
Abortion funding is an imperative part of abortion rights — and a recently introduced bill aims to address that.
With abortion care legally unavailable or severely restricted in nearly half the country, people must journey significant distances to access the nearest clinic. In the Freedom From Religion Foundation’s home state of Wisconsin, residents must travel and spend anywhere between $700 and $2,000 on transportation, procedures and hotels. Such costs only exacerbate existing inequities for people who are already struggling to make ends meet.
That’s why we should welcome a recent bill that Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., have co-sponsored: the Reproductive Health Travel Act. This bill would provide federal funding grants to pay for travel-related expenses for people seeking an abortion. The Reproductive Health Travel Fund would allocate $350 million per year for the next five years. The funds would be distributed to nonprofits and community organizations that help people access abortion care.
Abortion is a common medical procedure that nearly one in four women will have by the time they are 45 years old. Research shows that abortion is an extremely safe procedure with major complication occurring in less than a quarter of 1 percent. For context, there are more complications from wisdom tooth removals and tonsillectomies than from abortions. Furthermore, studies have found that 99 percent of women who have an abortion feel relief — not regret.
Indeed, there is no evidence-based reason to deny abortion care; only religion-based dogma can attempt to justify this. Abortion bans of any kind worsen maternal health outcomes. In fact, women are 14 times more likely to dieduring childbirth than they are from any abortion complications. And without abortion care available in many states, birth rates are expected to rise. University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers predict up to a 4 percent increase in births in the Badger State. Pregnancy specialists assert that this will disproportionately harm Black women in a state that already has the highest Black infant mortality rate in the country.
FFRF has a long history of not only supporting the legalization of abortion, but also funding for abortion care. In fact, FFRF’s principal co-founder Anne Nicol Gaylor founded the Women’s Medical Fund of Wisconsin in 1972 for this exact purpose. As one of the oldest abortion funds in the nation, Women’s Medical Fund supports an average of 1,000 Wisconsinites per year. You can make a tax-deductible donation here.
Access to abortion is a core component of bodily autonomy and human dignity. Let’s not only fight for the legalization of abortion care, but also its accessibility. The Reproductive Health Travel Fund Act provides a glimmer of hope on this front during these bleak times.