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  • SAY NO TO STATE-SPONSORED ABORTION

    Beneath the technical language of New York’s pending State Fiscal Year (FY) 2027 budget (covering April 1, 2026–March 31, 2027) lies a major policy shift that many New Yorkers may not realize is happening at all. What is unfolding in Albany is not a single transparent vote on abortion funding, but a quiet, cumulative strategy to entrench abortion as a permanent, taxpayer-funded priority in New York State. Through the Executive Budget process advanced by the administration of Governor Kathy Hochul—and amplified by coordinated advocacy campaigns—tens of millions of dollars are being proposed, renewed, or expanded across multiple programs that collectively total roughly $100 million in abortion-related spending. Some components, such as the Reproductive Freedom and Equity Program (RFEP) , have already been enacted in prior state budgets , while others are being pushed as “must-fund” priorities in the FY 2027 budget negotiations without standalone bills or clear public debate, including: A $35 million state “backfill” to replace lost federal Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood and affiliated abortion providers An increase to $30 million annually for the Reproductive Freedom and Equity Program, expanding taxpayer-funded abortion grants $20 million in sustained funding for medication abortion and care later in pregnancy, despite ongoing concerns about Medicaid reimbursement structures and oversight $15 million in continued capital and infrastructure funding for abortion providers, including facility upgrades and debt retirement under the Reproductive Health Care Improvement Program Together, these items are being advanced through the state budget appropriation process rather than through discrete legislation, limiting transparency and shielding the scale of abortion-related spending from direct public scrutiny. This piecemeal approach obscures the true scope of state involvement in abortion, shields lawmakers from accountability, and steadily diverts scarce public resources away from life-affirming supports like prenatal care, adoption services, and assistance for mothers in need. Voters and legislators who oppose abortion should recognize this moment for what it is: a deliberate effort to normalize, expand, and publicly finance abortion through the budget process—and they should say no before these priorities become permanently embedded in New York State law.

  • Feminists Condemn NY Governor’s Signing of Medical Aid in Dying Act (MAID) State-Sanctioned Suicide Is Anti-Women, Anti-Human Rights, and a Betrayal of the Vulnerable

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 7, 2026 Contact: info@fclny.org, FCLNY.ORG Feminists Condemn NY Governor’s Signing of Medical Aid in Dying Act (MAID) State-Sanctioned Suicide Is Anti-Women, Anti-Human Rights, and a Betrayal of the Vulnerable Feminists Choosing Life of New York (FCLNY), a statewide human rights organization committed to a consistent ethic of life, expresses profound dismay and moral outrage at the Governor’s signing of New York’s Medical Aid in Dying Act on February 6. "MAID does not represent compassion, progress, or respect for human dignity. It represents the abandonment of New Yorkers—especially women, people with disabilities, the poor, and those struggling with illness, isolation, or despair—at the moment they most need care, protection, and hope," claims FCLNY's executive director, Michele Sterlace-Accorsi. FCLNY opposes all forms of state-sanctioned lethal violence, including abortion and assisted suicide. "The legalization of physician-assisted suicide is not a neutral policy choice; it is a profound shift in how the state understands the value of human life," adds Sterlace-Accorsi. "When government authorizes suicide as a medical “treatment,” it sends a chilling message: some lives are no longer worth the investment of care, compassion, and resources." Medical Aid in Dying Is Anti-Women Amy Crossed, FCLNY Board Director, states: "Assisted suicide laws disproportionately impact women. Studies show that in jurisdictions where Medical Aid in Dying is legal, women are more likely than men to use these laws. This is not surprising. Women are more likely to live longer, to be widowed, to experience poverty in old age, to shoulder caregiving burdens, and to internalize feelings of being a “burden” on others. When the state offers death instead of support, women are subtly—but powerfully—pushed toward choosing it." "Women deserve better than a prescription for death. They deserve affordable, effective, and compassionate hospice and palliative care. They deserve mental health support, pain management, social connection, and the assurance that their lives retain dignity and meaning even in illness, disability, or dependency, " says Cecelia Lester, FCLNY's Board President. Assisted Suicide Increases Overall Suicide Rates "Evidence from states and countries where assisted suicide is legal shows a troubling pattern: legalization is associated with significant increases in overall suicide rates, " highlights Sterlace-Accorsi. "Rather than preventing desperate deaths, state-sanctioned suicide normalizes self-destruction as a solution to suffering. This cultural shift endangers everyone—but especially vulnerable individuals already at risk of suicide, including people with disabilities, those experiencing depression, and even children and adolescents who absorb the message that some lives are expendable," posits Lester. Extreme Autonomy at the Expense of the Vulnerable According to Sterlace-Accorsi: "The Medical Aid in Dying Act embodies an extreme and distorted vision of autonomy—one that elevates individual choice above social responsibility and communal care. True freedom does not exist in a vacuum. Choices are shaped by economic pressure, inadequate healthcare, fear of dependency, and social isolation. For the poor, the disabled, and the marginalized, “choice” can quickly become coercion. A society that offers death instead of care has failed its most basic human rights obligations." State-Sanctioned Suicide Degrades Us All FCLNY believes that government-approved suicide devalues life itself. It tells people who are suffering that their continued existence is negotiable, conditional, and costly. The group says that: "True compassion never involves helping someone die because caring for them is inconvenient or expensive. True compassion means refusing to abandon anyone—especially those who most need support, love, and hope." "New York should be leading the nation in expanding access to high-quality hospice care, palliative medicine, disability services, and mental health support—not in authorizing doctors to help patients end their lives," claims the organization. According to Lester, "Feminists Choosing Life of New York will continue to stand for women, for the vulnerable, and for the radical, unwavering belief that every human life has inherent dignity and worth." "New Yorkers deserve better than MAID. Compassion must never be confused with killing," she adds. XXX

  • Feminists Choosing Life of New York Urges Governor Hochul to Reconsider Support for Medical Aid in Dying Act

