Members of the Illinois House Democratic Caucus were joined by Planned Parenthood officials at a news conference Thursday to tout actions they said reaffirm women’s reproductive rights.
House Democrats passed House Bill 1464, which prevents the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation from being able to revoke, suspend or take any other disciplinary action against licensed physicians, nurses and advanced practice nurses for providing any medical service related to an abortion.
Illinois law already protects the right to an abortion as health care, but the bill aims to protect health care providers who practice in multiple states.
Bill sponsor Rep. Maura Hirschauer, D-Batavia, said that if a medical professional practicing in Illinois and other states is disciplined in another state, it triggers potential disciplinary action in Illinois as well. But as other states have moved to make abortion more difficult or outright illegal, the law would shield an Illinois doctor who is disciplined in one of those states for performing an abortion from facing the same discipline in Illinois.
Hirschauer said they have moved quickly on the bill because reproductive health care is under attack across the U.S. and because the U.S. Supreme Court cannot be counted on to uphold the fundamental right of reproductive health care.
“We have spoken here in Illinois – now is not the time to be punishing health care workers for doing their jobs and serving their patients,” Hirschaurer said.
H.B. 1464 passed the House, 68-41, and still needs approval from the Senate.
The Supreme Court is expected to release a decision as early as this summer regarding a Mississippi abortion case that challenges the 1973 Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade. The Mississippi law prohibits an abortion after 15 weeks but makes exceptions in cases when the fetus has a severe abnormality that is “incompatible with life” or when the pregnancy threatens the woman’s life.
Brigid Leahy, vice president of public policy at Planned Parenthood Illinois, said that if the Supreme Court ignores a half-century of precedent and overturns Roe v. Wade, it will become more difficult for people outside of the state to access the full range of care they need.
“If Roe falls, every single state that borders Illinois will quickly move to either outright ban or severely restrict abortion,” Leahy said.
Illinois has 17 Planned Parenthood health care centers that provide access to health care information and services for males and females.
Leahy noted that people from other states already have begun to turn to Illinois for reproductive health care access, and Planned Parenthood facilities could see at least double the number of out-of-state patients if Roe v. Wade is overturned.
Recently, Leahy said, Illinois Planned Parenthood worked with a patient from Mississippi who did not know how they were going to pay for transportation, lodging and meals, as well as the cost of an abortion, until a Planned Parenthood team set up accommodations.
“I urge everyone to remember that not one pregnant person should have to travel out of their state to get the care that they need,” Leahy said.
In a follow-up interview, Leahy said that Planned Parenthood has been planning to help with an influx of patients needing to travel to Illinois for reproductive health care access.
She said they have been working on a fundraising campaign to help expand capacity for care, have upgraded the health center located in the Chicago Loop, and have been coordinating with other Planned Parenthood providers, affiliates and local abortion funds.
In January, a regional logistics center opened in a Planned Parenthood clinic in Fairview Heights that uses private funds to pay for travel and lodging arrangements. The center is operated by Planned Parenthood and the Granite City-based Hope Clinic for Women.
There is no income or distance requirement to access services from the center, but patients must schedule an appointment with the clinic before reaching out for logistical support.
House Democrats also advanced resolutions that acknowledged their support for protecting reproductive health care. House Resolution 94 urges the state to fully fund Planned Parenthood, House Resolution 789 brings further awareness to the importance of reproductive rights and House Resolution 790 aims to serve as a reminder of Illinois’ support for Roe v. Wade.
House resolutions are nonbinding and do not need approval from the Senate or a signature from the governor.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.