Free abortions offered to Hurricane Harvey victims
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| Victims of Hurricane Harvey |
Whole
Woman’s Health, a reproductive health care organization, in collaboration with
other groups, is offering free abortions to women affected by Hurricane Harvey.
At
least 74 women have already taken the organization up on the offer, or have
scheduled an appointment for the procedure, the
Dallas Morning Newsreported. The price will be fully covered, as
will the cost of transportation and accommodations, the group said.
But
Texas Right to Life, an anti-abortion group, argued against the notion of a
free abortion, claiming that "there is always a cost.”
"The promotion of this heinous no-cost service is riddled
with fallacies because abortion is never free," Melissa Conway, director
of external relations for Texas Right to Life, told Baptist Press.
"There is always a cost to abortion. Women are not free from the emotional
toll that ensues after abortion and the child is certainly not free to live
another day. Abortions, just like the catastrophic effects of a hurricane, are
never free and we, as a community, pay the price for their needless
destruction."
The
clinic, which also offered free abortions following hurricanes Katrina, Rita
and Ike, has already raised $15,000 for one woman’s procedure and travel, and
aims to raise a total of $40,000 to cover the expenses of other patients.
"Texas
doesn't have a safety net, so we have to help people raise money for
services," Whole Woman's Health CEO Amy Hagstrom Miller told the
newspaper. "Many of these women are traveling for two days and need
support for travel and child care."
The
clinic, which also offered free abortions following hurricanes Katrina, Rita
and Ike, has already raised $15,000 for one woman’s procedure and travel, and
aims to raise a total of $40,000 to cover the expenses of other patients.
"Texas
doesn't have a safety net, so we have to help people raise money for
services," Whole Woman's Health CEO Amy Hagstrom Miller told the
newspaper. "Many of these women are traveling for two days and need
support for travel and child care." (Fox News)

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