New U.S. education law includes ban on abortion funding by school-based health centers
President Obama is flanked by Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), left, and the committee’s ranking member Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), along with other dignitaries as he signs the “Every Student Succeeds Act,” the successor to No Child Left Behind. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
It turns out that the country’s new K-12 education law, the successor to No Child Left Behind which President Obama signed on Thursday, includes language that prohibits school-based health centers from subsidizing abortions — but it has no real effect because the Public Health Service Act already includes such a ban.
The language is found in Section 8035. It says:
Section 399Z-1 of the Health Service Act says funds awarded for a grant under the section about school-based health centers “may not be used to provide abortions.” As a result, congressional sources said, the language in the Every Student Succeeds Act was not actually necessary to ensure that public funds would not be spent in such a manner.
Why is it in the law? The sources said that it was added as a way to appease hard-line conservatives who were wary of the bill because they believe it gives the federal government too much education policy-making power, even though it strips away a good deal of the power the federal government had under No Child Left Behind and sends authority back to the states and local districts.
The original House version of the Every Student Succeeds Act did not have any reference to abortion funding, but it was added before it went to the House floor, along with other provisions, such as one that would have prohibited personnel working in school-based student health centers from even recommending to students a full range of reproductive services.
Enter Sen. Patty Murray, the Washington state Democrat who was instrumental in compromising with Senate Education Committee Chairman New U.S. education law includes ban on abortion funding by school-based health centers - The Washington Post: