A federal judge blocked Texas’ new rules set to go into effect this week requiring abortionists to give aborted children a proper burial.
U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks gave the New York-based
Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) a temporary restraining order, the
Houston Chronicle reported, in a hearing last week that was “at times testy.”
The pro-abortion group, suing on behalf of several abortion
providers, argued that mandating abortionists and health centers to
provide for the burial or cremation of fetal remains was meant to reduce
access to abortion by driving up the cost.
The Texas Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) proposed rules
in July requiring hospitals, other medical centers, and abortion
facilities to bury or cremate the remains of children they abort or
those that miscarried at health centers. The regulations did not apply
to children aborted or miscarried at home.
Without the regulations, the fetal remains are treated as
medical waste and abortionists are free to dispose of the children in
landfills or down garbage disposals.
“The Health and Human Services Commission developed new
rules to ensure Texas law maintains the highest standards of human
dignity,” HHS Commission spokesman Bryan Black said at the time.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott supported the proposed rules and
hoped the state’s lawmakers would write them into law when the new
session convenes in January. "Governor Abbott believes human and fetal
remains should not be treated like medical waste, and the proposed rule
changes affirms the value and dignity of all life," his spokeswoman,
Ciara Matthews, said.
The rules were finalized November 28 and due to go in effect December 19.
Abortion supporters reacted in anger, saying
“Christo-fascists” were behind them and telling women to “dump the
ashes” of their aborted children “on the TX capitol steps.”
The CRR, which actively works to repeal pro-life legislation in the U.S. and push abortion internationally, filed suit earlier this year when a Colorado Catholic hospital refused to perform sterilizations in keeping with its religious principles. Last year, CRR sued to preserve the legality of dismemberment abortions on behalf of two Kansas abortionists and also sued the state of Florida after Governor Rick Scott signed a waiting period law.
CRR had threatened to sue
last August to block the Texas rule. It claimed that the state was
“undermining the dignity and autonomy of women to make their own choices
of reproductive health care” and that the rules were designed to
“further shame and stigmatize patients seeking productive healthcare in
the state.”
The next hearing is scheduled for January 3. Sparks is
expected to decide before January 6 whether to allow the rules go into
effect.
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