Wash. state eyes 1st abortion insurance mandate in U.S.

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - In 1970, Washington became the first - and remains the only - state in the country to legalize elective abortions by a popular vote.
A generation later, and 40 years removed from the landmark United States Supreme Court Roe v. Wade ruling that extended abortion access nationwide, Washington is once again poised to stand out.
With 21 states having adopted bans or severe restrictions on insurance companies from paying for abortions, Washington is alone in seriously considering legislation mandating the opposite.
The Reproductive Parity Act, as supporters call it, would require insurers in Washington state who cover maternity care - which all insurers must do - to also pay for abortions.
The bill passed the state House earlier this month by a vote of 53-43, though it faces an uncertain future in the Senate. A similar bill in the New York state Assembly has been introduced each session for over a decade but has never received a public hearing.
"This is a core value for Washingtonians," said Melanie Smith, a lobbyist for NARAL Pro-Choice Washington. "We should protect it while we still have it and not leave access to basic health care up to an insurance company."
The proximate cause of Washington state's measure is the federal Affordable Care Act. Thanks to language in it pushed by congressional Republicans, insurers selling their plans on the state exchanges taking effect next year will have to segregate the premiums they collect for abortion coverage.
In addition to that built-in disincentive to insuring abortion, the law also invites states to enact stricter rules of their own. Thus far, 16 states have followed suit, barring or restricting insurance companies on their exchanges from covering the procedure. Three of those states are joining the five that have barred or limited all insurers from covering abortions since the early 1980's.
Supporters of Washington state's proposed abortion insurance mandate are careful to stress that it wouldn't lead to a dramatic uptick in abortions or require carriers with a religious bent to cover the procedure. They also note that a pair of federal plans that will be sold on all 50 state exchanges will be barred from covering elective abortions.
"It's not expanding abortion coverage," said Democratic Rep. Eileen Cody of West Seattle, the bill's primary sponsor. "It's ensuring the rights of women to get what they're paying for now and to continue their freedom of choice."
Opponents counter that the measure would require businesses and individuals to pay for abortion coverage they'd rather not have.
"Washington state would be the only state in the country that would force employers to pay for abortion," said Peggy O'Ban, spokeswoman for Human Life of Washington.
If passed, she said, it would amount to "the first conscience coercion act in American history."
Its passage, however, is not assured.
Proponents of the measure say they have the votes they need in the state Senate, but it's not clear that Senate leaders will allow it to get to the floor. It is scheduled to receive a public hearing in the Senate Health Care Committee on April 1.
Ironically, the man bill supporters will likely blame if it fails to get a Senate vote counts himself as a proud backer of the measure.
Sen. Rodney Tom of Medina, a fiscal conservative and social moderate, and one other like-minded Democrat crossed party lines to caucus with Republicans in December, handing a one-vote majority to the GOP. Seizing power for the first time in nearly a decade, elated Senate Republicans reciprocated by installing Tom as Majority Leader.
Last month, Tom addressed about 250 advocates rallying for the measure's passage on the state Capitol steps.
"I'm down here making sure that my 17-year-old daughter has the kind of protections that we need in Washington state and that all of our kids have those same kinds of protections," Tom said to cheers.
Moments later, Gov. Jay Inslee, a Democrat and fellow bill supporter, delivered a not-so-subtle challenge to Tom's political will.
Washington state "deserves a vote in the state Senate on the Reproductive Parity Act," Inslee said. "We are going to insist that we are not going to let anybody close the door to democracy in this state."
Another irony: though the bill has proved to be among the most hotly contested of the session, its broader impact if passed may be less than sweeping.
For one thing, most abortions are paid for out-of-pocket. According to the Guttmacher Institute, only 12 percent of abortions nationwide are paid for by private insurers, with 20 percent footed by Medicaid.
For another, because most abortions cost less than a live birth - the procedure typically runs about $500, though late-term abortions are far more expensive - insurers may be disinclined to stop covering them.
At present, all major insurers in Washington state cover abortions, and Cody, the bill's sponsor, said she knows of no carrier with plans to change. Insurers new to Washington state on its exchange may be tempted to adopt different policies, she said.
