On June 12, Governor JB Pritzker signed the Reproductive Health Act into law, greatly expanding access to abortion in the state of Illinois. But what exactly does that mean?
What is included in the bill?
The bill contains several affirmations, new insurance requirements, and repeals of two old laws that have not been enforceable in the state.
What does the bill affirm?
According to its sponsors, the bill affirms that "women, not politicians, make the decisions" about their reproductive health, including their birth control, the decision to have an abortion and the decision to carry a pregnancy to term.
Does my insurance now cover abortion?
If you have private insurance, yes. Before the RHA passed, the contraceptive coverage requirement in the Illinois Insurance Code did not cover abortion services in private insurance. The RHA requires private insurance to extend coverage to abortion services in addition to contraception, infertility treatments and maternity care.
Pritzker signed an executive order in January requiring state employee health insurance plans and Medicaid to cover abortion services in Illinois.
What laws got repealed by the RHA?
The RHA repealed both the state Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act and the Illinois Abortion Act of 1975.
The Illinois Abortion Act of 1975 specifically imposed felony penalties on doctors who provided abortions. While the act had been largely blocked by courts in Illinois, the RHA took the regulation of abortion out of the criminal code and affirmed abortion services are health care.
Does the RHA require women to have abortions?
No. The RHA both protects a woman's right to have an abortion and to refuse an abortion.
Is the RHA a late term abortion bill?
State Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago), one of the bill's sponsors, strongly refutes assertions by anti-abortion groups that the RHA is a late term abortion bill. She noted that a viability standard is present in the law, and federal law with regard to abortions performed late in pregnancy supersedes state law.
The Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 includes an exception for when the life of the mother is at risk. The Supreme Court holds that states may prohibit abortion after fetal viability as long as there is an exception for the health, both mental and physical, and life of the mother. The legal standard of viability varies and is typically decided on an individual basis.
Will the RHA be challenged?
Anti-abortion groups have vowed to fight the law.
"As the pro-life people in Illinois, we will not be silent, we will move forward," said Mary Kate Knorr, executive director at Illinois Right to Life Action, the day that Pritzker signed the RHA into law.
What comes next?
Abortion rights advocates in Illinois said their next step will be to challenge the Parental Notice of Abortion Act of 2013 that requires health care providers to alert an adult family member 48 hours before performing an abortion on any patient under the age of 18.
Click here to read the Reproductive Health Act on the Illinois General Assembly website