lift a hold on a state law there banning most abortions.
Kansas has been an outlier on abortion among states with Republican-controlled legislatures. The state Supreme Court declared in 2019 that the Kansas Constitution protects a right to bodily autonomy and therefore access to abortion as a “fundamental” right. GOP lawmakers proposed an amendment to the state constitution to declare that it doesn’t grant a right to abortion — and in the August 2022 vote, that ballot initiative lost by a wide margin, upholding abortion rights.
Republican lawmakers nevertheless argued this year that “reasonable restrictions” are still fair game. A law that took effect July 1 required abortion providers to tell their patients that a medication abortion can be stopped using a regimen touted by anti-abortion groups. The state agreed not to enforce it until another ruling from Jayaram.
In an August hearing, Jayaram said his reading of medical literature showed that the regimen’s effectiveness is not confirmed by any valid studies. Major medical groups consider the regimen ineffective and potentially unsafe.
Providers also attacked existing laws enacted by GOP lawmakers as a way to ensure patients are properly informed before undergoing an abortion. Patients not only must receive medical information 24 hours before the procedure, but that information must also be in writing and in a specific size and style of type. It must include statements drafted by abortion opponents about fetal development and purported abortion risks that major medical groups consider debunked, false or misleading.
“I’m struggling to see why we’re singling out one specific provider type and one specific service,” Jayaram told the state’s attorneys from the bench during the recent hearing.
Attorneys for the providers have argued that the growing layers of restrictions created a biased counseling scheme designed to discourage abortion. Kansas doesn’t ban most abortions until the 22nd week of pregnancy.
The providers also said challenging older restrictions became more compelling as other states banned abortion and out-of-state residents flooded them with requests for appointments. Kansas saw a 57% increase in abortions in 2022, according to state health department data.
“We feel compelled to get patients who are going to get back in the car for 15 hours medically accurate information because we know they’re scared to talk to providers at home,” Emily Wales, CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Plains, told reporters after a recent court hearing.
Abortion opponents argued repeatedly before the August 2022 vote that without a change in the state constitution, all existing abortion restrictions could be at risk. The state Supreme Court is reviewing a 2015 law banning the most common second-trimester procedure and a 2011 law imposing tougher health and safety requirements only for abortion providers. Neither has been enforced because of the litigation.
Attorneys for the state and the anti-abortion Alliance for Defending Freedom argue that in suing the state this year, providers are working against their patients’ interest in having as much information as possible.
“Simply giving a woman information — just like these abortion providers have done for 26 years — that’s not impairing a woman’s right to choose to have an abortion one way or the other,” Denise Harle, an alliance attorney, said following the court hearing earlier this month.
____
Follow John Hanna on the X platform at https://twitter.com/apjdhanna
veryGood! (94776)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- What to know about the jurors in Trump's hush money trial in New York
- Republican AGs attack Biden’s EPA for pursuing environmental discrimination cases
- What to know about the jurors in Trump's hush money trial in New York
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Zendaya Addresses Fate of Euphoria Season 3
- How many rounds are in the NFL draft? Basic info to know for 2024 event
- 5 years after fire ravaged Notre Dame, an American carpenter is helping rebuild Paris' iconic cathedral
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Uri Berliner, NPR editor who criticized the network of liberal bias, says he's resigning
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Simone Biles thought 'world is going to hate me' after she left team final at Tokyo Games
- Horoscopes Today, April 17, 2024
- New Black congressional district in Louisiana bows to politics, not race, backers say
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- NCAA allows transfers to be immediately eligible, no matter how many times they’ve switched schools
- Voter ID took hold in the North Carolina primary. But challenges remain for the fall election
- Jennifer Love Hewitt Debuts Her 3 Kids on Book Cover: All the Details
Recommendation
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Mail carriers face growing threats of violence amid wave of robberies
Actors who portray Disney characters at Disneyland poised to take next step in unionization effort
Charges dropped against suspect in 2016 cold case slaying of Tulane graduate
Could your smelly farts help science?
Biden says he'll urge U.S. trade rep to consider tripling tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum imports
Historic Copenhagen stock exchange, one of the city's oldest buildings, goes up in flames
Melissa Gilbert remembers 'Little House on the Prairie,' as it turns 50 | The Excerpt