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Media Contact: Bernadette Patel,  BPFCNLY@gmail.com  1 (480) 388-0280 Feminists Choosing Life of New York Urges Governor Hochul to Reconsider Support for Medical Aid in Dying Act Rochester, NY — December 17, 2025 — Feminists Choosing Life of New York (FCLNY) — a statewide human-rights organization that promotes pro-life feminism and the consistent life ethic, affirming the inherent dignity and value of all human life from conception through natural death — today calls on Governor Kathy Hochul to withdraw her support for the Medical Aid in Dying Act (MAID). Consistent with FCLNY’s principles, the organization opposes MAID as a destructive act of violence that ends human life and undermines society’s obligation to care for its most vulnerable members. MAID intentionally terminates life, and reframing it as “medical care” does not eliminate its harm — it normalizes suicide, the deliberate ending of one’s own life. In her recent Albany Times Union op-ed and public statements, Governor Hochul announced her intention to sign an amended version of the MAID legislation, which permits medically assisted death for terminally ill adults under specified conditions. The amendments include procedural safeguards such as a five-day waiting period, dual written and oral requests, and a mandatory mental-health evaluation to confirm decision-making capacity.  “Regardless of any purported safeguards, MAID is an act of violence that kills people,” says Michele Sterlace-Accorsi, Executive Director of Feminists Choosing Life of New York. “Legalizing assisted suicide — even with procedural safeguards — sends a troubling message that some lives are less worthy of protection when illness, disability, or suffering is involved. And where MAID is legal, suicide rates increase, especially for women, studies show.” Why MAID Remains Harmful Despite procedural amendments, the law still authorizes physician-assisted death for terminally ill patients and retains risks critics have repeatedly warned against, including  Undermining suicide-prevention efforts by framing death as a treatment option rather than investing in care. Vulnerability to coercion or social pressure, which cannot be fully mitigated by procedural safeguards, particularly for people with disabilities, chronic illness, or inadequate access to palliative care. Structural inequities that leave individuals isolated, fearful of being a burden, or lacking access to mental-health services, making voluntary consent questionable. Reinforcing deadly assumptions about quality of life, codifying bias against people whose lives involve dependence or suffering. FCLNY Calls for a Better Path Feminists Choosing Life of New York urges Governor Hochul to reconsider MAID and instead champion policies that reflect true compassion: Expand access to quality palliative and hospice care Strengthen mental-health and suicide-prevention services Improve disability supports and community-based care “Perpetuating a culture where death is an acceptable solution to suffering contradicts our duty to care for every life, especially those who are most vulnerable,” states Bernadette Patel, an FCLNY Spokesperson and Grassroots Outreach Director. XXX

  • Feminists Urge the NYS Legislature to Bury MAID and for Governor Hochul to Continue Fighting Against the Violence of Suicide.

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEMedia Contact: Michele Sterlace-Accorsi, (716) 864 1454,  info@fclny.org Rochester, NY, July 15, 2025 – Following in the footsteps of the Democratic controlled New York State Assembly, and at the bitter end of NY’s 2025 legislative session, assisted suicide or Medical Aid in Dying (MAID) passed in the NYS Senate, as many folks are already aware.  The Medical Aid in Dying Act,  S138 ,  however,  has still not been delivered to NY's Governor for signature. If Governor Hochul fails to sign it, once delivered to her, MAID will die, or undergo a 'pocket veto' according to  Article IV, Section 7 of the New York State Constitution. "We are deeply disappointed that the senate passed MAID, and ask the NYS legislature to refrain from sending the bill to Governor Hochul for signature. But if they do, we urge our Governor to reject legalizing assisted suicide by refusing to sign the MAID bill," states Cecelia Lester, President of Feminists Choosing Life of New York (FCLNY), a statewide human rights organization that promotes non-violence and the consistent life ethic. “In 2024, Governor Hochul ensured millions of dollars for suicide prevention efforts in NY," says Michele Sterlace-Accorsi, FCLNY’s executive director; “On behalf of our brothers and sisters at risk of suicide, we’re asking the NYS legislature to bury MAID, and for the Governor to stand strong and true to her  word  to keep fighting to end the violence of suicide, including assisted suicide or MAID." Sterlace-Accorsi claims, Empirical  evidence   demonstrates that where assisted suicide is legalized, total suicide rates significantly increase, including non-assisted suicide rates in some cases. No study has identified a reduction in non-assisted suicide rates where MAID is legal.  Data  outlined by the Centre for Economic Policy Research show that assisted suicide laws increase total suicide rates by 18% overall and by 40% for women, with non-assisted suicide rates rising by 6% overall and 13% for women. She goes on to state, Recent statistical  analysis   on suicide in the United States shows rates of suicide have reached record high levels not seen “since 1941.” NY’s  suicide rate   has increased by 34.9% over the past 20 years. Suicide in  NY   is the 2nd leading cause of death for ages 25-34, and the 3rd leading cause of death for ages 10-24, where suicide rates have increased by 62% nationwide from 2007-2021, according to the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . Further,  research   released during the summer of 2024 by the Yale School of Medicine found that suicide is dramatically rising in preteens as young as 8 years old, with an 8.2% annual increase from 2008 to 2022.” “As thoughtful, kind people how can we do anything but work to decrease rates of suicide?” She adds. “How could Governor Hochul possibly sign into law a bill that normalizes suicide, threatens to increase suicide rates, disproportionately impacts women, and thwarts suicide prevention efforts?”

  • FEMINISTS CHOOSING LIFE OF NEW YORK (FCLNY) URGES NYS REGISTERED VOTERS TO MAKE CALLS TO HELP DEFEAT NEW YORK’S MEDICAL AID IN DYING ACT (MAID) S.138

    FCLNY is humbly asking you to help stop assisted suicide or MAID from passing in the NYS Senate, and for you to share this outreach letter with others that you think will also make calls. We have a small window of continued opportunity to defeat MAID in the NYS Senate. The bill, S.138, could come up for a NYS Senate floor vote any day, literally. We have identified vulnerable NYS Senators to receive calls from as many registered NY voters as possible. Please call each NYS Senator listed below (in their District and Albany offices). Please ask some of your friends and family to call each of these NYS Senators as well. THESE CALLS MUST BE MADE ASAP, before the NYS Legislative Session ends on THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2025 Here is a simple draft SCRIPT (Just leave a message if no one answers the phone. You can call after 5 PM, if you can't get to it earlier in the day.) Dear Senator  _______, I am a voting New Yorker, and as a registered NY voter, I am urging you to VOTE NO to the Medical Aid in Dying Act, S.138; not only on my behalf, but on behalf of my colleagues across New York State. Empirical data demonstrates that when MAID is legalized, overall suicide rates significantly increase, including non-assisted suicide rates, in some cases. MAID normalizes suicide and threatens suicide prevention efforts. Every major national disability organization that has taken a stance on assisted suicide opposes MAID. The American Medical Association opposes MAID. Research consistently shows the ineffectiveness of MAID safeguards, including those contained in S.138. The MAID bill contains no ban on lethal drugs being sent across state lines. Please VOTE NO TO S.138. LIST OF CRUCIAL NYS SENATORS TO CALL BY JUNE 12, 2025: 1. Shelly Mayer: District (914) 934-5250/ Albany (518) 455-2031 2. Brian Kavanaugh: District (212) 298-5565/ Albany (518) 455-2625 3. Jamal Bailey: District (718) 547-8854/Albany (518) 455-2061 4. Patricia Fahy: District (518) 842-2159/ Albany (518) 455-2225 5. Joseph Addabbo: District (718) 738-1111/ Albany (518) 455-2322 6. April Baskin: District (716) 826-2683/ Albany (518) 455-2426 7. Monica Martinez: District (631) 341-7111/ Albany (518) 455-2765 8. Cordell Cleare: District (212) 222-7315/ Albany (518) 455-2441 9. Andrea Stewart-Cousins: District (914) 423-4031/ Albany (518) 455-2585 10. John Liu: District (718) 765-6675/ Albany (518) 455-2210 11. Andrew Gounardes: District (718) 238-6044/ Albany (518) 455-3270 12. Siela Bynoe: District (516) 739-1700/ Albany (518) 455-3260 13. Toby Ann Stavisky: District (718) 445-0004/ Albany (518) 455-3461 14. Kevin Parker: District (718) 629-6401/ Albany (518) 455-2580 15. Rob Rolison: District (845) 229- 0106/Albany (518) 455-2945 16. Jack Martins: District (516) 922-1811/ Albany (518) 455-2677 THANK YOU FOR YOUR HELP! Please reach out anytime with any questions or concerns, (716) 864-1454, info@fclny.org . Michele Sterlace-Accorsi FCLNY, Executive Director

