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SCOTUS rejects state’s attempt to restore federal family planning funds
News
September 12, 2024
SCOTUS rejects state’s attempt to restore federal family planning funds
By Paul Monies Oklahoma Watch

Oklahoma will have to use state money for family planning services at county health clinics after it lost an emergency bid to restore $4.5 million in federal grants because of the state’s refusal to publicize an abortion referral hotline upon request.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday afternoon rejected an emergency application by the state to restore the federal grant. As is typical in emergency applications, the court rejected it without comment, although Justices Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito would have granted the relief.

Oklahoma argued the federal government was unduly punishing the state when it discontinued the grant in 2023. The state said it could no longer publicize an abortion referral hotline after Oklahoma’s trigger law made abortion illegal in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision in June 2022.

The family planning grants cover pregnancy testing, cancer screenings, contraceptives, reproductive health counseling and other services. The program helps 25,000 Oklahomans per year and is especially important at county health departments in rural areas. Oklahoma has been receiving Title X family planning grants from the federal government for more than 50 years.

With the emergency application to restore federal funding over, the case returns to the federal district court in Oklahoma City on other issues surrounding abortion and federal family planning grants.

Attorney General Genter Drummond’s spokeswoman Leslie Berger said in an email that the attorney general was disappointed in the decision but pleased that three justices would have restored the funding.

“We will be exploring our options moving forward,” Berger wrote.

Earlier this year, the state lost its bids for an injunction at the federal district and appellate court levels, leading to the emergency application before the U.S. Supreme Court.

As well as its own attorneys, the attorney general’s office contracted with attorneys from Spencer Fane LLP in Oklahoma City and Titus Hillis Reynolds Love PC in Tulsa to help with the lawsuit.

The attorney general’s office did not immediately have an estimate on how much it is paying the outside attorneys.

Abortion referrals and Title X rules have varied depending on which party controls the White House. Congress weighs in from time to time with additional requirements in annual spending bills. Since 2000, the regulations have ranged from providing counseling and referrals for abortion to forbidding referrals and now allowing referrals only if requested by clients.

Although other states have banned abortion since the Dobbs decision in 2022, they have continued to follow federal rules to get Title X family planning grants. Oklahoma and Tennessee have been the only states to see their funding discontinued because they refused to include an abortion hotline referral upon request.

Last week, a federal appellate court in Ohio ruled against Tennessee in its bid to restore $7 million in federal grant funding for family planning.

Oklahoma continues to provide family planning services at county health departments using appropriated money from the Legislature. But health officials said they prefer to tap federal funds rather than go to the Republicancontrolled Legislature each year to ask for appropriations for family planning services, which can be politically fraught debates.

Separately, Oklahoma lawmakers this year put $18 million into the state’s Choosing Childbirth program, which provides money to mostly religious nonprofit crisis pregnancy centers that counsel against abortion. That funding represents a six-fold increase from previous years.

Paul Monies has been a reporter with Oklahoma Watch since 2017 and covers state agencies and public health. Contact him at (571) 319-3289 or pmonies@oklahomawatch.org. Follow him on Twitter @ pmonies.

Lady Ironheads top the field to win Canadian Golf Tournament; Lady Wildcats place 6th
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Lady Ironheads top the field to win Canadian Golf Tournament; Lady Wildcats place 6th
By Rodney Haltom sports EDITOR 
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The Eufaula Lady Ironheads brought home hardware Wednesday, capturing the team title at the Canadian Golf Tournament at Arrowhead Golf Course with a strong all-around performance. Eufaula set the tone...
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Highway 150 memorial sign unveiled for fallen heroes
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Highway 150 memorial sign unveiled for fallen heroes
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On Friday, March 27, friends and family of the late William “Bill” Walker, an OHP State Trooper, and the late T. Leo Newton, Fountainhead Park Superintendent, gathered together to participated in the ...
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Early voting begins April 2
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Candidate filing for primary elections approaches
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Successful Youth Safety Day
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OSU McIntosh County OSU Extension office had a great turn out for their Youth Safety Day on March 23. Area 5th graders from Checotah, Eufaula, Stidham and Hanna had a fun-filled day learning about saf...
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More Than the Easter Bunny
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More Than the Easter Bunny
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At the Eufaula Memorial Library on Friday, March 21, a presentation by longtime educator Roger Thompson became more than a history lesson—it became a reflection on how we learn, how we question, and h...
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Checotah Youth Wrestling gaining ground
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Checotah Youth Wrestling gaining ground
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Checotah Youth Wrestling (CYW) has been making a name for itself with a new generation of talented wrestlers emerging from the mat, including two young ladies, Annabelle Mowdy and Tylee Johnson that s...
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Micronesian National pleads guilty to failing to register as sex offender
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MUSKOGEE – The United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Oklahoma announced that Reynold Rodriguez, age 60, a Micronesian national, entered a guilty plea to one count of Failure to R...
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Author William B. Lees sheds new light on Battle of Honey Springs
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This past Saturday, Oklahoma native William B. Lees, a former professor at the University of West Florida who spent over 30 years researching the Battle of Honey Springs told about his book Honey Spri...
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