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Judge rules Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion is illegal
Judge rules Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion is illegal

CBS News

time14-05-2025

  • Politics
  • CBS News

Judge rules Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion is illegal

A judge on Tuesday struck down Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion, saying it conflicts with a voter-approved amendment that locked abortion rights in the state constitution in 2022. "Michiganders have the fundamental right to reproductive freedom, including the right to abortion care, and the state cannot deny, burden or infringe upon this freedom barring a compelling state interest to protect the health of the individual seeking care," Judge Sima Patel said. The waiting period had been in place for years, though Patel temporarily blocked it earlier in litigation in 2024. The judge said a mandatory 24-hour delay "exacerbates the burdens that patients experience seeking abortion care." Patel also overturned a regulation that required abortion providers to provide a fetal development chart and information about alternatives, declaring them "coercive and stigmatizing." The judge stopped a requirement that only a physician, not other health professionals, can perform an abortion. The lawsuit was filed by Northland Family Planning Centers and a group called Medical Students for Choice. Michigan's attorney general and health director agreed that the challenged regulations were unconstitutional, though state attorneys were assigned to defend them in court. Abortion rights were added to the state constitution by nearly 57% of voters in 2022, months after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Patel's ruling "reaffirms that Michigan is a state where you can make your own decisions about your own body with a trusted health care provider, without political interference," Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, said.

Judge overturns Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion

time13-05-2025

  • Politics

Judge overturns Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion

DETROIT -- A judge on Tuesday struck down Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion, saying it conflicts with a voter-approved amendment that locked abortion rights in the state constitution in 2022. 'Michiganders have the fundamental right to reproductive freedom, including the right to abortion care, and the state cannot deny, burden or infringe upon this freedom barring a compelling state interest to protect the health of the individual seeking care,' Judge Sima Patel said. The waiting period had been in place for years, though Patel temporarily blocked it earlier in litigation in 2024. The judge said a mandatory 24-hour delay 'exacerbates the burdens that patients experience seeking abortion care." Patel also overturned a regulation that required abortion providers to provide a fetal development chart and information about alternatives, declaring them 'coercive and stigmatizing.' The judge stopped a requirement that only a physician, not other health professionals, can perform an abortion. The lawsuit was filed by Northland Family Planning Centers and a group called Medical Students for Choice. Michigan's attorney general and health director agreed that the challenged regulations were unconstitutional, though state attorneys were assigned to defend them in court. Abortion rights were added to the state constitution by nearly 57% of voters in 2022, months after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Patel's ruling 'reaffirms that Michigan is a state where you can make your own decisions about your own body with a trusted health care provider, without political interference,' Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, said.

Judge overturns Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion
Judge overturns Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion

Yahoo

time13-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Judge overturns Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion

DETROIT (AP) — A judge on Tuesday struck down Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion, saying it conflicts with a voter-approved amendment that locked abortion rights in the state constitution in 2022. 'Michiganders have the fundamental right to reproductive freedom, including the right to abortion care, and the state cannot deny, burden or infringe upon this freedom barring a compelling state interest to protect the health of the individual seeking care,' Judge Sima Patel said. The waiting period had been in place for years, though Patel temporarily blocked it earlier in litigation in 2024. The judge said a mandatory 24-hour delay 'exacerbates the burdens that patients experience seeking abortion care." Patel also overturned a regulation that required abortion providers to provide a fetal development chart and information about alternatives, declaring them 'coercive and stigmatizing.' The judge stopped a requirement that only a physician, not other health professionals, can perform an abortion. The lawsuit was filed by Northland Family Planning Centers and a group called Medical Students for Choice. Michigan's attorney general and health director agreed that the challenged regulations were unconstitutional, though state attorneys were assigned to defend them in court. Abortion rights were added to the state constitution by nearly 57% of voters in 2022, months after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Patel's ruling 'reaffirms that Michigan is a state where you can make your own decisions about your own body with a trusted health care provider, without political interference,' Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, said.

