Oregon Voters Will Vote on Parental Notification for Abortion in November

State   |   Steven Ertelt   |   Jul 26, 2006   |   9:00AM   |   WASHINGTON, DC

Oregon Voters Will Vote on Parental Notification for Abortion in November Email this article
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by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
July 26, 2006

Salem, OR (LifeNews.com) — Oregon voters will have the opportunity to vote on whether they think parents should be notified when their minor teenage daughters are considering an abortion. Backers of parental notification turned in significantly more signatures than were necessary to qualify for ballot status.

Supporters needed just 75,630 valid signatures to qualify but, led by Oregon Right to Life, they turned in 115,845 signatures to the Secretary of State’s office last month.

Nancy Bennett, a spokeswoman for Oregon Planned Parenthood’s political action committee, said the abortion business would oppose the measure.

"We know what has proven most effective in keeping teens safe when it comes to reproductive health — and that is education and counseling," Bennett told the Associated Press.

According to the National Right to Life Committee, 22 states have parental consent laws in effect that require a parent to sign off on a teen’s abortion before it can be done. Another seven states have notification laws in place that require abortion facilities to notify a parent of a potential abortion beforehand.

Oregon has neither, but if state residents approve the ballot measure, parents would be able to be notified by an abortion facility 48 hours prior to their teenage daughter’s abortion.

That would allow them the opportunity to help her make a better decision.

"Parents are involved in teenagers’ lives in every other area," Sarah Nashif, who is managing the ballot-measure campaign, told the Statesman Journal newspaper. "Why is abortion the exception to that rule?"

In 2004, 1957 teen girls had abortions in Oregon and 55% of minors did not tell either parent before they had an abortion.

The proposal includes a Supreme Court-mandated provision that teens be allowed to get an abortion through a judicial bypass in cases of medical emergencies or in abusive home situations.

Polls show Oregonians strongly support parental involvement laws on abortion.

A January 2005 Moore Information Poll found 74 percent favor parental notification on abortion while just 21 percent opposed the idea.

That tracks with polls showing Americans favor the concept as well.

An April 2005 Fox News Poll also found that Americans agreed by a 78-17 percentage margin that parents should be notified about a minor’s abortion. A March 2005 Quinnipiac University Poll found a 75-18 percent support for parental notification.

Abortions in Oregon are down to their lowest levels since 1998, having decreased 20 percent between then and 2004, the latest year from which state data is available. The Oregon Department of Human Services reported 14,344 abortions in 1998, but that number decreased to 11,443 abortions in 2004.

Oregon has one of the oldest abortion laws in the nation, having legalized it in 1969, four year before the Supreme Court handed down its Roe v. Wade decision nullifying pro-life laws in the rest of the states.

Because Oregon has a similar pro-abortion climate to other west coast states like California and Washington, it doesn’t have the benefit of laws like parental notification and Right to Know provisions that help women avoid abortions.

Related web sites:
Protect Our Teen Daughters – https://www.protectourteendaughters.com
Oregon Right to Life – https://www.ortl.org