(Photo by Ashley Lopez.)

Editor’s note: To cover this year’s 11 proposed constitutional amendments, the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting partnered with nonprofit political money tracker MapLight and eight of Florida’s NPR member stations. This radio story is the fourth in a series by FCIR reporter/blogger Ashley Lopez airing on Florida’s NPR member stations before Election Day. For detailed information about each of this year’s ballot measures, check out the FCIR-MapLight project Voter’s Edge Florida.

RADIO COPY:

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This series on the state’s ballot measures this year was brought to you the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting—and VotersEdge.org, a nonpartisan online guide to Florida’s constitutional amendments.

Visit Votersedge.org for more information.

Related

FCIR’s Series on the 2012 Constitutional Amendments

Voter’s Edge Florida

Review FCIR’s guide to this year’s proposed Constitutional Amendments.

INTRO: In November, Florida voters will decide the fate of 11 proposed constitutional amendments.

Amendment 6 would prohibit public funding for abortions in the state.

As WRLN’s Ashley Lopez reports, it’s also a debate over privacy.
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More than two decades ago, Doris Rosen from Pasco County became a women’s rights activist.

At the time, then-Governor Bob Martinez asked the Legislature to draft laws that would restrict access to abortion.

States all over the country were taking a closer look at their abortion laws in 1989, thanks to a new Supreme Court ruling.

But Martinez also set his sights on what supporters call a “right to privacy.” It had been added to Florida’s Constitution less than a decade before.

When that happened, activists like Doris Rosen stormed the state’s capitol.

“That was the first march that I ever participated in. We had buses. We marched on Tallahassee. I remember walking down Apalachee Parkway to the Capitol. That was my first march and there were over 10,000 women and men marching to leave that right to privacy alone in the Florida Constitution– and it remained.”

Since that time, anti-abortion activists have taken issue with Florida’s right to privacy.

They say it goes much farther than the U.S. Constitution.

“We are very concerned about the rights of parents and the parent’s rights to be involved a children’s decision to have an abortion was taken away.”

That’s Shelia Hopkins. She works for the Florida Catholic Conference in Tallahassee.

“Our grave concern is for the parents who believe they have the right to work with their minor child on many different levels on giving permission for things like field trips and medications and all, but are shocked to find that their minor child can receive an abortion without their permission or consent.”

Under state law, minors must notify their parent or guardian before having an abortion. But they don’t need their parent’s consent.
In 1989, the state Supreme Court cited privacy provisions in the Florida constitution to strike down a parental consent law.

Hopkins says passing Amendment 6 would help get that consent law back.

“So, we are trying to right a wrong as we see it. And the only way they can get back parental consent for a minor’s abortion, is if we pass this amendment. Then, this does not automatically restore it, but it would give a future legislature the ability to pass legislation to bring back parental consent.”

That’s exactly what Doris Rosen is afraid of. If the amendment passes, she predicts an onslaught of new legislation aimed at cracking down on abortion that goes beyond consent laws.

She’s disappointed that she’s still fighting the same battle two decades later.

“Well it troubles me because now am I not only fighting this for my daughter, but I am fighting it for her daughter and I want her to be able to make the decision at that she feels are right for her at that particular time.”

The supporters of the Amendment include the
Florida Conference on Catholic Bishops, Florida Right to Life, and the Archdioceses of Miami and St. Petersburg.

The ACLU of Florida and Planned Parenthood both have large campaigns aimed at stopping the amendment.

So far, opponents have outraised supporters 10 to one.

One more money issue — the amendment also adds language to the state Constitution that says taxpayer money cannot pay for abortions.

However, a federal law already prohibits taxpayer funding of abortions.

I’m Ashley Lopez in Miami.

WEB COPY

One of the constitutional amendments on the ballot this November takes on a very controversial political issue: abortion.

Amendment 6, if passed would prohibit public funding for abortions in the state, but it would also take away a right to privacy explicitly in Florida’s Constitution.

This has women’s rights activists in the state up in arms.

More than two decades ago, Doris Rosen from Pasco County became a women’s rights activist.

At the time, then-Governor Bob Martinez asked the Legislature to draft laws that would restrict access to abortion.

States all over the country were taking a closer look at their abortion laws in 1989, thanks to a new Supreme Court ruling.

But Martinez also set his sights on what supporters call a “right to privacy.” It had been added to Florida’s Constitution less than a decade before.

When that happened, activists like Doris Rosen stormed the state’s capitol.

“That was the first march that I ever participated in,” Doris says. “We had buses. We marched on Tallahassee. I remember walking down Apalachee Parkway to the Capitol. That was my first march and there were over 10,000 women and men marching to leave that right to privacy alone in the Florida Constitution– and it remained.”

Since that time, anti-abortion activists have taken issue with Florida’s right to privacy. They say it goes much farther than the U.S. Constitution.

“We are very concerned about the rights of parents and the parent’s rights to be involved a children’s decision to have an abortion was taken away,” Sheila Hopkins, spokeswoman for the Florida Catholic Conference in Tallahassee, says.

Under state law, minors must notify their parent or guardian before having an abortion. But they don’t need their parent’s consent.
In 1989, the state Supreme Court cited privacy provisions in the Florida constitution to strike down a parental consent law.
“Our grave concern is for the parents who believe they have the right to work with their minor child on many different levels on giving permission for things like field trips and medications and all, but are shocked to find that their minor child can receive an abortion without their permission or consent,” Hopkins says.

Hopkins says passing Amendment 6 would help get that consent law back.

“So, we are trying to right a wrong as we see it,” Hopkins continues. “And the only way they can get back parental consent for a minor’s abortion, is if we pass this amendment. Then, this does not automatically restore it, but it would give a future legislature the ability to pass legislation to bring back parental consent.”

That’s exactly what Doris Rosen is afraid of, though.

If the amendment passes, she predicts an onslaught of new legislation aimed at cracking down on abortion that goes beyond consent laws.

The supporters of the Amendment include the Florida Conference on Catholic Bishops, Florida Right to Life, and the Archdioceses of Miami and St. Petersburg.

The ACLU of Florida and Planned Parenthood both have large campaigns aimed at stopping the amendment.

So far, opponents have outraised supporters 10 to one.

One more money issue — the amendment also adds language to the state Constitution that says taxpayer money cannot pay for abortions.
However, a federal law already prohibits taxpayer funding of abortions.

Rosen says she is disappointed that she’s still fighting the same battle over privacy rights two decades later.

“Well it troubles me because now am I not only fighting this for my daughter, but I am fighting it for her daughter and I want her to be able to make the decision at that she feels are right for her at that particular time,” she says.