  • 2025 OPEN LETTER TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE NEW YORK STATE LEGISLATURE URGING OPPOSITION TO THE MEDICAL AID IN DYING ACT (MAID), S00138, A00136

    Feminists Choosing Life of New York, Inc., is a statewide human rights organization that advocates for non-violence from conception to natural death. Our supporters across New York recognize the power of peaceful, life-affirming solutions to the distresses vulnerable people experience.  We believe our elderly, infirm and disabled brothers and sisters, pregnant mothers and their unborn children, as well as every person at risk of suicide, deserve our best resources and protection against human rights violations, including the fundamental right to live free from violent destruction— the most basic human right of every member of the human family.  PROGRESSIVE SOCIETIES DO NOT LEGALLY SANCTION AND FUND  KILLING HUMAN BEINGS The pending MAID or Assisted Suicide bills threaten to Violate Human Rights Significantly Increase Overall Suicide Rates, including Non-Assisted Suicide Rates Jeopardize Suicide Prevention Efforts   NY’s MAID bills permit doctors to give qualifying people, including teenagers (18 & 19 year olds) a lethal overdose of drugs to self-administer.  Studies  show “prognostic error is widespread,“ that doctors charged with determining whether an individual qualifies or is plagued with a terminal illness that will cause death within 6 months have an accuracy rate of only 20%.  There is ample  “evidence that patients, including with disabilities, are being denied treatment by insurers and offered assisted suicide instead.” Data reveals that when medical aid in dying is legalized “it immediately becomes the cheapest treatment. Direct coercion is not necessary.” Where insurers “deny or even simply delay approval of expensive life-sustaining treatment,” patients are more susceptible to self-initiated deaths. The current NY MAID bills allow “abusive caregiver s  …[to] steer someone toward it, witness the request, pick up the lethal dose, and even, in the end, give the drug- because when the lethal agents are administered, no witnesses are required.”  Research consistently demonstrates the ineffectiveness of ‘safeguards’ in MAID laws, including those contained in NY’s pending MAID bills. Data demonstrates how purported patient ‘protections’ are readily circumvented, and ultimately fail  to ensure the mental capacity of potential MAID patients, and to protect them from social, familial and financial pressures to end their own lives– to commit suicide.  Every  “prominent national disability organization that takes any position on assisted suicide laws is in opposition.” The American Medical Association opposes MAID.  Robust research demonstrates that legalizing assisted suicide is associated with a “significant increase  in total suicides,” which includes non-assisted suicides.  Studies show rates of self-initiated deaths increase significantly after the legalization of assisted suicide, and that these rates  increase for non-assisted suicides as well, in some cases. No study exists showing any decline in non-assisted suicide rates where MAID is legal. The increase in suicide rates (assisted and non assisted) where MAID proposals are legalized “disproportionately” impact   women .  Research  “estimates suggest assisted suicide laws increase total suicide rates by about 18% overall. For women, the estimated increase is 40%.” Increasing evidence  shows that legalizing assisted suicide or MAID is a “threat to suicide prevention.” Suicide prevention  programs are effective. The “suicide rate in New York  has increased by 34.9% over the past 20 years”  In NY, s uicide  is the “2nd leading cause of death for ages 25-34” and the “3rd leading cause of death for ages 10-24.”  Every “16 hours, someone dies from suicide in  New York City ” According to recent statistical analysis  on suicide in the United States, U.S. suicide rates reached “record highs” in 2024, “ rates reaching levels not seen since 1941.” “This marks a concerning 30% increase over the past two decades,” “indicating a persistent upward trend.”  Suicide   “deaths among 10- to 24-year-olds increased by 62% from 2007 to 2021 .” Research   released during the summer of 2024 “found that suicide is rising dramatically in preteens as young as 8 years old as well, with an 8.2% annual increase from 2008 to 2022 .” Legalizing MAID threatens to Normalize Suicide Increase Overall Suicide Rates Jeopardize Suicide Prevention Efforts Violate the Human Rights of all New Yorkers, especially Women and the Disabled  We can do better. We must do better.  On behalf of the weakest and most marginalized among us, across New York, please reject the violence of MAID.

  • Whole-Life Feminists Call Upon the NYS Senate to Reject the Medical Aid In Dying Act

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Media Contact: Michele Sterlace-Accorsi, (716) 864 1454, info@fclny.org Rochester, NY, May 1, 2025– The proposed Medical Aid in Dying Act ( MAID ) is moving forward in the New York State Legislature, with Assembly Bill A136 having already passed in the Assembly and been referred to the Senate. Diverse groups call upon the NYS Legislature to VOTE NO to MAID, including Feminists Choosing Life of New York (FCLNY), a statewide human rights organization that promotes non-violence. FCLNY is a member of the New York Alliance Against Assisted Suicide , comprised of diverse groups including the Center for Disability Rights, the Autistic Self Advocacy Network and the NY Association of Independent Living, all of which oppose MAID.  According to Cecelia Lester, President of Feminists Choosing Life of New York, “ evidence that physician assisted suicide does more harm than good has only mounted  in the last 10 years.   Every  major national disability organization that has taken a stance on assisted suicide laws stands in opposition to them. The   American Medical Association  is a long-standing opponent of MAID.”  “In the name of compassion and self governance, MAID threatens to violate human rights,  increase overall suicide rates, including non-assisted suicide rates, and jeopardize suicide prevention efforts, all of which disproportionately impact women , the disabled  and low-income  populations,” states FCLNY’s Executive Director Michele Sterlace-Accorsi. “Despite wording in the pending MAID bills that a self-administered drug overdose by a person who qualifies under MAID ‘shall not be construed for any purpose to constitute suicide [or] assisted suicide,’ it is precisely that- suicide,” Sterlace-Accorsi says. Empirical evidence  demonstrates that where assisted suicide is legalized, total suicide rates significantly increase, including non-assisted suicide rates in some cases. Further, per the Director of the Anscombe Bioethics Centre, Oxford University; "No study has found a reduction in non-assisted suicide" rates where MAID is legal. Data  outlined by the Centre for Economic Policy Research show that assisted suicide laws increase total suicide rates by 18% overall and by 40% for women, with non-assisted suicide rates rising by 6% overall and 13% for women.   According to   recent statistical analysis  on suicide in the United States, U.S. suicide rates reached “record highs” in 2024, “rates reaching levels not seen since 1941.” The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report s uicide   “deaths among 10-24 year olds  increased by 62% from 2007 to 2021 .”   Research   released during the summer of 2024 by the Yale School of Medicine “found that suicide is rising dramatically in preteens as young as 8 years old,” with an “ 8.2% annual increase from 2008 to 2022 .” The suicide rate in   N Y  has increased by “34.9% over the past 20 years.”  NY’s Office of Mental Health states s uicide  is the “2nd leading cause of death for ages 25-34” and the “3rd leading cause of death for ages 10-24.”  “As thinking, loving people how can we do anything but work to decrease rates of suicide?” states Sterlace-Accorsi. “ How could we possibly enact laws that serve to increase lethal harm to our brothers and sisters?” she asks. Further, Lester contends that qualifying restrictions in NY’s pending MAID bills will more likely than not be grossly expanded. “The slippery slope is real,” Lester states.  “ Canada has since been exposed  for providing MAID to citizens who simply could not afford their medical bills or housing and the nation is poised to expand physician assisted suicide for mental illness  in March of 2027.   MAID is now a leading cause of death  in Canada,” she adds. “On behalf of the weakest and most vulnerable among us, NYS Senators should reject the violence of MAID,” says both Lester and Sterlace-Accorsi.  XXX

