Catholic, Pro-Life Groups Fighting SCHIP Provisions
BY CHARLIE SPIERING
REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
September 16-22, 2007 Issue |
Posted 9/11/07 at 2:42 PM
WASHINGTON — Some Catholic activists fear federal funds may
soon go to contraceptive subsidies and sterilizations and open the door to
state-funded abortions.
At issue is the State Children’s Health Insurance Program as
passed by the U.S. House of Representatives.
Before breaking for recess, both the Senate and the House
passed their own versions of a bill designed to expand the existing State
Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP).
The pressure is on to finalize the bill by Sept. 30, the
date which existing legislation is set to expire.
Critics of the new child health care bills say that they
provide health insurance for families that are making well over the poverty
level, citing it as a step towards socialized medicine. The House bill would
add $50 billion to current health care provisions, while the Senate bill would
add $35 billion. President Bush has threatened to veto the bill if it contains
too much additional spending.
Catholic organizations in March came out in favor of
extending the program, as lawmakers considered its expansion. The U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops, joined by Catholic Charities USA and the
Catholic Health Association, called on Congress to expand health care funding.
They also raised concern over proposed cuts to the Medicaid and Medicare
programs.
However, the current legislation in the House version of the
bill also makes provisions to expand and streamline Medicaid so that states
have funds to provide contraceptives, including sterilization, both for
children and adults. It also includes measures that offer states the option to
use federal funding provided for abstinence programs to include options for
family planning programs, a victory for Planned Parenthood activists.
“Planned Parenthood applauds the majority of members of
Congress who stood up and voted in favor of children and families’ health — and
in favor of a commonsense prevention agenda,” said Nancy Clack, vice president
for Public Policy and Advocacy for Planned Parenthood Federation of America,
after the House bill was passed. “The best way to build healthy families is to
put prevention first — and that means making sure our children have health
insurance, women have access to reproductive health care and affordable birth
control, and teens have access to medically accurate information.”
That has U.S. bishops’ policy watchers more than worried.
“These are all things that don’t have to do with SCHIP
itself,” said Richard Doerflinger of the U.S. bishops’ conference. “This is a
bill they threw in with Medicaid and Medicare and Title V abstinence programs
that doesn’t have much of anything to do with SCHIP. We hope that there will be
a straightforward enough bill on the children’s health program; it’s important
enough in its own right to deserve its own bill.”
Michael O’Dea of the Christus Medicus Foundation noted that
Catholics should challenge the new family planning measures within the bill.
“I don’t believe that the majority of Americans want to
subsidize family planning, abortion, contraception, sterility and faulty
procedures for children in a health plan.” he said.
Unborn Child
As the bill was debated in both houses, pro-life activists
successfully brought an amendment to the Senate floor sponsored by Wayne
Allard, R-Colo., which attempted to codify the “unborn child rule” into the
bill.
The clause, inserted by the Bush administration in 2002,
included unborn children into the definition of a child, specifically stating
that a “child means an individual under the age of 19, including the period
from conception to birth.”
The Allard amendment failed in the Senate, 49-50. Douglas
Johnson, legislative director for National Right to Life, said that in spite of
the defeat of the Allard amendment, the current Senate bill did not threaten
the unborn child clause. “The Senate bill does have language that makes it
clear that they are not overturning the rule.” he said.
Johnson noted that attempts to include similar legislation
in the House bill were rebuffed by the Democratic leadership. Doerflinger said
there were fewer concerns with the Senate bill than the House, but both bills
diminished the “unborn child clause.”
Although the clause allows states to cover pregnant women,
both the House and Senate versions of the bill codified a different rule in the
name of the “pregnant woman, rather than defining the personhood of the unborn
child. In their zeal to not mention that the unborn child is a child, what they
have done is to cover the pregnant woman as if she were a child,” said
Doerflinger.
If the unborn child is only covered by health coverage for
the mother, it could allow more states to fund abortions.
“The pregnant woman can get whatever coverage that pregnant
women get in that state,” said Doerflinger. “In 17 states, that means elective
abortions.”
Doerflinger added that some states were required by court
order to fund abortions if they have a program that covers childbirth.
“Obviously we think that covering the woman and child in the name of the unborn
child is preferable,” he added.
Both Doerflinger and Johnson noted that they are interested
in communicating with conference members as they are appointed, but it’s
unlikely that they will have much influence in the final bill.
“There are a lot of other issues in play,” Johnson said,
citing the budget differences with the president. “No matter what happens in
conference, it may end up that what the Congress committee produces will be
vetoed and we’ll be back to square one.”
Charlie Spiering writes from
Washington, D.C
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