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Marylanders To Vote on Expansive 鈥楻ight to Reproductive Freedom鈥

Voters in 10 states will consider whether or not to protect or expand abortion rights in November. That includes battleground states such as Arizona and Nevada and such Republican strongholds as South Dakota and Missouri.

In Maryland, where abortion is legal, a proposed amendment is much broader than many abortion-related ballot questions in other states. Called the Right to Reproductive Freedom amendment, it would enshrine in the state constitution a right 鈥渢o make and effectuate decisions to prevent, continue, or end one's own pregnancy.鈥

鈥淲hat we鈥檙e saying with this amendment is that the right to reproductive freedom is central to an individual鈥檚 liberty and equality,鈥 said Joseline Pe帽a-Melnyk, a Democrat who chairs the Health and Government Operations Committee in the Maryland House of Delegates. She helped draft the amendment.

Reproductive freedom, Pe帽a-Melnyk said, includes birth control, fertility treatment, tubal ligation, abortion care, and vasectomies. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just for women; it鈥檚 for everyone,鈥 she said.

Maryland already has some of the strongest protections for reproductive health care in the country. In 1998, it became the first state to mandate that insurance companies cover birth control, more than a decade before the Affordable Care Act did so nationwide. And, in 2016, it became one of the first states to require insurance companies and Medicaid to pay for the entire cost of male sterilization procedures and over-the-counter emergency contraception.

The state鈥檚 agencies are prohibited from providing information to other states for investigations of 鈥渓egally protected health care,鈥 including reproductive health care services, provided by Maryland-based physicians.

Democratic lawmakers, who control the state legislature and now hold the governor鈥檚 mansion, have methodically passed laws to bolster reproductive health rights. Enshrining those rights in the state constitution will protect Marylanders regardless of which party is in power, Pe帽a-Melnyk said.

鈥淭he measure guarantees that future changes 鈥 for example, in state politics 鈥 will not easily overturn these rights,鈥 she said.

Putting an abortion rights amendment on the state ballot could also boost turnout for the Nov. 5 election 鈥 a potential lift for Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Angela Alsobrooks, who is in a competitive race against former Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican.

Jeffrey Trimbath, president of the , an anti-abortion group that describes its work, in part, as protecting life and parental rights, said the amendment is unnecessary because there is no serious discussion of rolling back abortion rights in the state capital.

The measure 鈥渦ses this undefined term 鈥榬eproductive freedom鈥 and it says 鈥榠ncluding but not limited to,鈥欌 Trimbath said. And, he said, the reproductive freedom amendment would undermine parents鈥 rights.

鈥淭he first two words, 鈥楨very person鈥 鈥 there is no constraint on who that is. Every single person, whether you鈥檙e 6 months old, 6 years old, 16 years old, or 100 years old,鈥 Trimbath said. 鈥淓very person is entitled to this right. We think that includes children.鈥

Maryland law does require that one parent or guardian be notified before a person under 18 can receive abortion care, although the law provides several exceptions, including if a doctor determines that the notification could harm the patient. State lawmakers who drafted the amendment and legal experts say it will not alter existing abortion laws in Maryland, including requirements for minors.

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