North Carolina OKs Mandatory 72-Hour Abortion Waiting Periods

Gov. Pat McCrory, speaks at Wilmington International Airport in Wilmington, N.C., Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2014. The North Carolina Transportation Department said Tuesday that North Carolina is getting $6 million in fede... Gov. Pat McCrory, speaks at Wilmington International Airport in Wilmington, N.C., Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2014. The North Carolina Transportation Department said Tuesday that North Carolina is getting $6 million in federal grants to improve train service. The Wilmington stop was one of several around the state on Wednesday introducing the "25-Year Vision for North Carolina" transportation plan. (AP Photo/The Star-News, Matt Born) LOCAL TELEVISION OUT; LOCAL INTERNET OUT MORE LESS
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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina lawmakers passed a bill on Wednesday that would make the state one of several with 72-hour waiting periods for an abortion, sending the bill to the Republican governor who plans to sign it.

Hours after the bill passed, Gov. Pat McCrory said he was pleased with progress made on the bill in recent days and planned to sign it. The House and Senate chambers in the GOP-controlled legislature approved the measure by margins above the threshold for overcoming a veto.

Bill supporters have said that increasing the state’s waiting period from the current 24 hours will give pregnant women more time to collect information about a difficult decision. The bill’s House sponsors also said they hope the measure would lead to fewer abortions.

The bill requires women to talk to a doctor or other qualified professional 72 hours before having an abortion, unless there’s a medical emergency.

Three other states have 72-hour waiting periods: Missouri, South Dakota and Utah. Oklahoma’s waiting period of that length goes into effect in November.

The bill adds other rules for doctors and clinics that perform abortions and includes several unrelated criminal justice measures.

Democratic lawmakers and other opponents have said there is no medical reason for increasing the wait, and they’ve complained that Republicans want to add more hurdles for women seeking a procedure that courts have ruled to be constitutionally protected.

“In the majority’s view, a woman’s right to choose is an empty and hollow concept with little meaning,” said Rep. Rick Glazier, a Cumberland County Democrat.

Since Republicans took over North Carolina’s legislature in 2011, the state has passed several laws aimed at limiting abortions, including the current 24-hour waiting period. Some credit the laws with contributing to the 26 percent decline in the number of abortions in North Carolina since 2010.

The bill that passed Wednesday also requires doctors to provide more data to state regulators about certain second-trimester abortions, and it makes clear that clinics and ambulatory surgical centers performing abortions must be inspected annually and that no one under 18 can work at them.

Other criminal justice measures expand the definition of statutory rape, make administrative changes to child support collection and specify places that must be avoided by sex offenders registered in other states who come to North Carolina.

The bill’s passage was applauded by Tami Fitzgerald, executive director of the NC Values Coalition. She called it “a major victory that will protect women and save the lives of unborn children in North Carolina.” She urged the governor to sign it.

Opponents of the bill had urged McCrory to stand by his answer in a 2012 gubernatorial debate when he was asked what further abortion restrictions he would sign if elected. McCrory responded only: “None.”

In announcing his plans to sign the bill, McCrory argued that it won’t restrict access.

“We ensured that contact, including a simple phone call, would start a reasonable process that protects women’s health, and we also more clearly and rationally defined medical training and qualifications to ensure there will be no further restrictions on access,” he said.

Planned Parenthood and NARAL Pro-Choice North Carolina said before the governor’s announcement that they planned to deliver thousands of petitions on Thursday urging the governor to veto the bill.

“Going back on his word by allowing these new restrictions to become law would represent a fundamental betrayal of voters’ trust,” said Alison Kiser, Senior Director of Communications for Planned Parenthood South Atlantic.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. It takes two to tango, where is the mandatory responsibility for the men?

    I would add to this law that doctors must treat a pregnancy as a gunshot wound and inform the police.
    Then a paternity investigation would be mandatory to find the biological father, who would then, under penalty of prosecution and jail time, be held responsible for 100% of the financial well being of that child until it reaches the age of 18.

    If you can force a woman into being nothing more than a gestation chamber, then we can force men into being ATMs.

  2. This how you “respect” and “defend” the Constitution. If the SCOTUS under it’s Constitutionally granted powers declares Abortion a legal act and woman a right to it what do you do?

    Well if you wish to impose your religious beliefs on others against of our Founder’s desire that never happen and you cannot make a SCOTUS granted act illegal…well you do and end run around all that annoying stuff ( Roe and the First ) and just make getting an abortion impossible. You craft law after law that interfere with the doctor patient relationship, direct a physician in the care he provides and cry about Obamacare being a takeover of health care.

    This isn’t going to stop. The GOP’ers are going to win this mess. In time you’ll have a GOP’er packed SCOTUS, a GOP’er Congress and POTUS and its all over folks. You think not? They reelected Scott, Walker, Brownback, Le Page and NC elected this Duke Energy creep to run their state. FOX wins and we all lose. GOP’ers lose too because this is a formula for America’s descent.

  3. I certainly feel that way sometimes too. Then I look at the changing demography of the country and remind myself that the white fright freakout since Obama’s election is, in fact, a “tell” that they know they are fucked. Their voting restrictions, gerrymandering and even this “one person, one vote” nonsense are all temporary bandaids for the severe existential crisis they face…and they know it. All this radicalization, denial and end-run nonsense is avoidance behavior, because they desperately don’t want to face the music and do he hard work of admitting that, for many of these issues, they are going to have to give up the ghost in order to survive. Perhaps that’s all happy horseshit I tell myself so I can sleep at night, but I think there’s at least some elements of truth to it.

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