  • Rochester calls on DOGE to stop tax-payers dollars for abortion: Protest to defund Planned Parenthood is among the nearly 100 nationwide

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 31, 2025 Rochester calls on DOGE to stop tax-payers dollars for abortion: Protest to defund Planned Parenthood is among the nearly 100 nationwide Brighton, NY  -  One of 78 nationwide events calling for the defunding of the abortion giant Planned Parenthood will take place at its new facility in Brighton, New York.     “Say no to funding abortion”  Wednesday, April 2nd, 11am – 12: 30 Corner of Westfall Road and South Clinton Ave., Brighton, NY April 2, is in conjunction with the United States Supreme Court hearing of oral arguments in the case of Kerr v. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic concerning state funding for abortions.  The protest calls for Planned Parenthood to be stripped of all federal funding in DOGE and in the Congressional Budget being voted on this week.  Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion chain, receives nearly $700 million in taxpayer funding every year. A recent New York Times expose , Botched Care and Tired Staff: Planned Parenthood in Crisis , found the abortion giant spends more resources lobbying in Washington DC than providing services for women.   Planned Parenthood provides less than 1% of annual pap tests and breast exams, but performs 42% of annual abortions in the U.S.  Numerous court cases re: shielding child predators, defrauding Medicaid, and harvesting fetal tissue for profit have contributed to the abortion conglomerate’s crisis in staff morale.  According to Cecelia Lester, Brighton Residents Against Violence to Everyone (BRAVE), the effort locally to defund Planned Parenthood has nothing to do with taking real healthcare away from women. “The city’s healthcare directory lists nine Federally Qualified Health Care Centers in the Rochester area that provide all necessary reproductive non-abortion medical services including STD testing.” Says Lester. "Elective abortion is not healthcare. Most women seeking abortion do so because they need financial assistance. When abortion supporters insist abortion is healthcare they divert attention and resources away from the real needs which drive women to abortion.”  Further, Lester states, “We don’t see destroying women’s pre-born children as either healthy or charitable.” Feminists Choosing Life of New York concurs. “ No funding should be taken away from programs that help poor women and families.” says Carol Crossed, Vice-President of FCLNY. “ As a matter of fact, we want every dollar taken from Planned Parenthood to be redirected to health centers that provide a wider range of services and higher standard of care than Planned Parenthood, without doing abortions.” Media Contacts Cecelia Lester, Brighton Residents Against Abortion (BRAVE),  ceceliahayes@yahoo.com .  Carol Crossed, Feminist Choosing Life of New York, carolncrossed@gmail.com , (585)730-7808, (585) 473-6743

  • Hot! Letters to the Editor Sent: New York Times, February, 2025

    To the Editor: NYT I don’t understand how reported increases in infant mortality and morbidity rates can be “unexpected” in most states with abortion bans post Dobbs . As outlined in “After Abortion Bans, Infant Mortality and Births Increased, Research Finds,”  the same economically disadvantaged people historically undergoing abortions, instead gave birth to children. Dr. Harrison said it best “these ‘excess’ children who were born would have been killed by induced abortions.”  Poverty has long been recognized as the fiercest driver of abortion as well as infant mortality and morbidity.   What can be rightly considered ‘unexpected’ is the decrease in infant mortality rates in 4 of the 14 states with abortion bans, evaluated by the JAMA studies, Belluck’s article discusses.  While JAMA researchers say expanded abortion access in neighboring states is “most likely” responsible for the decrease, other potential reasons are largely overlooked. Namely, did these 4 states both restrict abortion and enhance support for poor pregnant mothers? And if so, to what extent? As a feminist, committed to protecting human life from conception to natural death, I join the call for improved “support systems and funding for pregnant women and infants,” echoed in Belluck’s piece.  All human beings are worth our time and attention. Michele Sterlace-Accorsi, JD, LLM Feminists Choosing Life of New York, Inc., Executive Director To the Editor: NYT I am one of many sidewalk advocates for life in Rochester, NY and you've brought to light what we know, Planned Parenthood puts abortion first.  (Feb. 16 Planned Parenthood in Crisis) As advocates we lovingly offer support to women entering Planned Parenthood. One mother, well into her second trimester, left Planned Parenthood and came to us for help.  She decided against abortion.  Without her knowledge or consent Planned Parenthood gave her name and number to a local late term abortionist who badgered her repeatedly to arrange an abortion.  Upset, she finally had to block their number. Fortunately for Planned Parenthood, the underserved population doesn't tend to complain, they just disappear. Planned Parenthood aggressively promotes abortion at the expense of the health and wellbeing of the women they claim to serve.  Dorothy Hayes To the Editor: NYT It is clear, as shown in the NYT article Botched Care and Tired Staff: Planned Parenthood in Crisis, Planned Parenthood’s primary motive is to make money through abortions, rather than to care for women’s health. According to your article,  PP of Northern California ended its prenatal care program in 2023 due to a $379,000 expense shortfall despite; 1. Receiving a $1.3 M county contract for prenatal healthcare delivery 2. Another $275 million gift given to National and affiliates 3. National office spending $40 million on political campaigns in 2023 and according to PPNoCal’s 2024 annual report, prenatal program ended despite 4. spending over $60M in operating expenses and 5. Opening a new, expanded center that can offer abortion services.  I wonder if the prenatal patients having to go elsewhere agree with the CEO’s characterization of it being a “necessary decision”. Amy Crossed, Feminists Choosing Life of New York, Board Director To the Editor: NYT  Thanks for covering Planned Parenthood on Feb 15.  Brighton, NY where we live opened a new Planned Parenthood in Fall of 2024 and many residents, including myself, fought its' opening. Ms. Benner’s article confirms our feelings and findings. You say the normal appointment is 10-15 minutes and then later talk about the 12- and 13-year-olds getting abortion “sometimes because a family member impregnated them.”    Is Planned Parenthood asking the right question to protect these children from the abuse and rape (after all they are too young to consent) and reporting it to the proper authorities? Sadly, the obvious answer is NO. The same goes for impregnated sex trafficked victims, many young, which this article failed to reference -- there is a strong correlation between abortion and sex trafficking.   The article references a California clinic that cancelled prenatal care – no surprise there.  If there is even a PP clinic somewhere else that provides prenatal care it is a miniscule fraction. Another takeaway is the financial strains on Planned Parenthood Federation, a non-profit. The Director is compensated almost $900 million and other top executives including their development executive make over $500,000.  Seriously!  What women do not realize is that all the “services” Planned Parenthood provides, other than abortion, can be obtained at most community health clinics in a much safer way. Abortion is what sustains PP financially and while they are focusing on profits, they are jeopardizing women’s health and safety. Jessica C. Shanahan, MA, MS Brighton Residents Against Violence (BRAVE) To the Editor: NYT For years, Planned Parenthood has downplayed the role abortion plays in their financial stability.  Proponents often make the dubious claim that abortion is only 3% of the services they provide.  However the NYT’s article  “Botched Care and Tired Staff: Planned Parenthood in Crisis,” reveals that abortion services are integral to Planned Parenthood’s ability to operate, as funding abortion politics has been admittedly prioritized over funding patient care.  If Planned Parenthood is financially motivated by whether or not individual patients choose abortion, they cannot possibly be relied upon to provide neutral guidance in discussing abortion choice with patients.  Taxpayer funding should only go to health care providers who are not financially incentivized by their patient’s abortion choice. Cecelia Lester, Feminists Choosing Life of New York, President. *LTE submitted, but not published.

