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- March 14, 2026 | 2:00 PMHuntington, NY, USA
- April 21, 2026 | 9:30 PM14 Anson Pl, Rochester, NY 14607, USA
- May 13, 2026 | 11:00 PM1880 East Ridge Road, Rochester, NY 14622, USA
Blog Posts (29)
- SAY NO TO STATE-SPONSORED ABORTION
Governor Kathy Hochul and aligned advocacy organizations are supporting continued and expanded funding across several abortion-related programs in New York’s pending FY 2027 budget (April 1, 2026 - March 31, 2027). The abortion funding being sought collectively totals roughly $100 million, including approximately: $35 million to backfill lost federal Medicaid reimbursements to Planned Parenthood affiliates and related providers, $30 million annually for the Reproductive Freedom and Equity Program, $20 million to sustain medication abortion and later-stage care funding, and $15 million in continued capital and infrastructure support for providers under the Reproductive Health Care Improvement Program. As reflected in the publicly released Executive Budget, these are still proposals - they are not yet listed as specific line items in the appropriation bills. They cannot be spent unless the Legislature votes to approve them in the final enacted budget, whether as direct appropriations or within broader health funding. That means there is still time for lawmakers to stop them. On behalf of pregnant mothers and their unborn children, FCLNY urges every NY legislator to exercise careful fiscal oversight, scrutinize any attempt to incorporate these proposals into the final budget agreement, and VOTE NO to the FY 2027 NY Budget if it contains any funding for abortion-related services. FCLNY urges the Governor to reverse her position of support for $100 million in abortion related spending in NY's FY 2027 budget . New York recorded 70,562 abortions in 2023, the most recent year the NY Department of Health reports abortion data. This represents an abortion rate nearly 30% higher than the U.S. national average (18 vs.14 abortions per 1,000 women). Notably, 2023 also marked the highest percentage of pregnancies ending in abortion in the past five years, with 25% of pregnancies resolved by abortion. The longer-term data show that abortions in NY have declined substantially over the past decade, from 2014 through 2023, for which there exists published NY abortion statistics. Since 2014, the abortion rate per 1,000 women has dropped by nearly 22%. These figures demonstrate that New York is not facing an abortion “access crisis” that supports any expanded public funding. In fact the recent rise in the percentage of pregnancies ending in abortion, demonstrates the contrary. Let’s not reverse the decade-long progress made in NY for pregnant mothers and their unborn children. Abortion harms women and girls. Studies show abortion increases risks of depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and suicide. Pregnant mothers deserve better than a system that funds and presents the violence of abortion as a solution. Women have agency, strength, and the capacity to choose life. New York’s priority should be expanding resources for parents and birth mothers, not directing public funding toward ending unborn lives and harming women. If you're a registered voter in NY contact Governor Hochul to voice your opposition to any and all abortion related budgetary spending. NY needs resources allocated for life affirming solutions for pregnant mothers, rather than state-sponsored abortion. Contact Governor Hochul with Opposition Here: https://www.governor.ny.gov/content/governor-contact-form NY registered voters please contact your NY legislators in the NY Senate and Assembly and ask them to VOTE NO to any and all abortion related budgetary spending. Contact your Senator Here: https://www.nysenate.gov/senators-committees Contact your Assemblymember Here: https://nyassembly.gov/mem/
- FCLNY 2026 NYS Legislative Packet
2026 NYS Legislative Session Policy Recommendations Human Dignity | Public Safety | Family Stability | Responsible Policy Dear Member of the New York State Legislature: Feminists Choosing Life of New York, Inc. (FCLNY) is a statewide human rights organization committed to advancing whole-life feminist public policies that uphold the equal dignity of every human person and promote life-affirming, nonviolent responses to the challenges faced by individuals, families, and communities across New York. Our work focuses especially on those who are most vulnerable, including children in utero, individuals affected by poverty, illness, disability, or aging, persons impacted by violence or armed conflict, and others whose voices are often underrepresented in public policy discussions. In furtherance of this mission, and in service both to your constituents and to marginalized communities statewide, we respectfully submit the enclosed fifteen-measure 2026 legislative packet. This packet includes budget proposals as well as pending legislation that we believe carry significant implications for human dignity, public health, family stability, and responsible policy in New York State. The following pages identify seven (7) measures we respectfully urge you to oppose and eight (8) measures we respectfully urge you to support, enact, or, where appropriate, introduce, sponsor, or co-sponsor as companion legislation in your chamber. Our intent is to provide clear, research-grounded analysis that supports careful legislative consideration and thoughtful policy leadership. We are grateful for your service to the people of New York and for your careful review of these proposals. Respectfully submitted, Feminists Choosing Life of New York, Inc. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY VOTE NO NYS FY 2027 Executive Budget - Abortion Funding (Budget Requests) Free Abortion Access: Reimbursements - S135 / A2137 Abortion Pill Deregulation - S2533 / A1172A Abortion Pill Provider Anonymity - S8656A / A10083 State-Funded Abortion Outreach - S9036 State-Funded Abortion Provider Expansion - S1438A Capital Punishment Expansion - A5165 / A5522 VOTE YES Born Alive Abortion Survivor Protection Act - S577 Parental Notice: Minors and Abortion - S1970 / A9090 Women’s Right to Know: Pre-Abortion Ultrasounds - A3694 Adoption Support Timeline Expansion - S5737 / A2425 Adoption Tax Credit - S4481 Preserving Family Bonds - S5240A / A4940B The Non-Militarization Act - S8586 The Hospice and Palliative Care Access and Quality Act - A4717 VOTE NO Measures Raising Concerns for Human Dignity, Safety or Accountability NYS FY 2027 Executive Budget – Abortion Funding (Budget Requests) Governor Kathy Hochul and aligned advocacy organizations are supporting continued and expanded funding across several abortion-related programs in New York’s pending FY 2027 budget (April 1, 2026 - March 31, 2027). The abortion funding being sought collectively totals roughly $100 million, including approximately: $35 million to backfill lost federal Medicaid reimbursements to Planned Parenthood affiliates and related providers, $30 million annually for the Reproductive Freedom and Equity Program, $20 million to sustain medication abortion and later-stage care funding, and $15 million in continued capital and infrastructure support for providers under the Reproductive Health Care Improvement Program. As reflected in the publicly released Executive Budget, these remain proposed appropriations and are not final law. Funding cannot be spent unless approved by the Legislature and included in the enacted budget, either as direct line items or within broader health and Medicaid appropriations. New York is not facing an abortion “access crisis” that supports any expanded public funding. In fact the recent rise in the percentage of pregnancies ending in abortion, demonstrates the contrary. Pregnant mothers deserve better than a system that funds and presents the violence of abortion as a solution. Women have agency, strength, and the capacity to choose life. New York’s priority should be expanding resources for parents and birth mothers, not directing public funding toward ending unborn lives and creating