No matter its immediate impact, said Elizabeth Nash, states issues manager with the Guttmacher Institute, the bill's passage would be a watershed event.
"It would be a model for other states to follow," she said.
A generation later, and 40 years removed from the landmark United States Supreme Court Roe v. Wade ruling that extended abortion access nationwide, Washington is once again poised to stand out.
With 21 states having adopted bans or severe restrictions on insurance companies from paying for abortions, Washington is alone in seriously considering legislation mandating the opposite.
The Reproductive Parity Act, as supporters call it, would require insurers in Washington state who cover maternity care - which all insurers must do - to also pay for abortions.
The bill passed the state House earlier this month by a vote of 53-43, though it faces an uncertain future in the Senate. A similar bill in the New York state Assembly has been introduced each session for over a decade but has never received a public hearing.
"This is a core value for Washingtonians," said Melanie Smith, a lobbyist for NARAL Pro-Choice Washington. "We should protect it while we still have it and not leave access to basic health care up to an insurance company."
The proximate cause of Washington state's measure is the federal Affordable Care Act. Thanks to language in it pushed by congressional Republicans, insurers selling their plans on the state exchanges taking effect next year will have to segregate the premiums they collect for abortion coverage.
In addition to that built-in disincentive to insuring abortion, the law also invites states to enact stricter rules of their own. Thus far, 16 states have followed suit, barring or restricting insurance companies on their exchanges from covering the procedure. Three of those states are joining the five that have barred or limited all insurers from covering abortions since the early 1980's.
Supporters of Washington state's proposed abortion insurance mandate are careful to stress that it wouldn't lead to a dramatic uptick in abortions or require carriers with a religious bent to cover the procedure. They also note that a pair of federal plans that will be sold on all 50 state exchanges will be barred from covering elective abortions.
"It's not expanding abortion coverage," said Democratic Rep. Eileen Cody of West Seattle, the bill's primary sponsor. "It's ensuring the rights of women to get what they're paying for now and to continue their freedom of choice."
Opponents counter that the measure would require businesses and individuals to pay for abortion coverage they'd rather not have.
"Washington state would be the only state in the country that would force employers to pay for abortion," said Peggy O'Ban, spokeswoman for Human Life of Washington.
If passed, she said, it would amount to "the first conscience coercion act in American history."
Its passage, however, is not assured.
Proponents of the measure say they have the votes they need in the state Senate, but it's not clear that Senate leaders will allow it to get to the floor. It is scheduled to receive a public hearing in the Senate Health Care Committee on April 1.
Ironically, the man bill supporters will likely blame if it fails to get a Senate vote counts himself as a proud backer of the measure.
Sen. Rodney Tom of Medina, a fiscal conservative and social moderate, and one other like-minded Democrat crossed party lines to caucus with Republicans in December, handing a one-vote majority to the GOP. Seizing power for the first time in nearly a decade, elated Senate Republicans reciprocated by installing Tom as Majority Leader.
Last month, Tom addressed about 250 advocates rallying for the measure's passage on the state Capitol steps.
"I'm down here making sure that my 17-year-old daughter has the kind of protections that we need in Washington state and that all of our kids have those same kinds of protections," Tom said to cheers.
Moments later, Gov. Jay Inslee, a Democrat and fellow bill supporter, delivered a not-so-subtle challenge to Tom's political will.
Washington state "deserves a vote in the state Senate on the Reproductive Parity Act," Inslee said. "We are going to insist that we are not going to let anybody close the door to democracy in this state."
Another irony: though the bill has proved to be among the most hotly contested of the session, its broader impact if passed may be less than sweeping.
For one thing, most abortions are paid for out-of-pocket. According to the Guttmacher Institute, only 12 percent of abortions nationwide are paid for by private insurers, with 20 percent footed by Medicaid.
For another, because most abortions cost less than a live birth - the procedure typically runs about $500, though late-term abortions are far more expensive - insurers may be disinclined to stop covering them.
At present, all major insurers in Washington state cover abortions, and Cody, the bill's sponsor, said she knows of no carrier with plans to change. Insurers new to Washington state on its exchange may be tempted to adopt different policies, she said.
