URGENT ACTION NEEDED: Help protect the health and safety of Mississippi teens!

Please take action to protect the health and safety of Mississippi teens by helping us defeat SB 2549!

Contact Rep. Edward Blackmon, committee chair of Judiciary A, and House Speaker William McCoy and ask them to oppose this detrimental legislation.  This bill dies if it does not make it out of committee by the 18th.  Please add your voice and oppose this bill!

SB 2549

Instead of proposing common sense measures that would get to the root of the problem of unintended teen pregnancy, this bill seeks to restrict the already limited access to abortion that Mississippi teens have without regard to their health and safety

This bill also creates mandatory reporting requirements for sexual activity that could keep teens from seeking needed reproductive health services for fear of lack of confidentiality.  

Planned Parenthood absolutely supports protecting Mississippi youth.  However, the proposed abortion restrictions and mandatory reporting requirements in SB 2549 have the potential to harm Mississippi teens.

Visit the "What's at Stake" page for a thorough explanation of the repercussions of this legislation. 

Sample Letter for Campaign

Subject: Oppose SB 2549 - Protect the health and safety of Mississippi Teens!

Dear [ Decision Maker ] ,

Please oppose the mandatory reporting requirements and abortion restrictions in SB 2549 to protect the health and safety of Mississippi teens.

SB 2549 punishes parents for having trusting relationships with their teens and pits family members against each other. We believe that teens should be encouraged to involve their parents in making medical decisions when possible. Most teenagers do, but not every family is a model family. For some teens, speaking to both parents is not an option. The possibility of family members suing each other because one tried to help a teen relative access safe health care could tear Mississippi families apart.

SB 2549 creates an unconstitutional burden on teens' right to privacy and their right to travel interstate to seek medical care.

SB 2549 infringes on First Amendment rights by inhibiting the provision of factual information to minors about the services provided by out of state health centers.

Please oppose SB 2549.

Sincerely,

Campaign Launched:
March 14, 2008



Background Information

SB 2549 punishes parents for having trusting relationships with their teens and pits family members against each other.   The possibility of family members suing each other because one tried to help a teen relative access safe health care could tear Mississippi families apart.

SB 2549 creates an unconstitutional burden on teens.  Minors without parental involvement may well have to go to court to obtain judicial waivers of two states’ laws: Mississippi’s and the state’s where they are obtaining an abortion, requiring the minor to go through two legal procedures in two states’ courts. This will delay minors’ abortions, creating unconstitutional burdens on their right to privacy and their right to travel interstate to seek medical care. 

SB 2549 infringes on First Amendment rights.  The bill could inhibit the provision of factual information to minors about the services provided by out of state health centers as providing such information potentially could be viewed as “assisting” or “aiding” a minor to obtain an out of state abortion.

By traveling to a neighboring state, Mississippi teens are not evading parental consent requirements.  In fact, every state surrounding Mississippi already has a parental consent law with which women seeking an abortion must comply.  

SB 2549 completely ignores geographic and economic realities.  Out of state travel is often the simplest and least financially burdensome way for women to obtain needed medical services. 

The mandatory reporting requirements of SB 2549 expands reporting to include instances where teens are involved in normal sexual activity with other teens.  SB 2549 removes the ability of health professionals, clergy members, teachers and childcare providers to make judgments as to whether teens are engaging in normal sexual activity and instead mandates that they report a wide range of sexual behaviors.