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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, May 17 2022

Full Issue

Starbucks Joins List Of Companies Covering Abortion Travel Costs

The coffee company said it will pay for travel expenses for U.S. employees seeking abortions if they're unavailable within 100 miles of home. It will pay, similarly, for access to gender-confirmation procedures. Payments extend to dependents of employees on the company health care plan.

Starbucks said Monday it will pay the travel expenses for U.S. employees to access abortion and gender-confirmation procedures if those services aren鈥檛 available within 100 miles of a worker鈥檚 home. The Seattle coffee giant said it will also make the travel benefit available to the dependents of employees who are enrolled in Starbucks鈥 health care plan. Starbucks has 240,000 U.S. employees but the company didn鈥檛 say what percentage of them are enrolled in the its health care plan. (Chapman and Durbin, 5/16)

And more on Roe v. Wade 鈥

The Supreme Court appears poised to overturn Roe v. Wade, a decision that would end legal abortion in nearly two dozen states and hand more power to state attorneys general 鈥 a shift that has thrust those down-ballot contests into the limelight. (Edelman, 5/16)

What had been a slow, deliberate erosion of abortion rights over the 50 years since the court鈥檚 ruling in Roe now seemed to be a flash flood of increasingly severe restrictions and proposals cropping up at the state level, abortion rights advocates say, as antiabortion Republicans envision a post-Roe world. 鈥淚 think these state lawmakers are feeling emboldened based on what they think is coming down the pike from the Supreme Court,鈥 said Rachel Fey, who works on policy programs for Power to Decide, a nonprofit organization that seeks to prevent unplanned pregnancies and supports abortion rights. (Wang and Kitchener, 5/16)

The reproductive rights community is exploring creative new legal avenues to fight state abortion bans in anticipation of a post-Roe v. Wade world. But it鈥檚 also confronting a difficult reality: Lawsuits alone will not provide a fix. POLITICO鈥檚 publication of a draft Supreme Court opinion that overturns the landmark decision protecting access to abortion has forced attorneys and abortion activists to prepare for a legal Wild West. To stop half the country from becoming an abortion access desert in the coming months, they鈥檙e exploring a range of new tactics, all while managing expectations. (Ollstein and Barron-Lopez, 5/16)

In his leaked draft Supreme Court opinion, Justice Samuel Alito argues that overturning Roe v. Wade would allow 鈥渨omen on both sides of the abortion issue to seek to affect the legislative process.鈥澛... But advocates for voting access and civil rights say that Alito鈥檚 depiction does not account for the parts of the country, particularly in the South, where laws make it harder for the poor and voters of color to cast their ballots, and where racially polarized voting can make it more difficult for abortion rights candidates to gain ground. (Harris, 5/16)

Maria laid the pregnancy test facedown on the counter in her boyfriend鈥檚 bathroom in McAllen and set a timer for the longest three minutes of her life. She watched the timer tick down, mentally running through her litany of reassurances: They鈥檇 used a condom; she鈥檇 taken the Plan B pill; maybe her missed period was just an anomaly. 鈥淚 was just praying, please don鈥檛 let this be the case,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 had no idea how I鈥檇 navigate the situation. But what can I do but flip this test over?鈥 (Klibanoff, Ferman and Garc铆a, 5/16)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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