No matter its immediate impact, said Elizabeth Nash, states issues manager with the Guttmacher Institute, the bill's passage would be a watershed event.
"It would be a model for other states to follow," she said.
I support this act. ...it takes a lot of burden off of Welfare and medicare which is where most of these births would end up. Â Medical pays for things the public needs, this is one of them. Â Think about it.....who or what kind of person is going to ask for or need an abortion? I know I am smarter than that! And for those who were result of rape and incest, let them have a way out! Â I don't think you are a human till you are born and the spirit enters your body at first breath. Look at death. We all know when you see someone who has died, you do not feel their spirit anymore.....they are not breathing. Also, guidelines should be written to make sure those women getting abortion have to agree to a form of birth control management they cannot abuse. We need a single pill that lasts a year, or free tubal ligation, or something.......
Free, free, free infanticide. Force all to pay for free, free, free infanticide. Raise everyone's premiums --- over for others' irresponsibility. Force a 60 year old who isn't going to get pregnant, who has MS, who lives on a small income, who belives infanticide is wrong and who doesn't want to pay for free, free, free infanticide, to pay higher premiums and disregard her conscience. What happened to freedom of choide, you pro-choicers? This is rape of pro-lifers, insurance premium payers, and freedom of choice.    Why don't you pro-choicers petition the legislature to allow ONE insurance company to offer this travesty. Then you can buy it and the rest of us won't.
@Ann I am fully pro-choice, but I am against this. I agree with insurance covering birth control, but not paying for abortions. This stance may result in more births, but if my premiums are helping to pay for abortions, I should have some say in the circumstances.
@factchekrÂ
Read whatever insurance you currently have. Unless it specifically excludes abortion, it most likely covers them. It is considered the same as every other surgical procedure, and paid accordingly.
Actually, I believe insurance companies don't need the government to "allow" them to pay for abortions. They could offer this now, but they know they would lose business.Â
@AnnÂ
Actually, they already DO pay for it. The MAJORITY of insurance policies in Washington state neither cover or deny "abortion". Abortion is a surgical procedure, paid the same as every other surgerical procedure. Unless the Policy Exceptions state abortion is NOT covered, it would fall under surgery benefits.
What business does government have in telling a company (insurance) what they can offer for sale and what they Must offer for sale. This is denying choice to the consumer. If one wished to buy insurance without maternity, abortion, contraception coverage and a company was willing to offer it, why should government interfere?
@contraryjim There's a word for doing that, its called fascism. The states job is to provide basic security for us citizens to go about our day without being persecuted. They pass these kinds of bills and they are failing in their duties. I believe in abortion, I've been party to 2 of them and it as the best decisions I ever made. But you can't force other people into the same belief. People should not be government mandated into paying for something they don't believe in.
Oh, good. Another bit of government insight and intervention to promote personal UNACCOUNTABILITY......All at the expense of the already high self-employed insurance rates, responsible families paying for insurance coverage, large and small businesses, and those making responsible decisions to use their choices of birth control.
And the insurance companies raise their rates and profits, joining the perpetual tide of enabling of Americans with insurance lobbyists clout and taxpayers' dollars.Â
I have noticed that everyone who is for abortion has been born
All American: I remember this phrase. Thanks for posting it. Sort of puts some sanity to this discussion.
The hard thing for pro-infantcide folk is to just admit they support the killing of babies. Â That would be an estimated 50 million "choices" since 1973. Â "You've Come a Long Way, Baby".
I see US Senate democrats just voted to extend Obamacare to illegal aliens so the insurance industry is doomed anyway. Just another reason that this worthless bill is moot.
Maybe, but it true. Try to d dispute it.
I'll say it again. In Margaret Sanger's ideal world, Barack Obama's mother would have been forced to have an abortion. This is an indisputable fact, according to Margaret Sanger's philosophy.
@marsneedswomen It's even more inane the second time
@Lrry*x*K
Maybe, but it true. Try to dispute it.
