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Abortion Battle Brews Between Spitzer, Church

By JACOB GERSHMAN, Staff Reporter of the Sun
February 19, 2008

Tensions are running high between the Spitzer administration and the Catholic Church, which is mounting an unusually aggressive campaign to stop the state from enacting a law that would declare abortion a fundamental right for women.

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Governor Spitzer, whose administration drafted the legislation and is pressing lawmakers to pass it this year, is coming under fire from church officials who say the bill would leave Catholic hospitals and social service agencies vulnerable to discrimination lawsuits brought by women seeking abortions or referrals and could ultimately lead to state sanctions against the institutions.

Administration officials say the church is exaggerating the impact of the bill on Catholic facilities and, for the time being, have ruled out adjusting the language.

Mr. Spitzer unveiled the bill, which is called the Reproductive Health and Privacy Protection Act, in April. This year, his administration has signaled that the measure is a top priority, causing alarm among church leaders.

In his State of the State address in January, the governor called on lawmakers to pass the act. That month, his wife, Silda Wall, delivered a speech devoted to the legislation at a gathering in Rochester to mark the 35th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling Roe v. Wade.

In response, the church has intensified its campaign. In recent weeks, the archdiocese has organized a petition drive, shipped more than 100,000 pamphlets to parishes, and produced an advocacy video that it is distributing to Catholic leaders across the state.

Its effort will culminate next month, when the Roman Catholic archbishop of New York, Edward Cardinal Egan, and New York bishops are scheduled to meet with Mr. Spitzer and urge him to reconsider the legislation, church officials said.

"I've never seen anything like this. People, when they find out about this bill, get really incensed, and they want to do something," the director of pro-life activities at the New York State Catholic Conference, Kathleen Gallagher, said. The conference is the official public policy arm of the church.

If passed, the act would overhaul New York's abortion laws for the first time since 1970.

State Republicans, which control the Senate by two seats, say they are opposed to the bill. Democrats, who have a wide majority in the Assembly, have indicated they would support the measure only if the Senate joined them. Lawmakers say a Democratic takeover of the Senate would sharply increase the likelihood of passage.

The bill would establish a fundamental right of a woman to terminate her pregnancy prior to fetal viability and in later stages if the woman's health is at risk. It would also remove abortion regulations from state penal law and places oversight in the realm of public health law.

The administration and abortion rights activists say the chief purpose of the act is to preemptively ensure that abortion remains legal in New York should the Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade.

Church officials say the act goes much further. Among their concerns is a provision that expands the field of people who may legally perform abortions. The legislation would extend authority beyond physicians to "qualified, licensed health care practitioners." They also say the bill would eliminate the possibility of placing new restrictions on abortion, such as parental notification, informed consent laws, and waiting periods.

They say they are most troubled by a section that states that the "the state shall not discriminate against the exercise of the rights … in the regulation or provision of benefits, facilities, services, or information."

"If they grant us a license, which is a state action, they will be discriminating," a legal coordinator for the archdiocese, Edward Mechmann, said. "The right to abortion would have more protection under New York's law than the right to free exercise of religion."

Spitzer administration officials dispute the church's interpretation, arguing that a "conscience clause" provision in state law allowing physicians to refuse to perform abortions for religious reasons and federal laws prohibiting the federal government from requiring doctors, hospitals, or clinics to perform abortions would protect Catholic hospitals and social-service agencies from legal penalties.

"Nobody will be required to perform an abortion," an assistant counsel to the governor, Lisa Ullman, said in an interview.

Kelli Conlin, the executive director of the New York affiliate of Naral, the organization formerly known as the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League, said the legislation provides the "absolute right of women to access the service" but does not demand that an institution perform abortions. She called the claims made by the church "sensational distractions."

Church officials, who have raised their concerns directly with the governor's office, say the proposed act conflicts with state and federal refusal statutes — an inconsistency they say would invite legal challenges against their institutions. Moreover, they say, the statutes could be overturned just as easily as Roe v. Wade.

"If the intent is not to force our hospitals and other facilities to perform abortions or make direct referrals or promote abortion, then why not amend the bill?" a spokesman for the Catholic Conference, Dennis Poust, said by e-mail.

"Why not include specific language that says the bill does not apply to institutions owned, operated or sponsored by a religious institution? They are well aware of our concerns and have been shown zero interest in amending the bill. We have had lengthy discussions at the highest level of the administration on this and have gotten the cold shoulder," he said.

Cardinal Egan's objections to the bill follow an earlier flare up between him and Mr. Spitzer over the governor's budget proposal. In a January letter co-signed by other religious leaders, the cardinal said he considered the governor's decision to omit a $1,000-a-student private and parochial school tuition tax deduction a breach of trust.

The latest conflict has the potential to create "negative atmospherics between the Catholic community and the governor," said the executive vice president for government and public affairs of Agudath Israel of America, David Zwiebel, whose Orthodox Jewish organization has worked closely with the church to urge the Spitzer administration to boost support for parochial school families.

Still, he said, "It's not like all conversation has broken off. Like all relationships with government officials, it's complicated."

He noted that the governor's budget allocates $55 million for private and independent schools to pay for the cost of complying with state attendance requirements. Jewish and Catholic groups had sought the reimbursement money for several years.


