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House rejects parental-consent, birth-control bill

Friday, February 8, 2008

AUGUSTA - After the Senate said yes Tuesday, the House said no Thursday to allowing a measure requiring parental consent for birth control prescriptions to be heard.

Without both bodies agreeing, the bill does not go forward.

The House vote was a close 75-67. Those who voted against said the Legislature's top priority should be the nearly $200 million revenue shortfall looming over the state budget, and that the proposal was too politically charged.

"The real issue behind this measure is an absolute non-issue; it has been amply resolved at the local level," House Majority Leader Hannah Pingree, D-North Haven, said in a prepared statement Thursday. Pingree moved to indefinitely postpone, or kill, the measure. "It is inappropriate and irresponsible to bring such a highly charged, political wedge into the Legislature at a time when actual emergencies demand our complete attention and insist on cooperation," she said.

The proposal was to order the Health and Human Services Committee to report out a bill dealing with parental consent for minors to get birth control prescriptions. The Senate vote was 29-5 in favor.

The bill submitted after deadline came from Sen. Douglas Smith, R-Dover Foxcroft. Smith said he filed the proposal late because the King Middle School controversy erupted after the deadline.

In October, the Portland middle school found itself the subject of a controversy when it became among the first in the nation to provide birth control to middle school students. Maine laws state that students with parental permission can have confidential treatment at a school health clinic.

Smith said parents should know if their children are getting birth-control prescriptions. Planned Parenthood advocates said mandating parental consent would mean some girls would not have access to birth control prescriptions.

- Bonnie Washuk
CLICK HERE To Show/Hide Discussion Thread - (8 Comments)
Comments
Posted By:E at February 8, 2008 6:30 AM (Suggest Removal)
This is just like communist countries. The parent has no say so in how their children are raised or what morals you can teach them.

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Posted By:Jen at February 8, 2008 10:46 AM (Suggest Removal)
I love how Augusta likes to play God.

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Posted By:Eliza at February 8, 2008 10:54 AM (Suggest Removal)
Jen -- most governments do. However, they do have a point, this state is at a near crisis point & it is only going to get worse with millions of dollars in federal funds being cut in the near future. You can thank our lovely president & his unwarranted war for that.

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Posted By:E at February 8, 2008 10:54 AM (Suggest Removal)
Jen, Especially when they infringe on what is the parents obligation and choice.

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Posted By:E at February 8, 2008 10:56 AM (Suggest Removal)
Eliza, There you libs go again when you think something goes the way you don't want it to you blame everything on George Bush.

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Posted By:Eliza at February 8, 2008 11:01 AM (Suggest Removal)
Concerned... It's clear that our current administration & the war is responsible for less money for our own government and states. $3 trillion for one year of war? And you think the extreme cuts in federal funding are unrelated? And by the way -- thank you for assuming I am a "lib" -- I am not.

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Posted By:Ian at February 8, 2008 1:07 PM (Suggest Removal)
Does "Representative" Pingree have a daughter?

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Posted By:horsefeathers at February 8, 2008 7:14 PM (Suggest Removal)
I think that conversations in Maine should be directed to "little" things like Baldacci proclaiming a 95 million dollar debt and before the ink dries, it becomes 200 million. There is an old saying "when a marriage goes on the rocks, the rocks are there" so it is with Maine and this Socialistic money juggling admistration.

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