Washington State Bill Would Require Abortion Coverage
鈥淧ersonhood鈥 has dominated the abortion debate in recent months, highlighted by the failure of a . And while abortion rights advocates in several states continue to defend against聽 other bills that would define an embryo or fetus as a person, advocates in Washington state are taking the offensive.

Democratic members of the state legislature introduced a bill earlier this month that would maintain or expand abortion coverage.聽The 鈥,鈥 set for its first hearings on Thursday, would require聽private and public insurers聽that provide maternity coverage to cover abortion services as well. If passed, the law would be the first of its kind in the nation.
鈥淭his is Washington鈥檚 way of saying [abortion services] are basic health care coverage,鈥 said Sara Kiesler, a spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood Votes Northwest, which is part of the coalition pushing the bill.
Melanie Smith, a lobbyist with NARAL Pro-Choice Washington, said聽advocates are concerned less about personhood initiatives than about abortion restrictions stemming from the 2010 federal health law.
In 2014, states will be required under that law to open insurance exchanges — online marketplaces for individuals and small businesses to compare and purchase plans. These exchanges, however, have several restrictions, including a prohibition聽against using聽federal funds for abortions. Smith said those purchasing coverage will have to pay two separate premiums: one for abortion services — based on their actual cost, estimated by the insurer — and one for everything else under the plan. Federal subsidies can聽be applied only to the latter.
According to Smith, this presents a problem: Consumers might select against plans that offer abortion coverage, and if demand is low for the extra coverage, insurers could find it cost-prohibitive to continue offering coverage for abortion services.聽 All individual and small-group plans in the state currently cover abortion, said Stephanie Marquis, a spokeswoman for Washington鈥檚 insurance commissioner; information about larger, employer-based plans is unavailable. Smith added that all insurance carriers in the state offer at least one plan with abortion coverage. The bill, then, 鈥渋s about maintaining access the way we have it now.鈥
In contrast, many states have used the health law鈥檚 implementation to restrict abortion rights, said Elizabeth Nash, state issues manager with the Guttmacher Institute. As of Jan. 1, 15 states had put in place聽 on abortion coverage for plans that will be offered on exchanges; five of those states will allow coverage with a separate payment.
Advocates are 鈥減retty confident鈥 the Washington bill could become law and聽buck the trend, said Lisa Stone, executive director of Legal Voice, a nonprofit focused on women鈥檚 rights in the Northwest. Washington state voters have voted for abortion rights several times, Stone added, and she expects the state legislature will follow voter sentiment.
Those who oppose abortion rights, however, will likely put up a fight. Dan Kennedy, CEO of Human Life of Washington 鈥 an affiliate of the National Right to Life Committee 鈥 , “To mandate that we violate our conscience is tyranny. There’s no subtle or soft way to put the truth.”
Whether other states take up similar legislation will depend largely on changes in legislative makeup during the upcoming election, said聽Tait Sye, a spokesperson for the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. The national organization will be watching the Washington bill closely.
In New York,聽聽state Assemblymember Deborah Glick has introduced several times that would require abortion coverage, but it has made it out of committee only once. Glick reintroduced the bill this month, and while she was unaware of the effort in Washington, she said that the idea may now become more salient as states set up insurance exchanges.