RH Reality Check
Font Size: A |  A |  A

Roundup: Senate Bill Maintains Abortion Coverage, DC Insurance Commissioner Says No to Birth Control

Amie Newman's picture

Senate Bill Maintains Private Insurance Coverage for Abortion

As Jodi writes today, Senator Reid released the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act last night - and women's health advocates can breathe a sigh of relief.  The bill, which would cost $848 billion over ten years, contains provisions to ensure that private insurance coverage for abortion services are retained. According to The Progress Report put out by Think Progress,

Under the merged Senate bill, federal dollars could be used only to pay for abortions when the pregnancy threatens the life of the mother or results from rape or incest; private premiums would be used to pay for any other type of abortion, including those for health reasons. Each plan in the Exchange would decide whether to cover additional abortion services and at least one plan in each market must offer abortion services and one plan must not. In the public option, the Secretary of Health and Human Services can cover abortion only if the procedure is financed with private funds. 

This is a complete departure from the House bill's Stupak Amendment which bars even private insurance coverage from covering abortion for women, going far beyond simply maintaining the Hyde Amendment (which bars federal dollars from paying for abortion services except in particularly extrreme circumstances). 

John Richards, writing on the The Nation's web site, calls The Stupak Amendment "draconian" and notes that the Senate rejected "anti-choice extremes" in their bill. But he says more hard work is still ahead:

Pelosi will have her work cut out for her. And she will, unquestionably, need an assist from the White House.

In other words, while the Senate may clean up some of the mess, it will take a major intervention by President Obama to wrangle the votes needed to pass a healthcare reform bill that maintains existing rules with regard to abortion.

For a quick break-down of exactly what how the Senate bill treats insurance coverage of abortion, read Jodi's post

Placing Your Faith In Health Care Reform?

Jon O'Brien, President of Catholics for Choice responds eloquently, as a man of faith, to Jim Wallis' (Christian leader and writer/author who has been involved in the common ground efforts put forth by President Obama) claims that the culture wars have "started up again" as a result of the health care reform bill. In Wallis' post, he lends credence to anti-choice Democrats charge to restrict abortion access by chalking it up to their feelings of exclusion around the abortion conversation (I am not making this up):

I believe there were some sincere early efforts by leaders on both sides to abide by what became known as "abortion neutrality." But somewhere along the line, the process broke down. Instead of building on the initial common ground of neutrality and bringing both sides together to hammer out compromises, many pro-life Democrats felt excluded from the conversation about how abortion would be addressed in the bill.

But Jon O'Brien doesn't buy it:

Jim is mistaken. The antiabortion side decided that it was not interested in any compromise, hence the "my way or the highway" showdown between on one side Bart Stupak and the US Conference of Catholic Bishops and Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic leadership on the other. Therefore they pushed us beyond a compromise, "the current law, abortion neutrality and the status quo." In fact, this is particularly hard to fathom--given the demand by Bart Stupak and others that the bill would fail if their language, and no version thereof was acceptable, was not given a vote and included in the final bill to pass the House of Representatives.

O'Brien's point-by-point analysis of and response to Wallis underscores exactly why the Stupak Amendment was/is as far from "compromise" as one can get when it comes to abortion access under health care reform. 

Tapped also has a great piece by Sarah Posner on faith and The Stupak Amendment. Posner argues that the fight for The Stupak Amendment was no common ground effort at all but solely about blocking legal access to abortion:

The anti-choice Democrats who allowed Bart Stupak to be their ringleader now risk being seen as more aligned with the religious right than with their own party. As I reported at RD [Ed note: Religion Dispatches], while the Catholic bishops were in Nancy Pelosi's office late that Friday night, the religious right -- and Democrats for Life of America -- were rallying the religious right's base to push members of Congress to settle for nothing less than the Stupak amendment. Their goal, as we know, is blocking access to legal abortion, and a new study from the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services maintains the Stupak amendment would, over time, end all insurance coverage for abortion services.

Washington DC Insurance Commissioner Says No Birth Control Coverage for You!

Washington DC mayor Adrian Fenty appointed Gennet Purcell as the district's new insurance commissioner this summer. While the appointment was covered in the media, one recent change under Purcell's watch has somehow flown under the radar. 

Under Purcell's watch, private insurance companies operating in Washington DC are now allowed to opt out of covering contraception in individual plans. This coverage is considered "non-mandatory" by the insurance commissioner and some women are finding their birth control coverage suddenly dropped. 

A petition has been started, on twitter, to raise awareness and grab the commissioner's attention that allowing insurance coverage of birth control to become non-mandatory for those not in a group plan is unacceptable. You can sign here. 

More Reproductive and Sexual Health News From Around the Web:

11/18

Poll: Most favor tight abortion language United Press International

RealClearPolitics - Fallacies on Abortion Coverage RealClearPolitics

From Hyde to Stupak, over 30 years of limiting access to abortion ... Feministing

Bishops discuss authority over Catholic colleges San Jose Mercury News

Stung by restrictions in healthcare bill, abortion rights supporters fight back Los Angeles Times

Legislature advances abortion amendment Salt Lake Tribune

Matthew Yglesias » Study: Stupak Would Lead to Abortion Coverage Phaseout ThinkProgress

Reid modifies abortion provisions but eschews Stupak language The Hill

Read The Abortion Compromise In Harry Reid's Senate Health Care Bill Huffington Post

Mexico anti-abortion fight moves to federal level The Associated Press

Senate Wording Angers Abortion Opponents New York Times

Reid's restrictions on abortion Politico

Birth control: the most effective way of reducing greenhouse gas emissions Times Online

Manila warned on population Business Mirror

Will You Have To Ask Your Employer For The "Abortion Rider”? ... Change.org

US funding revamps African contraceptive drive AFP

Clerics role sought for family planning The Nation, Pakistan

Obama Opposes Pro-Life Efforts in Health Care Reform The New American

Report: SarahPAC scrubbed site to ward off pro-life critics Raw Story

Pro-Abortion Leader Claims Pro-Life Democrats Will Oppose Stupak Next Time LifeNews.com

Accepting the Stupak Amendment The Atlantic

Mr. Stupak: I Can Stand the Heat Huffington Post

Why I love Sarah Palin National Post

Kennedy, Catholic Church, and Politics of Compromise The Phoenix

Stupak Abortion Measure Stopped...for the Moment Newsweek

Pro-Choice Dems Seize On GWU Study On The Stupak Amendment Firedoglake

 

11/19

Birth control vaginal ring launched in India Times of India

Bishop reiterates pro-life commitment in defense of CCHD Catholic News Agency

Celebrate loving families on National Adoption Day The Desert Sun

 

 


. . . . .
1 comment
Please login or register to post comments...

The Department of Insurance, Securities and Banking has not made any changes in its position regarding contraceptive coverage in individual health insurance under Commissioner Gennet Purcell or prior to Commissioner Purcell’s appointment. 

In fact, mandated coverages for insurance are not at the discretion of the insurance commissioner, but rather mandated coverages are those that are required by D.C. law.  Contraceptive coverage is not now, nor has it ever been, a mandated coverage in the District. 

The Department has researched its recent consumer complaint history and found no complaints about individual health insurance not covering contraception. It is  surveying insurance companies writing individual health insurance in the District of Columbia and, while responses are still coming in, has found that there are individual plans available in the District that provide contraceptive coverage.

 

 

Submitted by MPhippsEvans on November 20, 2009 - 5:54pm.