North Carolina's Republican-controlled state legislature
voted Monday night to override Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue's veto of a
state budget that strips money from Planned Parenthood.
The same lawmakers overrode Perdue's veto and moved to defund Planned Parenthood last year, but a judge
blocked the provision,
arguing that a state can't single out a particular health provider.
This time around, lawmakers found a way to sidestep legal challenges by
not specifically naming Planned Parenthood in the budget. Instead, the
bill prevents the state's Health and Human Services department from
contracting with "private providers" of family planning services --
effectively, but not explicitly, singling out Planned Parenthood.
Planned Parenthood of Central North Carolina, one of the state's two
Planned Parenthood providers, estimates that it will lose $200,000 as a
result of the new budget. Because no state money is used for abortion
services, the funding cuts will affect the clinic's ability to provide
affordable birth control, cancer screenings, pap smears and other
services for low-income women in the state.
"If we aren't able to figure something out and replace this funding,
this will affect the price and availability of services and prescription
drugs for patients," Paige Johnson, a spokesperson for PPCNC, told The
Huffington Post. "We won't be able to provide the walk-in care we
currently provide."
The new budget bill redirects $343,000 in state family planning
funding from private family planning providers to county health
departments, effective July 1, 2012, because private providers --
namely, Planned Parenthood -- also offer abortions.
Johnson said it was unclear whether the judge's 2011 injunction
against the defunding provision would apply to the new budget, now that
it doesn't specifically name Planned Parenthood.
"We're looking at all legal options," she said.
The Huffington Post | By Melissa Jeltsen