  • FCLNY'S 2023 NYS Bills Packet: EXPANSIVE MEASURES REGARDING THE WELL-BEING OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN

    Dear NYS Legislator: Feminists Choosing Life of NY (FCLNY) is a state-wide human rights organization that educates on the root causes and impacts of publicly sanctioned lethal violence. We have compiled a ten (10) bill package containing expansive measures regarding the well-being of women and children. Please find below pending laws we ask you to carefully consider; eight (8) we urge you to enact, and two (2) we ask you to oppose, on behalf of not only your constituents, but women and children across our great state. Sincerely, FCLNY www.fclny.org VOTE YES 1. UNBORN VICTIMS OF VIOLENCE ACT, S.5308 NYS Senate Codes Committee, March 1, 2023 NYS Assembly, No analogous bill This bill provides that an unborn child, at any age, may be a victim of an assault or homicide. The bill carefully exempts unborn children who die because of a legal abortion, normal medical treatment or because of actions taken by his/her mother. NYS repealed its long-standing fetal homicide law, and re-defined “person” for homicide purposes, when it enacted the Reproductive Health Act in 2019. As a consequence, NYS fell behind the majority of states that provide protection and justice for victims of violence, including unborn children. Scientific consensus is clear: Human beings begin their existence at fertilization. Under current NYS Penal Law , a person is defined as a “human being who has been born and is alive.” It is no longer a separate crime in NYS for third party criminal assailants to kill unborn children, regardless of their gestational age and despite whether they are ‘wanted’ or ‘unwanted.’ Neither is there any particular enhanced statutory penalty for abusers to harm or kill pregnant women. Homicide is a leading cause of death of pregnant women and their unborn children in the U.S. Homicide deaths for pregnant women are more prevalent than deaths from obstetric causes. In other words, more pregnant women die because of vicious attacks against them rather than for physiological reasons. It is now well documented that: " It's not high blood pressure, hemorrhage or sepsis that is more likely to kill pregnant women -- it's their husbands and boyfriends." The U.S. has a higher rate of intimate partner violence than other affluent countries, and the problem is growing. Pregnancy-associated homicides are also increasing , and most pregnant homicide victims are killed by third party criminal assailants– abusive current or former intimate partners . Violence against women is a “major public health” concern and a “violation of women’s human rights.” Violence against women, especially pregnant women, necessitates a comprehensive approach towards its alleviation and elimination, including prosecutorial tools for perpetrator accountability. The least any progressive society owes women and children is the opportunity to hold abusers accountable for violent acts perpetrated against them. 2. AFFORDABLE CHILD CARE STUDY, A.01852 NYS Senate, No analogous bill NYS Assembly Children and Families Committee, January 23, 2023 The bill purposes to help ensure access to affordable, quality child care in NYS for “low to moderate income families, especially for single parents.” It directs that “particular attention” focus on the relationship between child care subsidies and the “ability of working families to achieve self-sufficiency.” The bill directs the Office of Children and Family Service to conduct a study of child care availability, child care assistance and child care funding in NYS. The bill seeks to aid the Child Care Availability Task Force’s efforts to address the deficiencies of NYS’ child care system. The study the bill seeks to implement will “not only look at the current number of providers, but also the cost, quality, labor force, waiting lists and transportation barriers across the state” regarding child care. Parents throughout NYS lack access to affordable, quality childcare. Research demonstrates that NYS’ child care system is in crisis, and “on the verge of collapse.” Various programs in NYS provide free or low-cost child care to poor families, including the EarlyLearn Program and the NYS Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP). Despite NYS’ efforts to improve access to child care, including increasing the income eligibility standards for child care subsidies, affordable child care for low-income parents and children is largely out of reach. For example , in NYC, “State funding will only cover 15% or 10,800 out of 72,000 of … eligible families.” According to the bill’s justification “only 22% of income-eligible families are receiving subsidies,” state-wide. For years, NYS has ineffectively and inefficiently addressed our state’s child care crisis through “piecemeal approaches and temporary solutions,” resulting in a child care system currently “on life support.” New York families deserve access to affordable, quality child care. 3. WORKING FAMILIES TAX CREDIT, S.277A , A.04022A NYS Senate Finance Committee, March 1, 2023 NYS Assembly Ways and Means Committee, February 17, 2023 This proposed law creates the New York Working Families Tax credit, which, among other things, provides working families a maximum tax credit of $1,500 per child, and, regardless of income, a minimum credit of $500 per child. The Working Families Tax Credit streamlines NYS’ Earned Income Tax Credit and Empire State Child Tax Credit “to provide working families with increased support while lessening the additional cost to the state.” It fills in gaps within the other tax credit schemes, including by applying to children from birth to 3 years old, and by eliminating “the cap on the number of children eligible to receive a credit.” Further, payments will be made to families quarterly rather than in one lump annual sum. The bills were introduced in response to the federal government’s unwillingness to recently renew the expanded federal child tax credit provided in the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). According to the U.S. Census Bureau , the ARPA child tax credit “ lifted 2.1 million children out of poverty. It helped drive child poverty to 5.2%, a drop of 46%, according to the bureau’s Supplemental Poverty Measure. Over 2 million New Yorkers, including nearly 715,000 children in NYS live in poverty . According to the Schuyler Center for Analysis and Advocacy , NYS children are “more likely to live in poverty” than children in the vast majority of other states, with nearly one in five NYS children experiencing poverty. NYS rate of poverty also disproportionately impacts children of color. Minority children in NYS experience a near 30% poverty rate. Families with young children experience higher poverty rates than other families and “the birth of a child is the leading trigger of ‘poverty spells’ experienced by families.” The American Academy of Pediatrics reports the following regarding the impacts of poverty on children, The link between poverty and children’s health is well recognized. [P]overty in childhood continues to have a negative effect on health into adulthood. Poverty has direct negative effects on early brain development through the mechanism of toxic stress. Children growing up in low-income families and low-income neighborhoods face a daunting array of psychosocial and environmental inequities [including food insecurity and inadequate housing or homelessness]. Higher infant mortality rates among the impoverished [exist]. Children in the poorest 20% of urban populations in the United States are twice as likely to die before their first birthday compared with children in the richest 20% of the population.Children raised in poverty have been shown to have higher levels of depression and antisocial behavioral problems than those raised in families with adequate incomes. Depression in poor children younger than 18 years has been linked to substance abuse, poor academic performance, teen childbearing, and unemployment. The justification for the proposed Working Families Tax Credit estimates that the tax will result in a “13.4% reduction” in child poverty in NYS, with a “19.6% reduction” for children living in “deep poverty.” Poverty is a root cause of the most visceral harms experienced by members of our human family. Effective measures that reduce poverty should be government’s top priority. 4. DOULA DIRECTORY, S.1867 , A.05435 NYS Senate, Passed, Referred to Senate Health Committee, March 1, 2023 NYS Assembly Health Committee, March 10, 2023 These pending bills require the Department of Health (DOH) to establish and maintain a Doula Directory on the DOH website, for Medicaid reimbursement and Doula promotion. Doulas are health care workers that provide physical, emotional, and informational support to women before, during and after the birth of children. It is well documented that the U.S. has the highest rate of maternal mortality “among high income countries,” and that women of color are disproportionately impacted. Maternal morbidity and mortality is a public health crisis, and has been for “far too long. ” Poor infant and maternal health outcomes “pose a threat to the health, welfare, and quality of life” of women, children and families. NYS has not stepped up and continues to “lack adequate and equitable” health care for pregnant women . Women of color experience significantly higher rates of pregnancy complications and “mistreatment during the course of their pregnancy.” According to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine doula care during pregnancy is “one of the most effective tools to improve labor and delivery outcomes,” including for minority women and children. Studies on the effectiveness of doula care conclusively demonstrate that women who are supported by a doula during labor and childbirth are less likely to require a cesarean birth or use pain medication, and more likely to give birth spontaneously, have a shorter labor, and feel satisfied with their birthing experience. Pregnancy involves two lives, mother and child. Helping both achieve health and wholeness is the hallmark of vibrant civilized societies. 