@Lrry*x*K @marsneedswomen "
"[Our objective is] unlimited sexual gratification without the burden of unwanted children ... [Women must have the right] to live ... to love... to be lazy ... to be an unmarried mother ... to create ... to destroy... The marriage bed is the most degenerative influence in the social order... The most merciful thing that a family does to one of its infant members is to kill it."Â
Margaret Sanger
@Lrry*x*K
I've read her book. Your are wrong.Â
@marsneedswomen Yeah ok, she favored contraception rather than abortion so your fact is based on nothing
All government mandates are bad because everyone of them forces you to give up some of your inalienable rights. The abortion mandate violates christians inalienable right to practice their religion. I'm certainly no advocate of any religion but they have the same rights as everyone else should have. Car insurance, helmet laws, seatbelt laws and so many other laws are unconstitutional because they consider you guilty of something before you even get the opportunity to do them. This is an issue where the libertarians have it so much more right other than the other 2 fake parties. Inalienable rights are INALIENABLE.
@Blindman
Jeez, Blindman, you're making me cheer for you.
Can they tax the insurance coverage more so they get some additional money to spend? Â Please can't they just concentrate on budget issues - so we don't have months of drama after the regular session ends?Â
@outofmadison
How would adding taxes solve anything? Taxes are just a means to get government money.
What I find so hypocritical is that those opposed claim it is coercion, and they push for PRIVATE businesses to have further government restrictions, rules and mandates to stop abortion. Yet those SAME people are the ones claiming they want smaller government, that they want to get government out of people'e lives.
Insurers ALREADY cover abortion - this is NOT a bill that would out of the blue require them to start covering it. And if you were to look at a CPT coding boook (the codes used to bill insurance that indicate what procedure(s) were performed, there is NOT a specific code for "abortion". It is a surgical procedure, listed the same as any other. It is not defined as "abortion".
Why do they seem to think they have any right to stick their noses & their laws into other people's PRIVATE decisions? The decision whether or not to terminate a pregnancy involves ONLY the woman who is pregnant, her partner, and her physician.
Perhaps if the "right to liers" cared as much about the children who have already been born & who are increasingly falling through the "social saftey net", they might have a credible leg to stand on.Â
As it is, all they appear to want to do is force a woman to carry to term & give birth - making her basically an incubator - and then she & her newborn are on their own.
@LocalLady If insurance companies are already covering abortions then why the need for this bill? I also find your 2nd to last sentence logically fallacious..you have created a false dichotemy by reducing this to two alternatives that really have nothing to do with the other. Just because children born to bad parents may not turn out as perfectly as you and Margaret Sanger hope for, does not mean that they are better off dead! In your world Oprah Winfrey (born in poverty to a single mother) should have been aborted!
@sometimesright
I personally do NOT see the need for the bill AT THIS TIME - what my understanding is that the bill was proposed to KEEP insurance that already covers it from dropping it
And PLEASE do not put words in my mouth.  I was simply pointing out that while on one hand you have the "right to lifers" trying to end ALL abortion for ALL reasons...meaning that women in many cases would be forced to carry to term, even if they are not "ready' to - they may be in ill health, they may not have the financial resources, there can be many reasons. Yet while deamnding every child should be bormn, if that child is born into poverty or into a terrible home with abusive parrents, where is the support needed to help that child sud=cceed in overcoming those obsticles - the socal safety net. THAT is being cut away more & more.
There can be MANY resason why a woman may choose abortion - what I believe is that it should be ONLY her choice with her partner & physcian - nobody else has any say in that private situaton & decision so it should not be anybody else's business.
@LocalLady
So maybe the question is, regarding this specific subject, should a government be able to stick their "noses and laws" into our individual decisions? Should those "noses and laws" be forced upon all individuals?
I have no problem with the existence of the medical procedure of abortion. I do have a problem with the ~96% that use it for birth control. It is a medical procedure and can be dangerous to the woman for future child bearing. The rest of the ~4% for rape, incest and if the mothers life is in danger should be covered under insurance or other funds. As for the ~96%, they can pay for it themsleves at the time of service in cash! This will stop the nonsense and waste.
But wait, that involves compromise on the left and the right! And they will never compromise as that art has been lost in US politics in recent decades...
@StarchaserÂ
You *claim* that ~96% ysae it a birth control. Any verifiable proof that is unbiased (in other words, not a Right to Life website) that would actually support this? I doubt it.
