The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Missouri could become the first state without an abortion clinic — starting Friday

Planned Parenthood officials said they are suing the state to allow their clinic in St. Louis to continue offering abortions

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May 29, 2019 at 1:29 p.m. EDT

Adapted from a story by The Washington Post’s Marisa Iati.

Five clinics in Missouri performed abortions in 2008; by 2018, only two did. It dropped to one facility in October, after Planned Parenthood’s Columbia Health Center could not meet new state requirements that abortion providers receive admitting privileges at hospitals within 15 minutes of their clinics, according to NPR.

Now, Missouri could become the first state without a clinic that performs abortions. Planned Parenthood officials said Tuesday they are suing the state to allow their clinic in St. Louis to continue offering the procedure.

The officials said the state’s health department is threatening not to renew the organization’s license to offer abortions in St. Louis, the only place in Missouri that provides the procedure.

The license expires Friday, and if it isn’t renewed, Planned Parenthood president Leana Wen said, “this will be the first time since 1974 that safe, legal abortion care will be inaccessible to people in an entire state.” Planned Parenthood said the closure of the St. Louis clinic would leave “more than a million people in a situation we haven’t seen since Roe v. Wade.”

Women come to her to find out if they can legally have an abortion. Now the answer might almost always be ‘no.’

The St. Louis clinic plans to file a lawsuit in state court Tuesday seeking permission to keep providing abortions if its license expires, Planned Parenthood said in a statement. The nonprofit said the clinic “has maintained 100 percent compliance” with the law.

“What is happening in Missouri shows that politicians don’t have to outlaw abortion to push it out of reach entirely,” Jennifer Dalven, director of the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project, said in a statement.

The facility in St. Louis will continue to provide other services if its license to perform abortions is not renewed, Planned Parenthood spokeswoman Emily Trifone said in an email.

The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services could not immediately be reached for comment.

Missouri’s 8-week abortion ban

Gov. Mike Parson (R) signed a bill last week that criminalizes abortion at eight weeks of pregnancy, following a wave of similar laws across the country. He had said that the bill provided Missouri “the opportunity to be one of the strongest pro-life states in the country.”

As The Washington Post’s Lindsey Bever reported:

“The vote came just hours before the state’s legislative session was set to end, and was preceded by an emotional debate in the House, during which some lawmakers recounted their own experiences with abortion. Aside from some outbursts from spectators in the gallery and quiet sobbing at times that appeared to come from the House floor, the chamber was largely silent during the arguments about the bill.

Supporters said the bill would protect unborn children’s lives, but opponents argued it would also put the mothers’ lives at risk, forcing them to either suffer or go underground to seek illegal and unsafe procedures.”

The ban on abortions at eight weeks, when some women do not know they are pregnant, provides exceptions for medical emergencies. The law defines these emergencies as “a condition which, based on reasonable medical judgment, so complicates the medical condition of a pregnant woman as to necessitate the immediate abortion of her pregnancy to avert the death of the pregnant woman or for which a delay will create a serious risk of substantial and irreversible physical impairment of a major bodily function of the pregnant woman.”

Under new abortion laws, men who impregnate women face zero consequences

Rape and incest are not exceptions under the state law, called the Missouri Stands for the Unborn Act. The legislation says a doctor who performs an abortion could be charged with a Class B felony that is punishable by five to 15 years in prison. Doctors could also lose their professional licenses.

Other states hanging in the balance

According to the Guttmacher Institute, which advocates for abortion access, five other states have just one clinic that performs abortions: Kentucky, Mississippi, North Dakota, South Dakota and West Virginia.

Eleven states have passed laws limiting access to abortion this year, and restrictions in three other states are pending. New York and Vermont passed laws that protect abortion access.

Conservative-leaning states hope to prompt the Supreme Court to reconsider its ruling in Roe v. Wade now that two justices appointed by President Trump sit on the court.

“I have prayed my way through this bill,” Alabama state Rep. Terri Collins (R), who sponsored that state’s abortion ban, previously said. “This is the way we get where we want to get eventually.”

Emily Wax-Thibodeaux contributed to this report.