6
hours
ago
AUSTIN,
Texas -- The federal government will withdraw funding for a Texas
program providing more than 100,000 poor women with birth control and
other health services because Planned Parenthood clinics are not
allowed to participate, a U.S. Health and Human Services spokeswoman
said on Friday.
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen
Sebelius announced the decision in Houston on Friday, prompting a
furious response from Texas Governor Rick Perry, who called it an
"egregious federal overreach."
At the heart of the dispute between the administration of President Barack Obama and Texas is the divisive issue of abortion.
Texas begins enforcing strict anti-abortion sonogram law
The Texas legislature last year voted to cut off funding for Planned
Parenthood because the network of women's health clinics performs
abortions. The federal government says that this violates rules of
Medicaid, the health program for the poor.
Some 130,000
low-income Texas women who get free exams and contraceptives through
Medicaid could lose those benefits as a result of the dispute.
The
program provides free birth control and annual exams to women of
reproductive age who do not qualify for the regular Medicaid program for
the poor. The federal government pays 90 percent of the cost and Texas
puts up about $4 million a year.
Wisconsin, North Carolina,
Tennessee and Indiana all have joined Texas trying to block Planned
Parenthood from receiving taxpayer money in the last year. Several
other states, including Ohio, Oklahoma and New Hampshire, are
considering similar moves.
'Politically motivated'
While
public funds do not pay for abortions, critics of Planned Parenthood
argue that hiring the organization to provide family planning to poor
women helps the organization stay afloat and thus indirectly supports
abortion services.
The Texas funding cut prompted Planned Parenthood to shut down 11 clinics in the state.
Perry
said the decision by the Obama administration was "politically
motivated," and said it was an affront that Sebelius had not informed
the state of Texas before announcing the move to the press.
After touring a hospital in Houston Friday, Sebelius said the state
law violates federal Medicaid regulations that require women be allowed
to choose where they go for health care. Federal funds flowed to Texas
under a waiver, but "we plan to let Texas know that that waiver will
not be extended," Sebelius said.
The money will be phased out so women have time to find alternative care, she said.
The state was warned that implementing the law would jeopardize
federal funding, and Texas chose not to immediately enforce it when it
was passed, Sebelius added.
"They knew ... they are not allowed to deny women the right to
choose," Sebelius said. "Women would be losing their doctor, their
medical home, their choice."
Stephanie Goodman, spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Health
and Human Services, said money to pay for the program would be diverted
from others that are under budget - though she didn't offer specifics.
If that doesn't cover the costs, she said, the state would increase
its deficit to pay for the services because officials believe that if
low-income women don't have access to birth control, the birth rate
would rise and cost the state another $57 million in maternity bills.
The
abortion fight is the latest of a string of disputes between Obama's
Democratic administration and the Republican-dominated Texas state
government. The two sparred last year over disaster aid for Texas after
devastating wildfires and environmental regulations Texas opposes.
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