5. PARENTAL NOTIFICATION OF ABORTION, MINORS, S.2911 , A.03398 NYS Senate Women’s Issues Committee, Notice of Committee Consideration, March 16, 2023 NYS Assembly Health Committee, February 3, 2023 This proposed law requires “at least one parent or legal guardian” of an un-emancipated minor receive “written notification from a physician or his/her agent within 48 hours prior to the … performance of an abortion” on such minor child. " Exceptions are provided for in these bills. For example, parental notification is not necessary where minors obtain a judicial bypass or when “a medical emergency exists.” In light of the impacts of NYS’ Reproductive Health Act (RHA) on abortion policy in NYS parental notification requirements for minors seeking abortions is essential to the well-being of young women. Uncertainty surrounds the safety of abortions in NYS for women and girls because of the RHA, particularly due to its failure to require the Department of Health to track, report and publish categorized abortion complication data or to require abortion related ‘informed consent’ pre-abortions, while at the same time repealing long-standing common sense safeguards surrounding the abortion procedure in NYS. The RHA removed NYS’ statutory requirement that only duly licensed physicians perform abortions and that a second physician be present during surgical abortions performed on fetuses 20+ weeks gestation. The RHA neglected to define exactly who can perform abortions, including second and third trimester abortions. The RHA repealed NYS’ requirement that second and third trimester abortions be performed in hospitals, and failed to specifically require that these abortions occur in ambulatory surgical centers or similar facilities. The RHA also failed to require that all facilities that provide abortions undergo annual or random state health department inspections. Abortion complications increase where abortion guidelines are lax, like in NYS. Oregon, which has abortion policies similar to NYS, has more than double the averaged abortion complication rate (36.68) than all states (15.76) with more abortion regulations than Oregon and NYS, and that also track, report and publish abortion complication data. NYS does not publish any categorized abortion complication data. Young females that undergo abortions are also at risk for a slew of psychological problems. According to a 25 year longitudinal study published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry , females between the ages of 15-25 who had an abortion experienced “elevated rates of subsequent mental health problems including depression, anxiety, suicidal behaviours and substance use disorders,” which “persisted after adjustment for confounding factors.” In NYS, a minor can obtain an abortion during the first, second and third trimester of pregnancy, in a facility other than a hospital, ambulatory surgical center or similar facility, performed by an individual other than a physician, while lacking concrete knowledge of alternatives to abortion or the documented psychological risks associated with abortion, without notice to any parent, legal guardian, or any adult- other than the abortionist. A double standard exists in NYS relevant to minors or children, their engagement in potentially dangerous activities, and standards utilized for their protection. Parental involvement is required in NYS when minors get body piercings , but not when they undergo abortion procedures, even invasive surgical abortions. According to the American College of Pediatrics , [A]bortion should be treated as any other medical or surgical procedure. Medical care of children and adolescents uniformly requires written and verbal parental consent for any procedure – inside or outside of a medical office. For example, written parental consent is required for minor children to receive over-the-counter medications when in day care or at school. This is because appropriate medical care can only be provided within the context of the patient’s family and medical history. Physicians would be considered negligent if they did not obtain past medical and family history when providing care for a patient. This information is more crucial when a patient faces a surgical procedure that occurs in some abortions, and it is the parents who are more likely to have the complete medical information required for optimal medical care of the adolescent. Regarding potential abortion complications, the American College of Pediatrics says this, Parents or guardians of minors "help monitor an adolescent for complications after ... medical procedure[s]... ." They "help ensure compliance with medical instructions, prescriptions, and follow-up medical care. " In an Amicus Brief submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court on Roper vs. Simmons , 543 U.S. 551 (2005), a death penalty case involving a minor, the American Psychological Association argued against its applicability to minors and won. Their reasoning is similar to why minors cannot ‘consent’ to participating in sex trafficking: During adolescence “the brain has not reached adult maturity, particularly in the frontal lobes, which control executive functions of the brain related to decision-making.” When parental notification laws for abortion were introduced in Minnesota teens, 15-17 years old, became more sexually responsible, abortion rates for these minors markedly decreased and birth rates continued to fall for this population. Research from multiple sources including from states other than Minnesota also demonstrates “benefits when parental involvement laws are instituted, including a decrease in abortion rates without an increase in birth rates, a possible decrease in sexually transmitted infections, as well as a decrease in suicide and depression.” Minors cannot be subject to the death penalty. Neither can they consent to being sex trafficked under the law. Nor should they be subjugated to abortions as though they were adults. Abortion related parental notification empowers girls. 6. DIAPERS FOR FAMILIES, S.1210 , A.02872 NYS Senate Finance Committee, January 24, 2023 NYS Assembly Ways and Means Committee, March 9, 2023 These bills provide a modest diaper allowance that will help the poorest of families afford diapers for their infants and toddlers. The proposed law provides low-income parents with children under the age of three (3) with an eighty (80) dollar quarterly diaper allowance. Over 11 million kids in the U.S. live below the federal poverty line, and a sizeable percentage are infants and toddlers, who need diapers, including in NYS . Diaper need is common among low-income families , and disproportionately impacts minority children. The lack of diapers increases health risks for children and is “associated with increased pediatric care visits.” It is well-cited that when poor families have sufficient diaper supplies, the overall health of their infants and toddlers improves and parents attend work more regularly. Providing diapers to underserved families also helps eliminate substantial short and long-term medical costs and increases state tax revenues. Tangible resources, including items as benign as diapers, have the power and potential to positively transform the lives of families in need. 7. HOSPITAL STAYS - POOR MATERNITY PATIENTS, NEWBORNS, S.1241 , A.05966 NYS Senate Health Committee, On Floor Calendar, February 6, 2023 NYS Assembly Health Committee, March 24, 2023 These bills require Medicaid to cover the hospital stays of Medicaid maternity patients and newborns for “at least 48 hours after natural delivery and 96 hours following cesarean section.” If enacted into law, these bills will ensure “that those covered by Medicaid are not treated differently than those covered by private insurance. It establishes the same mandatory minimum periods of coverage under Medicaid that private insurers are bound to provide.” For almost three decades, 48/96 hour hospital stays in NYS for women and children after birth have been covered by private insurance. Such coverage has largely excluded economically disadvantaged women who are covered by Medicaid from receiving the same minimum coverage after delivery. Short hospital stays can be detrimental to the health of the mother and newborn, especially since conditions which affect newborns, including jaundice,”ductal-dependant cardiac lesions and gastrointestinal obstruction” are not apparent within the first 24 hours of life. In addition, studies show benefits to both mother and child as a result of longer hospital stays after birth, including, “more stable blood sugar” for infants and less “postpartum depression” for mothers. Disadvantaged mothers and newborns are as worthy of appropriate health care as those more privileged. Justice demands equal treatment of all people. 