Action | Regulations for Licensure of Abortion Facilities |
Stage | Proposed |
Comment Period | Ends 3/29/2013 |
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In 2011, the Senate passed SB 924, a seemingly harmless bill that required the Department of Health to issue regulations related to infection prevention and disaster preparedness for hospitals. However, when it was considered in the Virginia House of Delegates, a surprise amendment was added that reclassified abortion providers across Virginia as a category of hospital. The bill narrowly passed the Senate on its return, with Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling casting the tie-breaking vote. Prior to signing the bill, Governor Bob McDonnell told reporters, “I think it’s fair to say that all outpatient surgical hospitals or clinics should be regulated in the same way, and I think this bill will do that.”
However, even when categorized as hospitals, which is inappropriate in itself, these medical offices are being treated differently than other outpatient clinics. The proposed regulations by the Virginia Department of Health single out women’s health care centers for a new set of rules, otherwise not applicable to any other outpatient facility. In effect, these regulations provide a mechanism for the McDonnell administration to achieve its endgame goal – the elimination of safe and affordable access to reproductive health services for Virginia’s women.
This disparate treatment resounds throughout the proposed regulations, with the Department of Health and the McDonnell administration clearly expressing its mistrust of, and abject bias against, the healthcare professionals operating and staffing these centers. Here are but a few examples of the separate and unequal treatment handed to abortion providers now classified as hospitals:
The McDonnell administration’s proposed regulations seek to do one thing and one thing only – cast a Big Brother shadow over the operations of all women’s health centers, further constricting access to their services.
Virginia would be wise to avoid this trap.