health risks for women and girls. A vote against any budget containing abortion-related spending affirms New York’s commitment to women’s health, human life and human dignity. NOTE: Since abortion first became legal nationwide in 1973, cumulative national estimates indicate that approximately 63-65 million abortions have occurred in the U.S., based on long-running abortion incidence tracking by leading research organizations. Roughly 8-10 million abortions have occurred in New York State since abortion became legal in the state, in 1970. New York recorded 70,562 abortions in 2023, the most recent year the NY Department of Health published abortion data. This represents an abortion rate nearly 30% higher than the U.S. national average (18 vs.14 abortions per 1,000 women). Notably, 2023 also marked the highest percentage of pregnancies ending in abortion in the past five years, with 25% of pregnancies ending by abortion. Evidence indicates that abortion is linked to elevated risks of depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and suicide for women and girls. Research shows that both surgical and medication (chemical) abortion carry documented medical risks for pregnant mothers that warrant careful medical oversight. FDA prescribing information for mifepristone, used in medication abortion, identifies potential complications including heavy bleeding, infection, sepsis, incomplete abortion, and the possible need for emergency surgical intervention. Evidence reviews , including the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, also note that surgical abortion can involve risks such as hemorrhage, infection, uterine injury, retained tissue, and complications requiring hospitalization, with the likelihood of serious complications increasing with gestational age. Free Abortion Access: Reimbursements, S135 / A2137 NYS Senate - Passed Senate; delivered to the Assembly (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly - Referred to the Assembly Committee on Health (Jan. 2026). The pending law would allow government funds to be used to cover travel-related expenses for women and girls seeking abortions, including transportation, lodging, meals, child care, and translation services. New York mandates insurance and Medicaid coverage for abortion, effectively subsidizing it, while providing far less financial support for women who want to carry their pregnancies to term. This bill raises significant policy concerns by effectively incentivizing abortion over other life-affirming options for pregnant women. A vote against these bills affirm that public resources should not financially incentivize abortion. Abortion Pill Deregulation, S2533 / A1172A NYS Senate - Referred to the Senate Committee on Higher Education (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly - Referred to the Assembly Committee on Higher Education (Jan. 2026). These bills would significantly expand access to abortion pills in New York by allowing non-patient-specific standing orders that permit pharmacists and nurses to dispense abortion medication without a patient-specific prescriber evaluation. While New York already allows physicians to prescribe abortion pills through telehealth, S.2533/A11172A go further by replacing physician-specific prescribing with standing-order dispensing based on patient self-reporting. These bills also mandate insurance coverage of abortion drugs without cost-sharing. S2533/A1172A strip away key medical safeguards, by reducing direct oversight and individualized clinical review, normalizing abortion as routine pharmacy care and expanding abortion access at the expense of protections for women, girls and their unborn children. A vote against S2533/A11172A affirms that expanding access to abortion should never come at the cost of individualized medical oversight and the fundamental responsibility to protect women’s health and human life. Abortion Pill Provider Anonymity, S8656A / A10083 NYS Senate - Passed Senate, delivered to Assembly (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly - Referred to the Assembly Committee on Higher Education (Jan. 2026). S8656A/A10083 would allow abortion-pill prescriptions in New York to be dispensed without identifying information, including the name and address of the prescribing provider appearing on prescription labels, further expanding New York’s abortion shield protections. While protecting patient privacy is important and already supported under existing law, this bill goes further by removing prescriber identification, reducing transparency and accountability in the dispensing of abortion drugs. Eliminating provider identification weakens basic medical safeguards, makes oversight and follow-up care more difficult, and prioritizes anonymous abortion access over clear medical accountability and protections for pregnant mothers and their children in utero. A vote against S8656A/A10083 affirms that patient privacy should not undermine or compromise medical transparency, accountability, and the safeguards necessary to protect women’s health and human life. State-Funded Abortion Outreach, S9036 NYS Senate - Referred to the Senate Committee on Health (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly - No Assembly companion bill introduced. S.9036 would require the New York State Department of Health to develop and fund a statewide education and outreach program that actively promotes “reproductive health services,” including abortion, using government resources to expand abortion messaging and access across the state. This bill turns the state into an active promoter of abortion rather than a supporter of women facing difficult pregnancies, directing public resources toward normalizing abortion instead of advancing life-affirming alternatives, maternal support, and real assistance for mothers and families. By institutionalizing pro-abortion outreach through state government, S.9036 further marginalizes women and girls who need support to choose life and undermines protections for unborn children. New York has state programs promoting abortion, but no requirement to promote adoption or pregnancy support. A vote against S.9036 affirms that state resources should support women through balanced life-affirming education and real maternal support, not government-funded promotion of abortion. NOTE: There are currently no New York State laws or regulations requiring the New York State Department of Health, or any other New York State agency, to create, fund, or implement statewide education or outreach programs that promote adoption, inform prospective birth mothers about available support services, or highlight pregnancy resource centers (PRCs), which provide practical support to underserved pregnant women and girls. State-Funded Abortion Provider Expansion, S1438A NYS Senate - Passed Senate; delivered to the Assembly (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly - No Assembly companion bill introduced; S1438A referred to the Assembly Committee on Health (Jan. 2026). Senate Bill S1438A would establish a state-funded clinical training program intended to expand abortion service capacity in New York, including by increasing the number of trained abortion providers statewide. While framed as a clinical training initiative, the practical effect of the bill is the long-term expansion of abortion services, including both procedural and medication abortion. Notably, S1438A does not require any corresponding training in the identification, tracking, or reporting of abortion complications, including those associated with abortion pills, leaving significant gaps in safety oversight and public transparency within the program. The proposal likewise provides no comparable investment in life-affirming alternatives or maternal support services that assist women facing difficult pregnancies. Sound public policy should prioritize women’s safety, accountability, and balanced healthcare support rather than directing state resources toward expanding abortion capacity. At a time when lawmakers are asked to expand abortion policy, New York still lacks the basic