Judge overturns Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion
Judge overturns Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion

Winnipeg Free Press

time13-05-2025

  • Health
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Judge overturns Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion

DETROIT (AP) — A judge on Tuesday struck down Michigan's 24-hour waiting period before an abortion, saying it conflicts with a voter-approved amendment that locked abortion rights in the state constitution in 2022. 'Michiganders have the fundamental right to reproductive freedom, including the right to abortion care, and the state cannot deny, burden or infringe upon this freedom barring a compelling state interest to protect the health of the individual seeking care,' Judge Sima Patel said. The waiting period had been in place for years, though Patel temporarily blocked it earlier in litigation in 2024. The judge said a mandatory 24-hour delay 'exacerbates the burdens that patients experience seeking abortion care.' Patel also overturned a regulation that required abortion providers to provide a fetal development chart and information about alternatives, declaring them 'coercive and stigmatizing.' The judge stopped a requirement that only a physician, not other health professionals, can perform an abortion. The lawsuit was filed by Northland Family Planning Centers and a group called Medical Students for Choice. Michigan's attorney general and health director agreed that the challenged regulations were unconstitutional, though state attorneys were assigned to defend them in court. Abortion rights were added to the state constitution by nearly 57% of voters in 2022, months after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Patel's ruling 'reaffirms that Michigan is a state where you can make your own decisions about your own body with a trusted health care provider, without political interference,' Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, said.

Trial begins as abortion providers challenge some restrictions in Michigan
Trial begins as abortion providers challenge some restrictions in Michigan

Yahoo

time14-02-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Trial begins as abortion providers challenge some restrictions in Michigan

Abortion-rights advocates seeking to undo some of Michigan's remaining restrictions on the procedure were in court Thursday, as a trial began over a challenge to a series of existing laws. Plaintiffs argue that some Michigan laws restricting abortion are no longer constitutional after voters approved a ballot proposal in 2022 that enshrined the right to reproductive freedom in the state's constitution. The lawsuit was filed last year by the Center for Reproductive Rights on behalf of Northland Family Planning Centers, a group of abortion providers in metro Detroit. They have already seen one victory in the case — last June, presiding Judge Sima Patel issued a preliminary injunction barring the state from enforcing some of the laws challenged in the case, including the mandatory 24-hour waiting period, the "informed consent" law that requires providers to ensure patients review certain materials described as inaccurate by abortion proponents, and a law prohibiting advanced practice clinicians (APCs) from providing abortion care. Patel, who was appointed to the Michigan Court of Appeals by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in 2022, wrote that Proposal 3 of 2022's passage most likely rendered the laws unconstitutional because they likely infringe on residents' ability to make decisions about their reproductive health care. Patel did not issue a preliminary injunction against a portion of state law that requires abortion providers to determine whether patients have been coerced to receive an abortion, something also challenged by the plaintiffs. Renee Chelian, executive director of Northland Family Planning Centers, took the stand to start the trial Thursday. She testified that the waiting period and informed consent laws created barriers to abortion access for some patients. She said some patients had previously arranged transportation or child care on the day of their appointment, only to be delayed more than 24 hours because of the mandatory waiting period. In some cases, Chelian said, the delay resulted in an advancement of the gestational period that made some abortion procedures no longer feasible. Chelian also testified the materials abortion centers are required to provide patients weren't completely accurate. The informed consent law also requires patients to fill out and submit a confirmation form affirming they've reviewed specific information. Before Patel issued a preliminary injunction against the informed consent law, the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services stated on its website it "does not necessarily endorse all the information it is required to make available under this statute," the Free Press reported last year. 'From the time it was written until recently, there was a great deal of inaccuracies,' Chelian said. Center for Reproductive Rights attorney Molly Duane also questioned Chelian about the state law requiring abortion providers to ensure patients are not coerced into having an abortion, the lone law challenged in the lawsuit that Patel did not grant a preliminary injunction against. Chelian testified it was more common for a woman to be coerced into remaining pregnant than to get an abortion. Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel is named as a defendant in the lawsuit, along with other state health officials. Nessel supports abortion access in Michigan, but her office is compelled to represent the state in any litigation brought against it. Nessel did not oppose the lawsuit, but lawyers from the Attorney General's Office are representing the state in the trial after a so-called conflict wall was established so an adversarial defense could be provided. Assistant Attorney General Kendell Asbenson led cross-examination for the defense. He asked Chelian if the informed consent laws created "a burden" for patients. "There's no other medical procedure done in this state where the patient is required to look at alternatives to the procedure they're going to have," she replied. Dr. Charisse Loder, a clinical assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Michigan, also testified Thursday. Trial dates in the case are currently scheduled through next Friday. The case is being heard in Detroit, and being livestreamed online. It is a bench trial, meaning Patel, the overseeing judge, will rule on the case once it reaches its conclusion. In 2023, Democrats in the Michigan House of Representatives had introduced legislation to repeal the waiting period and informed consent laws, but didn't have the votes to pass it alongside a series of other abortion access measures that were ultimately signed into law. Democrats have since lost the state House to Republicans, which makes it unlikely that any legislative action is taken on the abortion restrictions under the current leadership dynamic. Contact Arpan Lobo: alobo@ This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Trial underway in challenge to abortion restrictions in Michigan

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