Reader comments on this article

TitleByDate

A fundamental right??? [21 words]

mary e johnson 

Mar 10, 2008 11:29

Willfull blindness hinders anti-abortion activists from accomplishing their goal [reduced abortions] [298 words]

Colleen Burgos 

Mar 3, 2008 10:30

  Pro-Lifers NO interest in punishing women who have unwanted pregnancies [404 words]

Colleen Barry 

Mar 10, 2008 01:48

Anti-religious bigotry [94 words]

Rabbi Louis J. Feldman 

Feb 21, 2008 21:07

Picture of the year [342 words]

Bob Gontarek 

Feb 20, 2008 14:11

  Appreciation for a relevant post [21 words]

John House 

Feb 20, 2008 20:04

Pernicious legislation [82 words]

Thomas 

Feb 20, 2008 09:38

Think before you vote in November. [176 words]

Kathy Beickert 

Feb 20, 2008 07:26

  "Endowed by Their Creator. . . ." [174 words]

Dr. Patrick Foley 

Feb 21, 2008 17:42

Standing before God Our Creator [55 words]

Betty 

Feb 19, 2008 23:11

The wrong is made to look right, the communist way of doing things. [25 words]

Bob Lang 

Feb 19, 2008 22:17

He Does Not Want to Protect Woman [123 words]

Maryanne Linkes 

Feb 19, 2008 22:00

It is time to let Spitzer Go!! [65 words]

Br.Francis-Vincent Gigliotti FSD 

Feb 19, 2008 21:32

Why is Mr. Spitzer obsessed with a mission to kill? [296 words]

Margaret Sciarrino 

Feb 19, 2008 20:13

  GOD SAID; THOU SHALT NOT KILL! [254 words]

MARY ANN MCANDREW 

Feb 20, 2008 00:39

  Spitzer has to make good on his campaign promises [307 words]

Jacqueline Stutmann 

Feb 21, 2008 06:25

Spitzer vs Church [10 words]

R. Patronik 

Feb 19, 2008 18:49

New York's future with abortion [79 words]

Ingrid 

Feb 19, 2008 18:33

Choice between abortion rights or hospital care? [82 words]

S Farrell 

Feb 19, 2008 17:54

slippery slope [177 words]

Helene 

Feb 19, 2008 17:23

abortion is not a reproductive right [64 words]

Joseph A DiPoala 

Feb 19, 2008 17:05

Time for Catholics to act Catholic [47 words]

S. Murphy 

Feb 19, 2008 16:50

  A Nazi State? [92 words]

jerry heil 

Feb 20, 2008 10:53

Abortion [207 words]

Susie 

Feb 19, 2008 16:43

Abortion Right bill [70 words]

Ron Campisi 

Feb 19, 2008 16:01

Why? [67 words]

Mike Smith 

Feb 19, 2008 15:48

Abortion otherwise known as legal killing of babies [152 words]

Arturo S. Esguerra 

Feb 19, 2008 15:36

When does life have a beginning? [105 words]

Mary B. Grusendorf 

Feb 19, 2008 15:27

Re: Abortion "Rights" [58 words]

Linda 

Feb 19, 2008 15:02

Spitzer! [133 words]

DAS 

Feb 19, 2008 14:46

Sitzer and Abortion [102 words]

Henry DeBonis 

Feb 19, 2008 14:15

Abortion Battle - Catholic Church vs Spitzer [91 words]

Vin Terricola 

Feb 19, 2008 14:01

Cardinal Egan deservs a pat on the back [33 words]

Bob Brady 

Feb 19, 2008 13:17

Just another nail in the coffin [136 words]

Bill Freeman 

Feb 19, 2008 12:47

Better than Abortion? [72 words]

Felice Bullard 

Feb 19, 2008 12:43

No Right [32 words]

JW 

Feb 19, 2008 12:33

What about Separation of Church and State? [56 words]

Mary 

Feb 19, 2008 12:13

  Separation of Church and State in NOT in the Constitution! [94 words]

Patrizia 

Feb 19, 2008 19:29

  Patrizia is right [55 words]

Mr. Bee 

Feb 19, 2008 21:23

This imposition by Governor Spitzer must not be allowed to prevail. It is immoral. [70 words]

Roy Tenn 

Feb 19, 2008 11:39

Abortion Battle [50 words]

Richard Meade 

Feb 19, 2008 11:01

spitzer [10 words]

francine Hanlon 

Feb 19, 2008 10:40

They don't mind killing defenseless American babies. [83 words]

Maureen 

Feb 19, 2008 10:15

  priceless [108 words]

Violet 

Feb 20, 2008 04:11

rights of children [126 words]

Carolyn Kelley 

Feb 19, 2008 09:58

talk about choice [55 words]

Gerry Zipf 

Feb 19, 2008 09:55

  Confront them about our "right to choose" [124 words]

Jacqueline Stutmann 

Feb 21, 2008 06:57

Let them spell it out [62 words]

Aryeh Moshen 

Feb 19, 2008 09:41

what a shame... [77 words]

Jeff Johnson, Collegeville 

Feb 19, 2008 09:19

abortion [19 words]

dr.william richter 

Feb 19, 2008 09:07

Its about time The Church steps up [76 words]

Paulette 

Feb 19, 2008 08:58

  The Church can and should do more [32 words]

blkjak 

Feb 20, 2008 03:22

Spitzer vs Church [113 words]

C. Bakasy 

Feb 19, 2008 08:34

Outrageous! [168 words]

Mike 

Feb 19, 2008 07:55

  Dads and abortion [61 words]

Mary 

Feb 19, 2008 18:40

Abortion laww in NY [29 words]

Jacques DUMON 

Feb 19, 2008 07:45

  This is what happens when PEOPLE do not think when they vote. [98 words]

Priscilla Sabatino 

Feb 19, 2008 18:27

  Spitzer is the Barabbas of New York [73 words]

Jacqueline Stutmann 

Feb 21, 2008 06:42

A modest proposal to prevent abortions [99 words]

John House 

Feb 19, 2008 01:23

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