complication data needed to ensure informed, evidence-based decision-making. A vote against S1438A affirms that state-funded healthcare policy should prioritize women’s safety, the well-being of children, including unborn children, and transparency rather than expanding abortion capacity.; especially without corresponding safeguards or accountability. NOTE: Despite the seriousness of abortion as a medical intervention, New York has no law or regulation requiring the Department of Health, or any other state agency, to specifically track or publicly report abortion complications, leaving the state without a clear, transparent system to monitor outcomes or ensure accountability. New York law also does not require the state to report abortion data to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). As a result, any complications are only incidentally captured, if at all, through broad hospital and adverse-event reporting systems that were never designed to provide abortion-specific oversight. Capital Punishment Expansion, A5165 / A5522 NYS Senate - No Senate companion bills introduced. NYS Assembly - Referred to the Assembly Codes Committee (Jan. 2026). Assembly Bills A5165 and A5522 would reintroduce capital punishment in New York for certain first-degree murders involving police, peace, and correction officers, replacing the state’s current reliance on life-without-parole sentences with a system that permits the death penalty. From a humanitarian and human-rights perspective, New York should reject efforts to reinstate state-sanctioned execution and instead uphold punishment models that protect public safety without taking human life. Life imprisonment without parole already provides the maximum level of accountability and permanent incapacitation, while avoiding the irreversible moral, legal, and practical risks associated with capital punishment, including wrongful convictions, unequal application, prolonged trauma for victims’ families, and costly, decades-long litigation. A vote against A5165 and A5522 affirms a commitment to justice grounded in human dignity, nonviolence, and effective public safety. NOTE: New York effectively ended capital punishment in 2004, when the New York Court of Appeals ruled in People v. LaValle that the state’s death-penalty statute was unconstitutional because its jury “deadlock instruction” created a substantial risk of coercing jurors toward a death sentence, violating the Due Process Clause of the New York Constitution. New York’s decision reflected a broader humanitarian and public-policy recognition that state-sanctioned execution carries irreversible risks, including coercive sentencing dynamics, wrongful convictions, and unequal application, while life imprisonment without parole fully protects public safety without taking human life. Although federal law still permits capital punishment for certain crimes under federal statute, New York has moved ahead of this framework by rejecting execution as a punishment and embracing a more modern, dignity-centered approach to justice grounded in nonviolence and constitutional safeguards. Since 2004,13 people have been executed by the U.S. federal government (Federal executions had previously stopped after 2003 and then resumed in 2020) and roughly 1,100 people have been sentenced to death in the U.S. VOTE YES Measures Advancing Human Dignity, Family Stability, and Responsible Policy Born Alive Abortion Survivor Protection Act, S577 NYS Senate , Referred to the Senate Committee on Health (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly , No Assembly companion bill introduced. The Born Alive Abortion Survivors’ Protection Act affirms a simple and widely accepted principle: every child born alive deserves equal medical care and legal protection, regardless of the circumstances of birth. This proposed legislation requires health care practitioners to provide the same degree of professional skill, care, and diligence to a child born alive during an abortion or attempted abortion as would be provided to any other newborn of the same gestational age, including immediate transport to a hospital for continued care. S577 does not alter abortion law itself; rather, it establishes clear standards to ensure that when a child is born alive, the child is treated as a patient entitled to life-preserving medical treatment and basic human dignity. By closing a critical gap in New York law, this bill promotes accountability, protects vulnerable newborns, and reinforces the core medical ethic that no child born alive should be denied care. A vote for S577 affirms that every child born alive is entitled to equal medical care, legal protection, and the basic dignity owed to every human life. NOTE : New York law currently provides no clear, explicit requirement that a child born alive during an abortion receive the same life-saving medical care as any other newborn. A peer-reviewed study in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (AJOG) did report that: Among 13,777 induced abortions between 15–29 weeks gestation in Québec hospitals, 1,541 (11.2%) resulted in live birth. Parental Notice: Minors and Abortion, S1970 / A909 0 NYS Senate , Referred to the Senate Committee on Women’s Issues (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly , Referred to the Assembly Committee on Health (Jan. 2026). New York law has long recognized that minors often lack the maturity to make certain significant decisions without parental involvement, requiring parental consent or notification in a variety of contexts, including certain medical decisions in school settings and situations where minors cannot legally consent, such as sexual exploitation and trafficking. S1970/A9090 provide a modest and reasonable safeguard by requiring notice to at least one parent or legal guardian before an abortion is performed on an unemancipated minor, while preserving exceptions for medical emergencies and judicial bypass. This legislation supports the health and safety of vulnerable young women while affirming the important role of parents in guiding their children through life-altering medical decisions. A vote for S1970/A9090 affirms that vulnerable minors deserve the protection, guidance, and support of their parents when facing life-altering medical decisions, not isolation from those most responsible for their care. NOTE : Under current New York abortion policy, minors may obtain abortions without any parental notice or consent, including 2nd and 3rd trimester abortions, and for reasons unrelated to the physical health of the pregnant mother or her unborn child. New York also fails to require annual, abortion-specific Department of Health inspections, leaving a notable gap in routine, procedure-focused oversight. Women’s Right to Know: Pre-Abortion Ultrasounds, A3694 NYS Senate , No Senate companion bill introduced. NYS Assembly , Referred to the Assembly Committee on Health (Jan. 2026). A3694 strengthens genuine informed consent by ensuring that women considering abortion receive an obstetric ultrasound and the opportunity to view and understand the medical information about their pregnancy before making a life-altering decision. In every other area of medicine, patients are entitled to complete and meaningful information before consenting to a procedure, and abortion should be no exception. By requiring providers to explain what is shown on the ultrasound and offer patients the chance to see the images, this legislation promotes transparency, patient autonomy, and ethical medical practice. Women and girls can decline to view the ultrasound. This commonsense measure supports informed decision-making, respects both women and unborn children, and aligns New York with numerous other states that recognize the importance of full medical disclosure prior to abortion. A vote for A3694 affirms that women deserve complete, medically accurate information and safety-focused care before making life-altering decisions. NOTE : Most abortions performed in the U.S. and in New York are medication abortions. Requiring an ultrasound reflects widely recognized medical best