NYC Funds Abortions For People From States With Restrictive Bans

By Ayana Byrd Jun 17, 2019

On Friday (June 14), New York City added money to its 2020 budget to help people who are not city residents. In what’s billed as the first move of its kind by a municipality, New York City earmarked $250,000 to assist pregnant people who live in states with restrictive abortion laws who want to get the medical procedure performed in the city.

The money will go to the New York Abortion Access Fund, reports The New York Times, and it will cover medical costs for approximately 500 people:

rnt

The abortion access fund provides payment to clinics on behalf of women who might not be able to pay for abortions, but are not covered by insurance or Medicaid. Roughly a third of the fund goes to women who come to New York for abortions.


The newspaper called the move “symbolic if provocative” in the ongoing national battle on abortion rights. This year, nine states have passed restrictive laws. These include KentuckyOhio and Georgia, which have six-week bans. Missouri’s ban is at eight weeks of pregnancy, while Alabama recently criminalized abortion at the moment of conception, with no exceptions for rape or incest.

These laws were passed by Republican-controlled state legislatures in the hopes that they will lead to legal fights that will prompt the conservative-majority Supreme Court of the United States to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 court case that legalized abortion nationwide.

In response to this threat to Roe, a number of states—including Illinois and Maine—have demonstrated their commitment to keeping abortions legal. On the 46th anniversary (January 22) of Roe v. Wade, New York state passed the Reproductive Health Act, which removes the procedure from the state’s criminal code and makes Roe’s protections part of state law.

Carlina Rivera, co-chair of New York City Council’s Women’s Caucus, told The Times that the city must stand as “a beacon for the rest of the country.”

“We heard the news on the abortion bans across the country,” she said. “Many of us in New York felt helpless. We wanted to do more.”