@LocalLady @Starchaser Anything to justify you love of baby killing! I do not understand this? Are you telling me that you honestly believe that most abortions are used due to rape, incest or medical complications? I know you are better educated and informed to make such an ignorant statement. Either you know this and therefore you are being a liar right now, or you do not know this and therefore you are maybe not as intelligent as I have found you in the past?
@sometimesrightÂ
Please, do NOT out words in my mouth. I honestly do not know what % are done as "birth control" - I would have to reasearch it further, but I do NOT believe that it is 96% - and that is why I asked for a link or a source so I could read further..
No, not all abortions are "rape/incest/medical necessaity". But since contracetion is still very hard to get in some areas of our country, that abortion should remain a safe option since it is a legal option.
I am not arguing "statistics" - I have been trying to put forth my knowledge of insurance & how it works since tha tis my field of knowledge.
@LocalLady @Starchaser This was taken right out of Planned Parenthood's own reports. You know, the company that makes billions in providing abortions? It use to be on their website, but not anymore.
@StarchaserÂ
Sorry, YOU are the one presenting it as *fcat* - you need to back it up
(and by the way, I spent an hour going through their website, there is NOTHING showing this information as you presented it)
We are already paying for abortions here in WA. just "googled" WA state abortions and this is what i found. Medicaid does not appear to fund abortions except under the circumstances noted below. These are the indications many writers have commented upon.
Washington: State Funding of Abortions Under Medicaid, as of June 1, 2012Â
State Funding of Abortions Under Medicaid, as of June 1, 2012View 50-State Comparison WA
Follows Federal Standard, Funding Only Cases Involving Life Endangerment, Rape and IncestNo32+DC YesFunds All or Most Medically Necessary Abortions, Exceeding Federal RequirementsYes117 Yes
Why don't we get mandated mental health care coverage first.Â
@jowsuf
Actually, Wasghington State HAS a Mental health Parity Act, it went into effect January 1, 2008
Here's the RCW:  Wash. Rev. Code §48.41.220.
@LocalLady @jowsuf Facts are meaningless, they can be used to prove anything
@Lrry*x*KÂ
Huh? If you do not believe there is a mental health parity act in Washington State, read the RCW in the link.
As a woman and a mother, I think this is a really bad idea. I've always supported abortion rights when it is medically necessary or in cases of rape or insest, but this is too over the top for me to support. This opens up the possibility that state funded plans will pay for elective abortions... yes folks, state funded with your tax dollars. I don't want that.
Why do the Dems in charge in Olympia insist on sticking their thumb in people's eyes? Have they not heard of the HHS mandate (abortion/contraception coverage) already being litigated by the Catholic church and other religious-oriented institutions? Or are they just eager to get in their own anti-Catholic licks to tickle their base? Oh, wait...I know. It's so when opponents express their views, it'll provide campaign materials with which to demonize folks in the next election. SMH
In Margaret Sanger's ideal world, Barack Obama's mother would have been forced to have an abortion.
Totally against this.
The slaughter must continue at all costs, as decreed by that bigoted racist Margaret Sanger, and society must be forced to pay it, as willed by her political followers. It's for the children, don't you know.
@marsneedswomen What about the gun slaughter? Oh that's okay because of the second amendment. I hate hypocritesÂ
@Lrry*x*K @marsneedswomen Here we go with the usual logical fallacies of liberals...just can't seem to debate without heading down the road to a straw man! Ok...I will play along...19,000 gun deaths a year (most are suicides so they will probably still be here after guns) compared to 1.2 million abortions...we will give up our guns and you give up your baby killing? How does that sound? Put your money where your mouth is. I would GLADLY turn in every one of my guns if you all would stop killing babies!
@Lrry*x*K
With your key word being "hate".
@Lrry*x*K @marsneedswomen guns "slaughter" about 1,181,000 less people a year than liberal baby killing abortionist doctors do! By your logic we should be stopping them and not guns!
@marsneedswomen @Lrry*x*K No the keyword was "gun slaughter"
Let em abort if they want. It's less democrat votes and will cost the taxpayers a lot less in the longrun. That's one less mouth to feed on welfare and food stamps
@Bubba Gunners Thank-you for that insightful comment Mitt.