practices, including guidance from major medical institutions such as the Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic, which use ultrasound to confirm gestational age and rule out ectopic pregnancy. This is especially critical because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends abortion pills only through 10 weeks’ gestation. Ingesting abortion pills later in pregnancy or in the presence of an ectopic pregnancy can result in serious, potentially life-threatening complications for women and girls. Adoption Support Timeline Expansion, S5737 / A2425 NYS Senate , Referred to the Senate Committee on Children and Families (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly , Referred to the Assembly Committee on Social Services (Jan. 2026). Under New York law (Social Services Law §374(6)), adoptive parents may pay reasonable and actual pregnancy-related expenses for a birth mother, including housing, maternity clothing, clothing for the child, transportation, medical and hospital costs related to pregnancy and birth, and legal fees connected to the adoption. S5737/A2425 extend the period during which adoptive parents may assist with such pregnancy-related expenses, to 180 days before birth (instead of 60), and 45 days after birth (instead of 30). This recognizes a straightforward reality: financial pressures often intensify long before birth and can heavily influence whether vulnerable women feel they have real choices. By allowing adoptive families to assist with reasonable and actual pregnancy-related expenses for a longer period, this proposed law helps stabilize expectant mothers earlier in pregnancy, reduces economic pressure, and strengthens adoption as a realistic option for women who may otherwise feel they have few alternatives. Adoption affirms both the dignity of the child and the well-being of the mother, and expanding lawful assistance promotes stability, informed decision-making, and healthier outcomes that benefit families and society alike. Importantly, this support should be understood as advancing ethical adoption practices that protect women and children, and not as an endorsement of surrogacy arrangements, which raise separate and serious concerns about the commercialization and potential exploitation of women’s bodies. A vote for S5737/A2425 affirms that New York will stand with women before crisis becomes coercion, expanding ethical adoption support, reducing economic pressure, and ensuring that financial hardship never dictates life-altering decisions. NOTE : Research consistently shows that abortion in the United States is disproportionately concentrated among economically vulnerable women, many of whom are low-income and facing significant financial stress during unplanned pregnancies. New York’s Medicaid-funded abortion framework likewise reflects the reality that many women confronting unintended pregnancies are experiencing economic hardship. These women are, in practical terms, also potential birth mothers, and public policy should ensure that financial hardship does not limit life-affirming choices. Adoption Tax Credit, S4481 NYS Senate - Referred to the Senate Committee on Budget and Revenue (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly - No Assembly companion bill introduced. Senate Bill S4481 offers New York families a practical, compassionate solution to a real and measurable barrier to adoption by creating a refundable adoption tax credit of up to $10,000 for qualified adoption expenses (reasonable and necessary legal and court-related costs) directly required to complete a child’s adoption. Adoption provides children with permanent, stable families, yet the significant upfront expenses often place it out of reach for many working New Yorkers. By reducing these financial barriers, S4481 strengthens families, expands pathways to permanency for children, and aligns New York’s tax policy with its commitment to supporting family formation and child well-being. A vote for S4481 affirms that when families are ready to adopt, government should clear the path, and not let cost decide whether a child finds a permanent home. NOTE : Federal Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System (AFCARS) data show that approximately 3,610 children in New York were waiting to be adopted, most of whom are school-aged children, adolescents, sibling groups, or children with special needs who often face longer and more complex paths to permanent families. This reflects broader national trends, where more than 70,000 children in foster care were awaiting adoption in recent reporting years, underscoring that the central adoption challenge is achieving stable, lasting homes for children already under state responsibility. However, adoption from foster care frequently includes government assistance that offsets legal and court-related costs. Research shows that infant relinquishment for adoption has declined dramatically over time, with only about 1% of infants born to never-married women relinquished for adoption in recent decades. For some pregnant women, the foster-care pathway can present practical and procedural barriers compared with making a voluntary private adoption plan. Unlike foster-care adoption, private adoption is a proactive, voluntary decision made by a woman to create an adoption plan before birth. Private domestic (non-foster care) adoptions occur at comparatively lower volumes than foster-care adoptions. Together, these data reinforce a clear policy imperative: New York must reduce barriers and strengthen support for families willing to adopt children. Preserving Family Bonds, S5240A / A4940B NYS Senate - Referred to the Senate Committee on Children and Families (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly - Referred to the Assembly Committee on Judiciary (Jan. 2026). This legislation is needed to address a clear gap in New York law: while courts may approve post-adoption contact when parental rights are voluntarily surrendered, they currently lack explicit authority to order post-termination visitation when parental rights are involuntarily terminated, even when continued contact would serve a child’s best interests. A4940B provides family courts with a carefully limited, safeguard-driven framework to allow safe, appropriate contact only when it is affirmatively found to be in the child’s best interest, including child consent requirements, exclusions for severe abuse, and protections ensuring adoption finalization is not delayed or undermined. By allowing judges to preserve beneficial connections while maintaining permanency and safety, this legislation advances a humane, child-centered approach that supports emotional well-being, stability, and lifelong resilience for children in New York’s child-welfare system. A vote for S5240A/A4940B affirms a most basic principle: children deserve permanence, but they also deserve the chance to safely retain the relationships that help them heal, grow, and understand who they are. NOTE : Modern child-welfare research and federal guidance recognize that adoption should often expand, rather than erase, a child’s sense of family and identity. Many children available for adoption have already formed meaningful bonds with their biological parents and relatives, and abrupt, permanent severance of those ties can contribute to grief, loss, anxiety, depression, identity confusion, and long-term emotional insecurity, particularly as children mature and seek to understand their personal histories. The Non-Militarization Act, S8586 NYS Senate - Referred to Senate Committee on Rules (Jan. 2026). NYS Assembly - No Assembly companion bill introduced. Senate Bill S8586 reflects a clear principle that civilian policing should remain distinct from military conflict and the tools designed for warfare. By prohibiting state and local law enforcement agencies from accepting federal military surplus equipment, this legislation advances a public-safety model centered on de-escalation, community trust, and proportional civilian law enforcement rather than combat-oriented approaches. The federal 1033 Program was created