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Two Abortion Bills Are Making Their Way Through the Statehouse

protestors
JO INGLES
/
STATEHOUSE NEWS BUREAU
Protestors on both sides of the abortion issue gather at the Ohio Statehouse.

Abortion is a big deal for Ohio lawmakers as they proceed through the Lame Duck session of this legislature. There are two bills that could end up on Governor Kasich’s desk soon.

The so called “Heartbeat Bill” that bans abortion at the point a fetal heartbeat is detected got another hearing before a House committee but it didn’t get what its backers want – a vote. Committee Chair Dave Burke delayed that while lawmakers examined some possible amendments to the controversial legislation, a delay that bill backer Janet Folger Porter says is unnecessary.

“This has been the most deliberated Heartbeat Bill in the country.”

There are concerns about its constitutionality, even by some anti-abortion groups like Ohio Right to Life. Other states have passed similar heartbeat bills but they are not in effect because courts have struck them down. Folger Porter says that won’t be the case with Ohio’s bill if it passes. 

“This is the bill that was crafted exactly for the Supreme Court. It was meant from its birth, from its conception, to be before the court. Nothing else needs to be done to this and anything else is a delay that not only hurts its chances for override, it can kill the bill and the babies it is meant to protect.”

This is the second time in two years that Folger Porter has dealt with her bill in the waning days of the legislature. Two years ago, the bill passed the Ohio Legislature, only to be vetoed by Gov. John Kasich.  That could happen again since Kasich is promising to veto this bill. But the longer lawmakers delay the vote on the measure, the better, as far as Jaime Miracle with NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio is concerned.

“These delays make it much less likely that this bill will go into effect.”

She knows Kasich has ten days to veto the bill and the closer that gets to the holidays, the less likely it will be to get enough lawmakers to come back to vote for an override on that expected veto.

Miracle says her real concern switches to the House where a committee has passed a different abortion bill to outlaw dilation and evacuation, a procedure that is commonly used at 12 weeks of gestation. The legislation which has already passed the Ohio Senate could be passed by the full Ohio House before the end of this week. Miracle says it lacks safeguards to make sure pregnant women have options to protect their health due to the standard put forth in the bill.

“Severe and irreversible harm to a woman’s body is not a protection for her health. The doctor would have to wait until she was so far along that they may not be able to protect her health or her life.”  

Miracle calls on lawmakers to quit playing games with the abortion issue. She doesn’t think it’s an accident that the legislature appears prepared to send Kasich two abortion bills – one he will veto and the other he will sign. That’s exactly what happened two years ago when Kasich vetoed a similar version of the “Heartbeat Bill.” He signed a different bill at the same time that bans abortions past 20 weeks. 

Jo Ingles is a professional journalist who covers politics and Ohio government for the Ohio Public Radio and Television for the Ohio Public Radio and Television Statehouse News Bureau. She reports on issues of importance to Ohioans including education, legislation, politics, and life and death issues such as capital punishment. Jo started her career in Louisville, Kentucky in the mid 80’s when she helped produce a televised presidential debate for ABC News, worked for a creative services company and served as a general assignment report for a commercial radio station. In 1989, she returned back to her native Ohio to work at the WOSU Stations in Columbus where she began a long resume in public radio.