8. PREGNANT WOMEN AND HEALTH INSURANCE PENALTIES, S.201 , A.02656 NYS Senate, Passed, Referred to Senate Insurance Committee, March 1, 2023 NYS Assembly Insurance Committee, January 26, 2023 These bills allow pregnant women to enroll in state “health insurance during a special enrollment periods without penalty” or fees. A primary purpose of this bill is to eliminate a potential financial barrier to obtaining health insurance coverage for pregnant mothers and their unborn children, including health insurance coverage for prenatal care. Prenatal care is covered by private health insurance as well as Medicaid. Prenatal care is essential to the health and well-being of mothers and their unborn children. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Women’s Health - Babies of mothers who do not get prenatal care are three times more likely to have a low birth weight and five times more likely to die than those born to mothers who do get care. Doctors can spot health problems early when they see mothers regularly. This allows doctors to treat them early. Early treatment can cure many problems and prevent others. This bill opens up vital, necessary services for women and children, including children in utero. Before passage, these bills should make it clear that the waiver of penalties and fees proposed apply to both mothers and unborn children in order for them to receive prenatal care and other healthcare that benefits both. Pregnant women should not be penalized for seeking prenatal care for themselves and their unborn children. VOTE NO 9. THE REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOM AND EQUITY GRANT, S.348B , A.00361A NYS Senate, Passed, Referred to Senate Health Committee, January 24, 2023 NYS Assembly Health Committee, January 23, 2023 This proposed law provides funding to NYS “abortion providers and non-profit organizations to increase access to abortion,” including for out-of-state abortion seeking women. Under this program, grants would be issued by the NYS Department of Health to abortion providers and non-profit organizations to "expand building capacity," “fund uncompensated” abortion services “for those who lack coverage or for those whose coverage is not usable” and to “support the practical … needs for individuals facing barriers to abortion.” The bills define practical support as direct assistance that enables a person to obtain an abortion, “including but not limited to ground and air transportation, gas money, lodging, meals, childcare, [and] translation services.” Expansion of building capacity includes “the establishment of new or renovation of existing” abortion providing facilities. The bills were introduced anticipating that approximately 190,000 - 280,000 women will travel to NYS for abortions after the overturn of Roe vs. Wade . NYS does not need more abortion access. According to the Guttmacher Institute NYS already has an abortion rate MORE THAN 2x the national average and more than 250 abortion providing facilities within its borders. Further, rather than help fund any non-profit that provides abortion alternatives, including adoption services, these bills fund ONLY non-profits that help women obtain abortions. Without options there can be no choice. Women and girls in NYS and BEYOND are being incentivized to abort their children, especially minority females, considering abortions' disproportionate impact on minority communities. Rather than fund abortions for out-of-state persons with NYS taxpayer dollars, monies are desperately needed to fund services for women, children and families that reside in NYS, including affordable, quality child care, better pregnancy health care and assistance, tangible resources, including diapers, and tax credits that will lift people out of poverty. 10. NYS ABORTION TELEHEALTH PROTECTIONS, S.1066A , A . 01709A NYS Senate, Passed, Referred to Senate Codes Committee, January 24, 2023 NYS Assembly Codes Committee, February 9, 2023 These bills ensure “telehealth services are explicitly included in existing safe-guards and protections for reproductive health care services,” enacted into law, June 13, 2022. In June of 2022 NYS’ Governor signed into law a package of bills enacted by the NYS Legislature aimed at protecting NYS abortionists, and abortion access for women and girls traveling to NYS from 'anti-abortion' states. This abortion-protecting bills package included The Fire Hate Act , S9039A / A10094A The law makes it unlawful to “attempt to or purport to prevent or limit travel” to NYS for legal abortions, or to engage in behavior that puts those who travel to NYS for abortions at risk of civil and criminal actions brought in Courts outside of NYS seeking to punish persons for traveling to NYS for legal abortions. NYS Abortion Providers, Extradition, Courts and Police S9077A / A10372A This law creates a “statutory exception for the extradition of abortion providers” regarding legal abortions performed in NYS on out-of-state abortion seeking women from anti-abortion states or states where the abortion performed in NYS would have been illegal if performed in that state. The law prohibits “courts from cooperating” with any “individual or out-of-state agency or department” regarding abortions performed legally in NYS on women from anti-abortion states. The law also forbids law enforcement from cooperating with any individual or out-of-state agency regarding “the provision of a lawful abortion” in NYS, and bars police officers from arresting “any person for performing or aiding in the performance” of a legal NYS abortion. NYS Abortion Providers and Medical Conduct S9079B / A9687B Among other things, the law prohibits filing or initiating “professional misconduct” charges or “disciplinary measures” against healthcare practitioners for providing legal abortions in NYS to women who reside in anti-abortion states. The law further ensures that out-of-state, prospective NYS healthcare practitioners are NOT DENIED “licensure, certification or authorization” to perform abortions in NYS solely on the basis of being subject to disciplinary actions by another jurisdiction for performing abortions otherwise legal in NYS. NYS Abortion Providers & Medical Malpractice Insurance Claims S9080B / A9718B Among other things, the law prohibits medical malpractice insurance companies from taking “any adverse action” against NYS healthcare practitioners for performing legal NYS abortions, including such abortions on out-of-state women from anti-abortion states. The law protects NYS health care practitioners from medical malpractice insurance claims for legally prescribing “abortion medication to out-of-state patients by means of telehealth.” Adverse actions include, but are not limited to "refusing to renew or execute a contract or agreement with a healthcare provider; making a report or commenting to an appropriate private or governmental entity regarding practices of such provider which may violate abortion laws in other states; [] increasing in any charge for, or a reduction or other adverse or unfavorable change in the terms of coverage or amount for, any medical malpractice insurance contract or agreement with a healthcare provider." NYS Abortion Providers, Others, and Address Confidentiality, S9384A / A9818A This law expands NYS’ Address Confidentiality Program (ACP) to allow individuals associated with abortion to enroll. People eligible to enroll, under this law, include abortion providers, their immediate family members, employees, volunteers and patients, including persons who assist others in obtaining abortions at the request of other persons. The justification for the law claims these persons “face threats of physical violence by anti-abortion extremists” and cite the National Abortion Federation for evidence. No mention is made regarding violent threats made by pro-abortion extremists against peaceful anti-abortion activists, for which there is ample evidence as reported in major news outlets. Women and girls deserve better than abortion. Abortion oppresses and degrades women, and kills children in utero. Our feminist foremothers including Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton fought against policies that treated women as property. During their lifetimes “both women vociferously condemned abortion,” or foeticide, the word they used to reference abortion. They shared a “revulsion of abortion.” According to Stanton, “When we consider that women are treated as property, it is degrading to women that we should treat our children as property to be disposed of as we see fit.” Pro-life feminists recognize the inherent value and dignity of all human beings. True feminism empowers and protects vulnerable human beings rather than seeks their destruction. Pro-life feminism promotes political, social and economic justice for all people throughout every stage of human development, beginning at conception through infancy and childhood, adolescence, adulthood and old age, including through the natural end of life.