for wartime and drug-war conditions, yet its expansion has increasingly transferred military equipment into local communities, raising concerns among researchers, policymakers, and the public about the normalization of militarized policing and its potential to escalate rather than reduce violence. S8586 does not impede lawful policing or officer safety; instead, it reinforces the distinction between military operations and domestic public safety, affirming that New York’s approach to security should prioritize prevention, accountability, and the protection of civil society over the adoption of equipment and tactics shaped by violent military conflict. A vote for S8586 affirms that public policy should reject the normalization of military violence in civilian life and prioritize strategies that protect human dignity, reduce harm, and prevent the conditions that too often place civilians, especially children, in the path of lethal violence. NOTE: Over the last century, armed military conflict has caused the deaths of tens of millions of people worldwide, with historical estimates commonly placing direct deaths related to modern armed conflicts well above 100 million, while researchers increasingly emphasize that the true human toll is far higher when indirect deaths from disease, hunger, displacement, and collapse of health systems in war zones are included. Children have consistently borne a disproportionate share of this burden: United Nations monitoring shows that since systematic tracking began in 2005, more than 120,000 children have been verified as killed or maimed in conflict, with hundreds of thousands of additional grave violations recorded, and humanitarian agencies report that children now represent roughly 30% of the global population, yet account for nearly half of internally displaced persons fleeing violence. Modern conflict research further shows that civilian casualties, including children as “collateral damage,” increasingly outnumber combatant deaths in many contemporary wars, reflecting the shift toward urban warfare and explosive weapons in populated areas, where loss of life extends beyond the battlefield to families who die from disrupted medical care, malnutrition, and unsafe living conditions. Taken together, the evidence demonstrates that violent military conflict produces multi-generational humanitarian harm, with children and civilians paying the highest price even when they are not parties to the fighting. The Hospice and Palliative Care Access and Quality Act, A4717 NYS Senate - No Senate companion bill introduced. NYS Assembly - Referred to Assembly Committee on Health (Jan. 2026) A4717 benefits seriously ill New Yorkers who wish to live their remaining time with comfort, dignity, and support, without hastening death, by strengthening access to hospice and palliative care services that focus on pain relief, symptom management, emotional and spiritual support, and family-centered care. By establishing a dedicated Office of Hospice and Palliative Care Access and Quality within the Department of Health, the bill helps remove barriers that currently prevent many patients from receiving timely referrals to hospice or palliative care, improves coordination between providers and regulators, and increases public awareness about care options that prioritize comfort and quality of life rather than curative or life-ending interventions. For patients who decline medical aid in dying, stronger hospice and palliative care systems mean better pain control, fewer unnecessary hospitalizations, improved caregiver support, and greater ability to remain at home or in familiar settings during the final stages of life. In this way, the legislation expands meaningful end-of-life choices by ensuring that choosing comfort-focused, non-hastening care is a realistic, accessible, and well-supported option for families across New York. A vote for A4717 affirms that every New Yorker facing serious illness, including those who do not wish to pursue medical aid in dying, deserves meaningful access to high-quality hospice and palliative care that prioritizes comfort, dignity, and tender, comprehensive support at the end of life. NOTE : Evidence from jurisdictions where medical aid in dying (MAID) is legal shows that requests are often influenced not only by physical illness but by social and psychological vulnerability, raising concerns for people with disabilities, those facing economic hardship, and individuals who fear becoming a burden. Official Canadian data reports that many MAID recipients cite perceived burden on others, loss of dignity, isolation, or loss of independence — factors reflecting social vulnerability as much as medical suffering. Disability-rights advocates have warned that inadequate supports and poverty can create indirect pressure that undermines truly free choice. These findings highlight the need for end-of-life policy that strengthens hospice and palliative care, expands social and disability supports, and ensures decisions are not driven by isolation, hardship, or lack of meaningful alternatives. CLOSING STATEMENT Thank you for your thoughtful review of these policy recommendations and for your service to the people of New York State. The measures outlined in this packet reflect a consistent commitment to human dignity, responsible governance, public safety, and evidence-informed public policy. We respectfully urge careful consideration of each proposal and stand ready to serve as a resource as you evaluate legislation affecting vulnerable individuals, families, and communities across our state. We appreciate your leadership. We ask that you advance policies that strengthen New York and uphold the dignity of every human life. FEMINISTS CHOOSING LIFE OF NEW YORK, INC. Office Headquarters, 1545 East Avenue, Suite 1, Rochester, NY 14610 P:(585) 730-7808 E: INFO@FCLNY.ORG WEBSITE: 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
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
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- HOME | FCLNY
PRO - WOMAN PRO - LIFE Feminists Choosing Life of New York (FCLNY) is a state-wide human rights coalition that embraces and promotes whole life feminism and the consistent life ethic. FCLNY's public advocacy draws connections between the root causes of violence, inequality and the social forces that dehumanize. DONATE NOW FCLNY Supports the Consistent Life Ethic We oppose publicly sanctioned lethal violence including violent military action, abortion, assisted suicide and capital punishment, and educate on the impacts and root causes including poverty, domestic violence, sex trafficking, and racism . FCLNY advocates for peaceful solutions. We accomplish our goals through SEVEN bold initiatives: • Community Encounters • Scholarly Events • Film Involvement • Media Outreach • Grassroots Campaigns • Projects that Empower • Legislative Advocacy Play Video Play Video 00:15 Play Video Play Video 00:30 Play Video Play Video 00:15 SM Local NBC Broadcast TV-NY Region 2 Local NBC Broadcast TV-NY Region 2 FCLNY's Streaming Ads! FCLNY is reaching millions by radio and podcast! Read Scripts on Grassroots Campaigns Page National Public Radio 00:00 / 00:15 WTBQ 00:00 / 00:30 iHeart Radio - Syracuse 00:00 / 00:16 WOLF FM 00:00 / 00:31 Station of The Cross 00:00 / 00:31 iHeartRadio- Albany 00:00 / 00:16 Station of the Cross 00:00 / 00:30 WHUD 00:00 / 00:31 The BEAR 00:00 / 00:31 iHeart Radio - Albany 2 00:00 / 00:31 Make The Switch Now! More than half of abortions in the U.S. now involve two “abortion pills,” Mifepristone and Misopristol. It is currently legal in NY for retail pharmacies to mail abortion pills with a prescription via tele-health. CVS and Walgreens have already obtained their certification to dispense abortion pills. Walgreens started providing medication abortions in NY. Giant retail pharmacies are more likely to undergo the expensive certification process than independent privately owned family pharmacies. Chemical abortion kills human beings and increases health risks for women. Retail pharmaceutical sale of abortion pills is deadly for