Sign-On Letter to the Senate Regarding the Child Custody Protection Act (S.403) (7/19/2006)
U.S.
Senate Washington, DC
20510
Dear Senator:
We, the undersigned
organizations, write to express our opposition to the Child Custody Protection
Act (S.403). This bill would make
it a federal crime for any person, other than a parent, to accompany a young
woman to an out-of-state doctor for abortion care if the home state’s
parental-involvement law has not been met.
We believe that young
women should be encouraged to talk to their parents about important health
issues like an unplanned pregnancy – and thankfully, many do. Even in states that do not have
mandatory parental-involvement laws, more than 60 percent of young women report
that one or both of their parents knew of their decision to choose an
abortion. However, some teens
simply cannot approach their parents about such matters, and often for good
reason. Among young women who do
not tell their parents of their decision to terminate an unplanned pregnancy, 30
percent report having experienced or feared violence in their family or feared
being forced to leave home. In
cases like these, our first priority must be to keep these young women
safe. The Child Custody Protection
Act does exactly the opposite.
Teens who decide they
cannot involve a parent – for whatever reason - often seek help and guidance
from other trusted adults.
Unfortunately, this bill would deter them from doing so. The Child Custody Protection Act would
make criminals of grandparents, adult siblings, and even clergy members for
helping young women obtain medical care that is legal – even if that person does
not intend, or even know, that the home state parental-involvement law has not
been followed. Threatening a caring
grandmother with a prison sentence for accompanying her granddaughter to the
doctor is hardly a constructive response to the American teen-pregnancy
epidemic.
The Child Custody
Protection Act also imposes an extremely complex patchwork of
parental-involvement laws on women and doctors across the country. Among
other things, the bill forces doctors to learn 49 other states’ laws, under the
threat of fine, imprisonment, and civil suits. In some cases, the Child
Custody Protection Act forces young women to comply with two states’
parental-involvement mandates. These are just a few examples of the
legislation’s onerous requirements.
Finally, the Child
Custody Protection Act is unconstitutional and tramples on some of the most
basic principles of federalism. In
the words of legal scholars Laurence Tribe of Harvard University and Peter Rubin
of Georgetown University, the legislation “violates the rights of states to
enact and enforce their own laws governing conduct within their territorial
boundaries, and the rights of the residents of each of the United States and of
the District of Columbia to travel to and from any state of the Union for lawful
purposes, a right strongly affirmed by the Supreme Court….”
For these reasons, we
urge you to oppose this dangerous legislation. Our nation’s families would be much
better served if Congress instead focused its time and energy on enacting
commonsense policies, such as honest and comprehensive sex education and
improved access to birth control, both of which would help prevent teen
pregnancy and reduce the need for abortion.
Thank you for your
consideration.
Sincerely,
American Association
of University Women American Civil
Liberties Union American Medical
Women’s Association Americans for
Democratic Action Association of
Reproductive Health Professionals Catholics for a Free
Choice Center for
Reproductive Rights Chicago Abortion
Fund Chicago Foundation for
Women Choice
USA Feminist Caucus of the
American Humanist Association Guttmacher
Institute Hadassah,
the Women's Zionist Organization of America Illinois
Caucus for Adolescent Health International
Gender Association Legal
Momentum Ms. Foundation for
Women NARAL Pro-Choice
America National Abortion
Federation National Council of
Jewish Women National Council of
Women’s Organizations National Family
Planning and Reproductive Health Association National Latina
Institute for Reproductive Health National Network of
Abortion Funds National Organization
for Women National Partnership
for Women & Families National Women’s
Conference National Women’s Law
Center People For the
American Way Physicians
for Reproductive Choice and Health® Planned Parenthood
Federation of America Population Connection Religious Coalition
for Reproductive Choice Reproductive Health
Technologies Project Republican Majority
for Choice Sexuality Information
and Education Council of the United States Union for Reform
Judaism Unitarian Universalist
Association of Congregations Women of Reform
Judaism Women's
Institute for Freedom of the Press
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