WASHINGTON — A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld some of the most onerous parts of a Texas abortion law, which is likely to cause most of the state’s abortion clinics close. The ruling, released Tuesday, allowed provisions requiring clinics to meet hospital-level operating standards and requiring providers to have admitting privileges at local hospitals to go into effect. It did exempt the last open clinic in the state’s Rio Grande Valley from the provisions. “In plain terms, H.B. 2 and its provisions may be applied throughout Texas, except that Supreme Court precedent requires us to partially uphold the district court’s injunction …

WASHINGTON — A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld some of the most onerous parts of a Texas abortion law, which is likely to cause most of the state’s abortion clinics close.

The ruling, released Tuesday, allowed provisions requiring clinics to meet hospital-level operating standards and requiring providers to have admitting privileges at local hospitals to go into effect. It did exempt the last open clinic in the state’s Rio Grande Valley from the provisions.

“In plain terms, H.B. 2 and its provisions may be applied throughout Texas, except that Supreme Court precedent requires us to partially uphold the district court’s injunction of the ASC requirement as applied to the Whole Woman’s Health abortion facility in McAllen, Texas, and to uphold the district court’s injunction of the admitting privileges requirement as applied to Dr. Lynn when he is working at the McAllen facility,” the ruling read.

The ambulatory surgical center standards include minimum sizes for rooms and doorways, ventilation systems and other structural elements. While supporters of the law, including the Republican-controlled Texas legislature that passed it two years ago, say it is meant to promote safety, its opponents say it places undue burdens on patients and is a veiled attempt to make the procedure inaccessible. The cost of meeting the ambulatory surgical center requirements is prohibitive for many clinics, and doctors often find it impossible to obtain admitting privileges from nearby hospitals, which may be Catholic or afraid of backlash if they offer those privileges. In court, attorneys opposing the law said it could close all but eight clinics in Texas.

The plaintiffs had challenged the law’s admitting privileges requirement as applied to clinics in McAllen and El Paso, on the basis that women in the Rio Grande Valley would have to travel over 200 miles to access the procedure in San Antonio or Houston. The court modified the injunction “to apply to the McAllen facility until such time as another licensed abortion facility becomes available to provide abortions at a location nearer to the Rio Grande Valley than San Antonio.”

The court said women in El Paso could simply leave the state and travel to New Mexico if they wanted to have the procedure.

“The closest Texas abortion facility that will remain open is in San Antonio, over 550 miles away,” the court wrote. “There is an abortion facility approximately twelve miles away in Santa Teresa, New Mexico. Prior to H.B. 2, more than half of the women who obtained abortions at the Santa Teresa facility were from El Paso. The State argues the closure of the El Paso abortion facility will not impose an undue burden because women in this area can travel to the Santa Teresa facility.”

A different 5th Circuit panel had previously ruled that Mississippi could not enforce its admitting privileges law because enforcement would cause the state’s only abortion clinic to close. The court said it was unconstitutional for the state to delegate constitutional rights to its neighbors. In the Texas decision, the court said the Texas and Mississippi cases were “distinguishable” because Texas wouldn’t be left with only one clinic if the admitting privileges provision was in effect.

The court heavily relied on the Supreme Court’s 1992 decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey, which said states can limit abortion access if restrictions are “reasonably related” to a “legitimate state interest.”

Reproductive rights advocates are now likely to appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court.

“Once again, women across the state of Texas face the near total elimination of safe and legal options for ending a pregnancy, and the denial of their constitutional rights,” Nancy Northup, the president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights, said in a statement. Her group had filed the lawsuit against the 2013 bill.

Researchers and reproductive health advocates say Texans are starting to cross the border into Mexico to seek back-alley abortions, given the difficulties associated with obtaining the procedure in their state.

The law, which was signed by former Gov. Rick Perry (R) last summer, also banned abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, though that provision hasn’t yet been challenged in court.

In August 2013, before the abortion restrictions went into effect, the state had 40 licensed abortion providers. After the Supreme Court in October 2014 blocked an earlier 5th Circuit ruling that had allowed Texas to fully enforce the law, the state had 16 legal abortion providers. There are now expected to be eight.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Continued:  

Many Clinics Likely To Close As Federal Appeals Court Upholds Texas Abortion Restrictions