unborn children and harmful for women. As long as privately owned pharmacies continue to resist selling abortion pills we will continue to PROMOTE AND SUPPORT them. Sign Petition Here FCLNY'S INDEPENDENT PHARMACY RESOURCE INDEX - NY A Post-Roe world needs you! FCLNY signed the statement, and you can too! Sign Here Building a Post-Roe Future The Pro Life movement has always recognized the importance of supporting women facing unplanned pregnancies. We are Pro Life conservatives, moderates, and liberals united in our conviction that every human life has value- including the lives of both the unborn child and that child's mother. We believe that our society should prioritize the needs of both, and that ultimately this can only be achieved by significant changes in public policy including expanded child tax credits paid parental leave flexible work hours affordable child care prenatal child support laws Impacts of NY's Reproductive Health Act (RHA) CLICK HERE FOR ANALYSIS Click on the image below to watch the video FCLNY'S BROCHURE DOWNLOAD 1/6 For Printed Copies Message us info@fclny.org HEAR PROFESSOR TERESA COLLETT SPEAK ABOUT CORE FEMINIST ISSUES Listen, Part I Listen, Part II ORGANIZE, AGITATE, EDUCATE FCLNY implements its purposes through Community Encounters, Scholarly Events, Film Involvement, Media Outreach, Grassroots Campaigns, Projects that Empower and Legislative Advocacy. READY? SET GO! LEARN MORE GO! FCLNY DEPENDS ON BROAD PUBLIC SUPPORT TO EXIST. Please Donate! COMMUNITY ENCOUNTERS LEARN MORE SCHOLARLY EVENTS LEARN MORE FILM INVOLVEMENT LEARN MORE MEDIA OUTREACH LEARN MORE GRASSROOTS CAMPAIGNS LEARN MORE PROJECTS THAT EMPOWER LEARN MORE LEGISLATIVE ADVOCACY LEARN MORE GALLERY UPCOMING EVENTS 2026! May 13th FCLNY Book & Film Club: Dignity of Dependence Hyrbrid (Rochester , NY) EVENTS! REGISTRATION April 21st LIFEMARK Film Showing Rochester , NY March 14th The Pro-Life Debate Huntington, NY
- MEDIA OUTREACH | FCLNY
MEDIA OUTREACH FCLNY develops social media campaigns and publishable commentary for print and online news outlets, including educational opinion essays. FCLNY also appears on TV and radio and in diverse print and online platforms. All of our media exposure listed on our media outreach webpage is EARNED MEDIA. GET INVOLVED FCLNY ESSAY EXCLUSIVES Hochul Should Reverse Course on Flawed Assisted Suicide Bill Democrat & Chronicle How Compassionate is Medical Aid in Dying? Wall Street Journal Why Governor Hochul Should Veto Medical Aid in Dying Cranes Business New York The Cost of Choice: What New Yorkers are Losing Syracuse Post Standard Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Must Protect the Unborn Buffalo News Governor Urged to Vote No on Assisted Suicide Bill Finger Lakes Times New York Must Not Legalize Assisted Suicide NewsWeek How Supporters of DEI Might Want to Rethink Abortion Democrat & Chronicle Does the US have Similar Abortion Policies to Communist China? The Christian Post Welcoming The Stranger. All of Them. The Good Newsroom, Recalling Impact of Carter's Support for Hyde Amendment Democrat and Chronicle Suffragists Were Not Generally Supporters of Abortion Democrat and Chronicle Why does NY Prioritize Abortion Over Life-Changing Care? Rochester Beacon New York should not enshrine transgender rights for minors. Parents need a say Special Report, USA Today, Published Across Gannet Newspaper Network, now available to read on Yahoo News New York's Equal Rights Amendment will Deprive Parents of their Role Buffalo News Logic on Abortion Law Runs Counter to Gun Law Democrat & Chronicle Break the Binary Political Divide on Death Democrat & Chronicle 'Sound of Freedom' Details Unseen Horrors Democrat & Chronicle Physician Assisted Suicide Hurts the Dying and Their Caregivers Albany Times Union Re-thinking Dying and End-of-Life Care The Wellsville Sun , Artvoice , Olean Times Herald , Adirondack Daily Enterprise, El Ignaciano Similarities in Restricting Gun, Abortion Industries Lockport Journal , Niagara Gazette Providing Free Abortion Pills is Destructive Democrat & Chronicle Abortion Pill Distribution Harms Unborn, Mothers Buffalo News Enlist NY Abortion Providers To Stop Human Trafficking Syracuse Post Standard Revisit Planned Parenthood's In Control Democrat and Chronicle Feedback: Readers Weigh in on Pregnancy Resource Center Coverage Rochester City Newspaper Consider History When Thinking of Racism and Abortion Democrat & Chronicle (newsprint only) Other Options NY Daily News Budget Helps Impoverished Pregnant Women EAB Peace: Investigating the Meaning of the Consistent Life Ethic During War Time Buffalo Latino Village (newsprint only) Old Fight is New Again for Unborn Albany Times Union Advances in Science, Medicine Lower the Age of Fetal Viability Buffalo News Many Founding Mother's Were Against Abortion Auburn Citizen Adding Women to Draft Runs Counter to Principles of Peace Democrat & Chronicle (Newsprint Only) Women Deserve Full Information About Abortion Effects Washington Examiner Passing SUNY Abortion Bill Would Be A Mistake The Democrat & Chronicle (Newsprint Only) Destroying the Hyde Amendment Could Spell Disaster For Women USA Today Network Bill Would Tip Scales Against Pregnancy Resource Centers The Buffalo News Violence, Including Capital Punishment Leaves Us Broken The Democrat & Chronicle Viable unborn children can live without their mothers — our Constitution protects them USA Today, The Human Life Review, News Break, Daily Magazine NY Abortion Law Does not Protect Women Lockport Union-Sun & Journal New York Fails to Protect the Most Vulnerable Among Us: Unborn Children The Democrat & Chronicle New York Should not Use Medical Resources on Abortions During Pandemic The Buffalo News Why is New York Giving Abortion a Pass During Coronavirus Crisis? Syracuse Post Standard Viewpoint: Sides Agree on Denouncing Commercial Surrogacy The Albany Times Union Letter: On Legalized Surrogacy, Just Follow the Money The Albany Times Union Planned Parenthood Crying Wolf on Titles X Funding The Democrat & Chronicle Treating a Fetus as a Person New York Times Viewpoint: RHA — Dangerous, Dehumanizing, and Anti-Woman Albany Times Union The Reproductive Health Act is Extreme Pro-Abortion Legislation New York Daily News Don’t Expand Abortion in New York Syracuse Post Standard New York's Abortion Laws City Newspaper Another Voice: Reproductive Health Act Sets Women Back Buffalo News Don't let NY Repeal Abortion Safeguards For Women, Babies Syracuse Post Standard Calling on the State Senate to Block Bills Expanding Abortion Niagara Gazette Proposed Budget's Changes To Abortion Law Are Extreme Albany Times Union Feminists Choosing Life Will Stand For Women’s Health On Women’s Equality Day Democrat & Chronicle Rights Should Apply in Utero, Too Albany Times Union Abortion Multiplies Tragedy of War Auburn Citizen Don't Leave Out Pro-life Feminists The Auburn Citizen, Will Walk's Message Truly Be Inclusive? Finger Lakes Times Feedback on New York's Abortion Law Rochester City Magazine Abortion Is A Cancer To The Feminist Politic The Christian Post Will Women's Marches Include 'Pro-Life' Feminists? Syracuse Post-Standard FCLNY PRESS COVERAGE Death is Not a Right Christianity Today CUNY Names 'Reproductive Justice' Professorship After Abortion Facility Founder The College Fix HBO Max's Failing 'Sex and the City' Spinoff Lies to Viewers About NY's Lax Abortion Laws MRC TV , MRC Culture Tell New York Governor Kathy Hochul to Veto Bill Legalizing Assisted Suicide LifeNews Religious Groups urge Hochul to Kill Medical Aid in Dying Bill City & State New York New York State Senate Passes Dangerous Assisted Suicide Bill LifeNews After New York Assembly Passage, Assisted Suicide Bill Heads to State Senate Catholic Courier , The Pilot , National Catholic Reporter , OSV News Will Albany Pass Medical Aid in Dying? MSN , News 22 , My Twin Tiers , Inform NY , News 10, Champlain Valley News, Rochester First Senator Hawley Urges FDA to Reinstate Abortion Drug Safety Regulations Catholic News Agency College Teaches Students How to Become Radical Abortion Activists LifeNews Ithaca College 'Intersectional Feminist' Class Teaches how to 'Resist Abortion Bans" The College Fix N.Y. Becomes the First State to Offer Paid Leave to Expectant Mothers for Prenatal Appointments The Evangelist , Catholic Review National March for Life Brings Thousands to Downtown D.C. The Eagle Prop 1 Ignites a Debate Over Transgender Rights Ahead of the Election Columbian Journalism School N.Y. Catholics warn Equal Rights Amendment on this year’s ballot could undercut parental rights Catholic Review Bishops Urge Voters To Reject Proposed Amendment They Call ‘Wolf In Sheep’s Clothing’ OSV News NY bishops urge rejection of 'wolf in sheep’s clothing' Equal Rights Amendment American Catholic Tribune NY Catholics warn Equal Rights Amendment on this year's ballot could undercut parental rights The Boston Pilot NY bishops urge voters to reject proposed amendment they call ‘wolf in sheep’s clothing’ The Record Newspaper St. Bernard Offers First Life Issues Series The Catholic Courior New Yorkers Will Vote on Making Abortion an 'Equal Right' in State's Constitution Catholic News Agency More Campuses are Requiring Access to Abortion Pill: "Women are Being Exploited" The Washington Stand Pro-Lifers Say New Law Lacks Safeguards, Support for Families The College Fix New York Abortion Bill Headed for Governor's Desk has Constitutionality Questioned. Spectrum News We Can’t Allow Oppressive Systems to Co-opt Abolitionist Language Prism Policy Proposals for Building a Post-Roe Future Newsweek Will We Keep Marching? On Roe's 50th Anniversary, Abortion Opponents Reach a Crossroads The New York Times The 2023 Manhattan Witness for Life Featured Egging, Halloween Masks & Creepy Pope Costumes — But That Didn’t Deter Us SFLA Blog Priest Found Guilty of Blocking Entrance to Abortion Clinic, Faces Prison Time Catholic News Agency They're not Religious. But They Oppose Abortion Christianity Today Town Rescinds Abortion Zoning Law Manhasset Press Anti-Abortion Feminism. How is this even a thing? Radical Philosophy For New York's Anti-Abortion Veterans, Roe's Fall Is Not a Full Victory The New York Times In New York, Anti-Abortion Centers Outnumber Abortion Clinics The New York Times Roe vs. Wade Decision News 12, The Bronx Historic Roe v. Wade Ruling a Momentous Day for Many in Rochester for Different Reasons Democrat & Chronicle How will Supreme Court Ruling Affect Abortion Laws in NY? Democrat & Chronicle Weekend News Brief WBTA Pro-life Groups and Politicians Celebrate Supreme Court Decision Overturning Roe v. Wade NY Daily News Leaked Abortion Opinion Draft Add Fuel To The Fire Of Political Debate Over Roe vs. Wade Democrat & Chronicle Coming of Age during Roe v. Wade: Women Tell Us how They Saw the Moment Then and Now Washington Post Actress Speaks at Finger Lakes Pro-Life Event Finger Lakes Daily News , News Break Inside the Anti-Abortion Movement's 'Feminist' Quest to End the Pill Jezebel Inspiring women: Celebrating their legacy Finger Lakes Times New York Bill Would Force All Public Colleges to Offer Free Abortions Life Site News New York bill would require taxpayer-funded medical abortions be available to all students at public colleges Blaze Media New York Introduces Bill To Offer Free Abortion Pills To State University Students On Campus Activist Mommy New York Bill Would Force SUNY Schools to Provide Abortion Pill on Campuses Live Action Proposed Bill Would Require SUNY Schools to Provide Abortion Pills on Campuses Rochester First As Supreme Court Shifts Under Trump, Cuomo Vows to Expand Abortion Rights The New York Times Governor Cuomo Support Radical Abortion Agenda NewsMax Gov. Cuomo Wants to Make Abortion a Constitutional Right in NY Family Life The Reproductive Health Act: Fact v. Fiction New Yorkers For Life Will New York Have the Most Liberal Abortion Laws in the World? National Catholic Register Delusional Andrew Cuomo Wants to Expand the 'Right' to Kill Your Unborn Child Even Further The Washington Examiner New York Gov. Cuomo: No Budget Unless Abortion Made Legal for any Reason until Birth The Christian Post NY Gov. Cuomo Refuses to Sign State Budget until Lawmakers Approve Bill Legalizing Abortion for Any Reason until Birth The Blaze, Fearless News New York State to Expand State Abortion Law to Allow Some Third-Trimester Procedures The Washington Times New York Governor Cuomo Ties State Budget to Passage of Aggressive Abortion Bill The New American New York's Radical Abortion Law Repeals Protections for Wanted Babies, Too PJ Media The State of New York Rules that Women Can Get Later Term Abortions for any Reason, and that Killing an Unborn Child is not Murder Shoe-bat Roe Anniversary Protests The Consistent Life Ethic Blog Trafficking and Women’s and Children’s Health: Intervention, Recovery and Prevention Center For Family & Human Rights RHA: How Far is Too Far? The Queens Village Republican Club, America's Oldest, 1875 Will the NY State Senate Protect Abortion Rights? The Gothamist Thousands To Come To Seneca Falls On Saturday To Continue Push For Women's Rights Democrat & Chronicle FCLNY TELEVISION APPEARANCES Medical Aid in Dying Act soon to become NYS law, what local experts expect Rochester First Advocates, critics react after Gov. Hochul reaches agreement with NY Legislature on Medical Aid in Dying Act TV News, Channel 10 Doctors, Activists Clash over Allowing Terminally Ill Patients to End their Lives with Medication TV News, Channel 10 Protesters Rally Outside Planned Parenthood in Brighton, Calling to Defund the Organization TV News, Channel 10 Rochester Anti-Abortion Advocates Highlight Alternatives Spectrum News Advocates Rally in Downtown Rochester on 51st Anniversary of Roe V. Wade. TV News, Channel 13 Response to Overturning of Roe V. Wade, One Year Later TV News, Channel 10 Local Organizations React to Supreme Court Decision to Expand Access to Abortion Pill TV News, Channel 13 Abortion continues to be hot topic on the 50th anniversary of Roe V. Wade TV News, Channel 13 The Impacts of Living in a Post-Roe America NBC News What Will It Truly Mean to be "Pro-Life" after Abortion is Banned in many American States NPR, WXXI Local Reaction to President Biden's Executive Order Signing TV News, Channel 10 NYS Lawmakers Vote on Gun, Abortion Measures TV News, Channel 13 Congressman Joe Morelle Hosts Town Hall on Women's Health and Abortion Rights TV News, Channel 13 'Stay Out of My House!': Just Part of the Reaction to the Supreme Court Decision on Abortion TV News, Channel 10 Overturning of Roe v. Wade Causes Whirlwind of Emotions in Western New York TV News, Channel 13 Abortion Divide: Reaction from the Pro-choice, Pro-life Movements TV News, Channel 7 Hochul Announces $35 Million to Support Abortion Providers TV News, Channel 10 Abortion Providers in Western NY Prepare to Expand Care to Women From Other States TV News, Channel 13 Planned Parenthood Rally Held At Parcel Five TV News, Channel 10 Supreme Court Leak Ignites Local Roe v. Wade Debate TV News, Channel 13 Pro-life and Pro-Choice Groups React to Roe v. Wade Draft Opinion TV News, Channel 10 Both Sides In The Abortion Debate React To The Court Leak TV News Channel 7 Advocacy Groups In WNY Weigh In On Supreme Court Draft Opinion TV News Channel 4 A Clash of Movements Spectrum News Demonstrations: Women’s March TV News, Channel 10 The proposed bill would require SUNY schools to provide abortion pills on campuses TV News Channels 8, 4 Opposition to the Reproductive Health Act Rochester First. Com, News Channels 8 & 10 Demonstrators Gather in Rochester to Protest Kavanaugh Nomination News Partners NBC, News Channel 10 FCLNY RADIO APPEARANCES Next Steps Show Radio Podcast Network An Interview with Carol Crossed News Radio WHAM 1180 The Latest on the Abortion Pill Family Life Radio Special Feature- Feminists Choosing Life- At the Washington March Family Life Radio A Conversation Discussing the Legal Landscape of a Post-Roe America. Just Love Discussing the Future of Abortion in America: Connections. WXXI Radio, NPR What Will It Truly Mean To Be Pro-Life After Abortion Banned In Many American States? NPR, WXXI NY Limited Pregnancy Centers Study Ava Maria Radio Discussing New York's Proposed Reproductive Health Act: Connections WXXI Radio, NPR 30 Issues: Reproductive Health Act, Brian Lehrer Show WNYC Radio, 93.9 FM PODCASTS AND OTHER MEDIA An Interview with Carol Crossed and Melissa Ohden! No Nonsense Roundtable Podcast Conversations With Cardinal Dolan Catholic Faith Network Dear Jane Podcast: Can Feminists Be Pro-Life? Youtube, Spotify , Audacity , Apple Podcasts Life Brings Hope that Death Cannot: Wake Up NY! The Whole-Life Democrat Blog Juneteenth 2023 - Special Edition WhatsNUrs Talk Show The Future of NY Abortion Pill Access After Federal Court Rulings Rochester First Peace and Life: Thousands Saved Consistent Life Network Peace and Life: Pharmacies Consistent Life Network Take Back Roe v. Wade. March on FCLNY Headquarters Action.WomensMarch.com Local, Regional Reaction to Roe v. Wade Getting Overturned by SCOTUS On-line News Video, Finger Lakes 1.com, NY Planned Parenthood of Central & Western NY Expanding in Anticipation of Roe v. Wade On-line News Video, Finger Lakes 1.com, NY Officials React to Scotus Roe v. Wade Leak WIVB.com , YouTube , Planned Parenthood Calls Possible Abortion Overturn 'Controlling,' Others Say It Will Re-Humanize Rochester First Better Arguments, Diverse Perspectives The Minimize Project Poor, Homeless, AND Pregnant WEDIGNIFY PODCAST - 058 FCLNY SOCIAL MEDIA INSTAGRAM X FACEBOOK TIKTOK YOUTUBE FCLNY PRINT AND ONLINE NEWS COVERAGE Signage Stop Calling Violence Feminism: Abortion Kills Human Beings Conservative Supreme Court Majority Appears Inclined to Scale Back Abortion Rights ABC News Supreme Court Abortion Case: 5 Key Moments from Oral Arguments Fox News Dueling Rallies as U.S. Supreme Court Confronts Abortion Rights Case Reuters Protests Outside Supreme Court Ahead of Abortion Rights Arguments WTOP News Not Your Mother's Pro-Life Protest WORLD Supreme Court Appears Open to Upholding Mississippi Abortion Restriction New York Times Protesters at Supreme Court Square Off Over Abortion Washington Post Doctors' scrubs and fetal photos: Protesters and counter protesters gather as Supreme Court debates major abortion case Business Insider Amicus Brief: Dobbs vs. Jackso n Brief of 240 Wom en Scholars and Professionals, and ProLife F eminists Organiz atio ns. FCLNY Lead Organizational Amici Why Supreme Court Abortion Decision Empowers Women Fox News The Controversial Economics of Abortion Law Wall Street Journal Black Women Have Much at Stake in States Where Abortion Access May Vanish KHN How Changes in Abortion Law Could Impact Community Health NPR Some Abortion Opponents Make Economic Arguments. They’re In for a Fight New York Times Friends of the Court Part II The Human Life Review ROE AND CASEY WERE GRIEVOUSLY WRONG AND SHOULD BE OVERRULED – COOPER ET AL Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Five Reasons Why the Supreme Court Should Overturn Roe v. Wade Life News A Split Dividing Anti-Abortion Feminists Politico Pro-Life Legal Experts Say They're Encouraged by Justices' Questioning in Dobbs Abortion Case Catholic News Agency Mississippi Argues that Abortions are no Longer Necessary Because Women can have Successful Careers Now Fortune We Read All the Amicus Briefs in Dobbs So You Don’t Have To Scotus Blog What Pro-Life Feminists are arguing in the Mississippi Abortion Case The 19th News Dobbs: The Court’s Historic Moment (Part 2) National Review Overturn Roe v. Wade? Why It Might Happen This Time CBN News Why Hundreds of Scientists are Weighing in on a High-Stakes US Abortion Case Nature Why Legal Abortion is Bad Precedent: Roe V. Wade Critics Make the Case to Supreme Court Catholic News Agency Female Scholars to SCOTUS: Abortion Deserves No Credit for Women’s Success Live Action Amicus Brief of 240 Women Scholars and Professionals et al. Center for Arizona Policy 'Relic of the past': Why Women Don't Need Roe v. Wade to Flourish Now USA Today Do Women Need Abortion to Succeed? Women Legal Scholars Say No Catholic News Agency Anti-Abortion Activists at Supreme Court Cite an Unlikely Authority for Overturning Roe v. Wade: Ruth Bader Ginsburg Washington Post Noem Joins Amicus Brief in US Supreme Court Abortion Case DRG News Some Other Noteworthy Amicus Briefs in Dobbs Abortion Case National Review The Women's Alliance Against Violence An Initiative of the Thomas More Society created to challenge S tate laws which incentivize violence against women and childr en, including children in utero. FCLNY Serves as an Educational Arm of the Women's Alliance Against Violence. PRINT/ON-LINE/RADIO Second Circuit Takes up Challenge to NY Reproductive Health Law Courthouse News Services Why Andrew Cuomo Faces Lawsuit Over New York's Abortion Law Newsweek Lawsuit over NY abortion law says it could help enable domestic abuse Catholic News Agency Lawsuit Alleges New York Abortion Policy Harms Victims of Domestic Violence The National Review ‘Devastating’: Lawsuit Against New York Claims 2019 Abortion Bill Enables Domestic Violence Daily Wire Victims Of Domestic Violence Sue NY State, Say Pro-Abortion Law Not Constitutional LifeSite News Women File Lawsuit to Overturn Radical New York Law That Legalized Abortions Up to Birth Life News HOT TOPIC: Victims Challenge New York’s Reproductive Health Act in Historic Lawsuit (Thomas More Society) The Human Life Review Class action Lawsuit Filed Against New York’s Governor Over Radical Abortion Bill Live Action Landmark Lawsuit Challenges New York's Reproductive Health Act News 69 WFMZ, Yahoo Finance , Associated Press Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against NY Governor, Other State Officials Over Reproductive Health Act The New American Lawsuit Says NY Abortion Law Makes Women More Vulnerable to Domestic Abuse - Here's Why CBN News Lawsuit Accuses NY Abortion Law Of Helping Domestic Abusers Daily Caller Gov. Cuomo faces Lawsuit Over New York’s Controversial Abortion Law USA Herald New York Sued Over ‘Dangerous Ambiguities’ In Liberal Abortion Law The Christian Post Federal Lawsuit Challenges New York's Abortion Law NPR: WRVO , WBFO , WSKG , WSHU Suing NY Reproductive Heath (sic) Act Relevant Radio New York’s Controversial Reproductive Health Act Today's Living Hope Historic Lawsuit Challenging New York's Reproductive Health Act Winds of Change, Episode #5578
- THE PRO-LIFE FEMINIST | FCLNY
Photo by: Defense Visual Information Distribution THE PRO-LIFE FEMINIST FCLNY publishes and distributes quarterly e-newsletters and periodic e-updates regarding its mission driven activities. Our newsletters and updates highlight FCLNY's educational efforts and calls to action in each of its SEVEN purpose inspired endeavors: Community Encounters, Scholarly Events, Film Involvement, Media Outreach, Grassroots Campaigns, Projects That Empower and Legislative Advocacy. Stay in The Loop Yes, Susan B. Anthony was Pro-Life Published in the Wall Street Journal Read the article here Suffrage Movement ~ Historical Background Restellism/Abortion Racism "Suffragists believed that greater independence of women would eliminate or at least greatly reduce poverty, rape, and prostitution. They believed these evils produced women’s desire to abort their children. Women’s enfranchisement would provide education and employment opportunities, change divorce laws related to drunken husbands, and take away the stigma of single motherhood. Having access to the vote would ‘scourge the evil of abortion’. " Susan B. Anthony was way ahead of the curve in propelling the nation's advancements in human rights for all human beings. Her newspaper, The Revolution, loudly and consistently supported suffrage for black women and condemned racism. Read more Read more The Pro-Life Feminist E-Newsletter Click on i mage to view and arrows to scroll 2026 February February February January 2025 December December December December December November November November November September September September August August August June June June June May April April April April 2024 December December December November November November October October (2x) October (2x) October October September September August July July July July July June June June May May May