  • Pro-Life Feminists Expose Inconsistencies of Governor Hochul's 2025 State of the State Address

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEMedia Contact: Michele Sterlace-Accorsi, January 20, 2025 716 864 1454, info@fclny.org Albany, NY – Governor Kathy Hochul delivered the 2025 State of the State address to New Yorkers on Tuesday, January 14. Hochul proposed many statewide policies that focused on making life for New York families more affordable, including a proposed expanded child tax credit that would provide up to $1,000 per child under four years old and $500 for school-aged children, and a $110 million child care construction fund to build and repair affordable, accessible childcare options statewide. Hochul also gladly acknowledged the state’s First-in-the-Nation Paid Prenatal Leave Law , which increases access to prenatal care for pregnant women, effective January 1, 2025. Feminists Choosing Life of New York (FCLNY), a human rights organization that educates on the consistent life ethic, issues the following commentary: We applaud many of Governor Hochul’s long overdue efforts to reduce financial difficulties for families and to provide greater access to prenatal care for mothers in New York State. Expanded child tax credits and greater access to affordable, quality childcare are effective ways to help families afford their children’s daily needs. Prenatal care is essential to the health and well-being of mothers and unborn children. In addition to helping families, these measures have the incredible potential to incentivize motherhood in our state like never before. New York State faces significant demographic decline as recent population projections show our state could lose up to 2.7 million residents by 2050, fueled by mass exodus and shrinking birth rates. New York State needs families to grow and flourish! However, FCLNY stands firmly opposed to New York State’s Paid Prenatal Leave Law’s despicable inclusion of increased access to elective abortion. Abortion hurts women and destroys human lives. By giving equal priority to increasing prenatal access and abortion access, Governor Hochul makes a mockery and false equivalency between life and death. If NY truly wants families to flourish it cannot accomplish this goal by killing future citizens. Considering the majority of women choose abortion because of the coercive effect of financial constraints, greater access to resources should always be prioritized over greater access to abortion. XXX

  • Feminists Adamantly Oppose Passage of New York’s Proposed “Equal Rights Amendment”

    March 27, 2024 Media Contact: D.J Robinson, Michele Sterlace info@FCLNY.org 716 864 1454 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ROCHESTER, NY —   In just about seven short months, a controversial state constitutional ‘equal rights’ amendment, impacting parents and children, will be on the ballot in New York, November 5, 2024. Proponents of NY’s ballot measure claim they’re most concerned about protecting reproductive rights, that the amendment is all about that tried and true blue term : “abortion access.” NY’s proposed ERA, however, goes much further than simply protecting abortion rights. The amendment includes, among other things, the fundamental right of minor children to obtain abortions, including chemical and second and third trimester abortions, as well as a child’s fundamental right to engage in transgender medical interventions. The ERA also empowers Courts to either nullify current or future state laws that require parental notice or consent or to validate state laws that ignore parental notice or consent for these and other life ending or life altering procedures. “You don’t need a law degree to understand how this vaguely written amendment erodes parental rights and hurts children,” states D.J. Robinson, Advisory Board Director of Feminists Choosing Life of New York, a human rights organization that promotes pro-life feminism and the consistent life ethic. FCLNY is also an organizational endorser of the Coalition to Protect Kids-NY, a ballot issue committee purposed to defeat NY’s proposed ERA at the ballot box on general election day. “The proposed so called Equal Rights Amendment potentially provides the court system and public schools in NY with more power than parents to determine what is best for their children,” states Michele Sterlace, Executive Director of FCLNY.  “The amendment threatens to deprive parents of crucial opportunities to help their own kids navigate the most difficult circumstances a minor may face; an unplanned pregnancy or gender confusion,” she adds. “Rather than enshrine ‘freedom and equality’ the ERA hurts children and families,” claims FCLNY’s Board President, Cecelia Lester. “All one needs to do is to look at how Europe has backed away from providing these treatments to children which can have devastating life long effects. No child should be taking medications or having surgeries without their parents’ knowledge and consent. NY is already outdated in its thinking on this,” says Lester. “At the very least scientific uncertainty exists regarding the short and long term impacts of abortion on pregnant minors, as well as the effects of transgender medical interventions on children,” states Sterlace.  “We owe our children, born and unborn,  far more than constitutionally crystallizing rights that will or may harm them, or at minimum where data is lacking regarding impacts, especially when parents, fathers and mothers, are cut from the equation.” According to NY’s most recently published vital statistics on abortion over a five year period, more than six thousand abortions occur on females 20 years old and younger, on average annually. Thousands of those undergoing these abortions are minors 17 years old and younger. More than six thousand later or second and third trimester abortions occur in NY on average annually. Studies reporting on the impacts of abortion on minors are sparse. Even the Guttmacher Institute, Planned Parenthoods research arm states, further study of the “potential risks and benefits” of abortions on minors “is needed.” Relevant published data however does demonstrate that:  “When compared to adult women, adolescents obtain abortions at a later gestational age--a factor that increases both the psychological and medical risks of the procedure.” Studies reporting on the impacts of transgender medial interventions on minors is even more sparse. While its reported that about forty thousand children in the U.S. suffer from gender dysphoria— comprehensive evidence and professional consensus is missing regarding the impacts and safety of transgender interventions for minors. NY already contains replete state statues that protect abortion access and gender expression. See NY’s Reproductive Health Act and NY’s Human Rights Laws, to name only a few. “It’s time we move forward and not backwards regarding ‘rights.’ Until we recognize the paramount role of motherhood, of parenthood, all people are at risk of exploitation,” states FCLNY’s Vice President, Carol Crossed. XXX

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