Oklahoma May Require Restroom Signs Discouraging Abortions

FILE - In this May 4, 2015, file photo, Oklahoma state Sen. A.J. Griffin, R-Guthrie, is seated on the Senate floor in Oklahoma City. Griffin is sponsor of a bill that would force hospitals, nursing homes, restaurants... FILE - In this May 4, 2015, file photo, Oklahoma state Sen. A.J. Griffin, R-Guthrie, is seated on the Senate floor in Oklahoma City. Griffin is sponsor of a bill that would force hospitals, nursing homes, restaurants and public schools to post signs inside public restrooms directing pregnant women where to receive services as part of an effort to reduce abortions in the state. The State Board of Health will consider regulations for the signs on Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2016. The signs must be posted by January 2018. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File) MORE LESS
Start your day with TPM.
Sign up for the Morning Memo newsletter

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma plans to force hospitals, nursing homes, restaurants and public schools to post signs inside public restrooms directing pregnant women where to receive services as part of an effort to reduce abortions in the state.

The State Board of Health will consider regulations for the signs on Tuesday. Businesses and other organizations will have to pay an estimated $2.3 million to put up the signs because the Legislature didn’t approve any money for them.

The provision for the signs was tucked into a law that the Legislature passed this year that requires the state to develop informational material “for the purpose of achieving an abortion-free society.” The signs must be posted by January 2018.

Groups representing hospitals and restaurants are among those complaining that the new requirements are an expensive, unfunded mandate from the Legislature.

“We don’t have any concern about the information they’re trying to get out to women about their babies and their pregnancy. This is just the wrong way to do it,” said Jim Hooper, president of the Oklahoma Restaurant Association. “It’s just another mandate on small businesses. It’s not just restaurants. It includes hospitals, nursing homes. It just doesn’t make sense.”

The anti-abortion group Oklahomans for Life requested the bill. The sponsor, Sen. A.J. Griffin, said she may revise the measure in the upcoming legislative session to more narrowly target it to exclude some facilities.

“I do see how it is going to need to be tempered a tad,” said Griffin, a Republican from Guthrie. “We need to make sure we have something that’s reasonable and still effective.”

Under the law, the signs would state: “There are many public and private agencies willing and able to help you carry your child to term and assist you and your child after your child is born, whether you choose to keep your child or to place him or her for adoption. The State of Oklahoma strongly urges you to contact them if you are pregnant.” The signs would also include a link to the Health Department’s website.

In written comments provided to the Health Department, the Tulsa Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy called the proposed regulations “completely unnecessary and unwanted” and said they would provide a significant financial burden on already stressed state agencies, including the departments of Health and Education.

Don Maisch, an attorney for the State Department of Health who has worked on the rules, said the signage requirements apply to public restrooms of any entity that is regulated by the agency, including hospitals, hotels and motels, nursing homes, residential care facilities and most public schools.

“There is definitely a cost involved in moving forward with this,” Maisch said.

The Oklahoma Hospital Association projected it would cost at least $225,000 for signage at the state’s 140 licensed hospitals, with the fiscal impact on other licensed industries estimated at about $2.1 million.

Tony Lauinger, executive director of Oklahomans for Life, said the group’s intent was for the Health Department to produce the signage, but only if the Legislature appropriated funds to do so.

___

Online:

House Bill 2797: http://bit.ly/21e4wgw

___

Follow Sean Murphy at www.twitter.com/apseanmurphy

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Latest News
9
Show Comments

Notable Replies

  1. What’s next in that most godly state? A tax/fine if you don’t go to church?

  2. Doesn’t OK need to spend more time on acquiring illegal, veterinarian "death drugs’’ for its lethal injections to do state-sponsored murder. Distractions, distractions.

    Evil disguises itself with millions of faces. Here is one of them.

  3. I’m sure A.J. Griffin thought that all these places would just hang up Xeroxed copies, and the only cost would be for laminating.
    And really the list of places being required to hang these signs is strange.

  4. Is this an example of smaller government and less interference in people’s lives that the Republicans are always talking about?

    Its also blatantly sexist. Why not signs in the men’s rooms too discouraging men from getting women pregnant so they need abortions? Don’t forget the Family Restrooms too, be sure all the children are exposed to this as much as possible so they can talk about abortion on the playground.

  5. Oklahoma plans to force hospitals, nursing homes, restaurants and public schools to post signs inside public restrooms directing pregnant women where to receive services as part of an effort to reduce abortions in the state.

    Because reducing abortions in the state by improving sex ed and access to birth control would be crazy.

Continue the discussion at forums.talkingpointsmemo.com

3 more replies

Participants

Avatar for system1 Avatar for victorabrahamsen Avatar for jamesggilmore Avatar for thepsyker Avatar for ralph_vonholst Avatar for lastroth Avatar for jamsie12b Avatar for smarterboy14 Avatar for scottsatellite

Continue Discussion
Masthead Masthead
Founder & Editor-in-Chief:
Executive Editor:
Managing Editor:
Deputy Editor:
Editor at Large:
General Counsel:
Publisher:
Head of Product:
Director of Technology:
Associate Publisher:
Front End Developer:
Senior Designer: