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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Larranaga
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/31/07
HB 239
SHORT TITLE Parental Notification for Abortions
SB
ANALYST E. Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB442
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Corrections Department
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Department of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 239 proposes to enact a new law, the Parental Notification Act to require parental or
guardian notification at least 48 hours before an abortion is performed on an unemancipated
minor (younger than 16 years) or a female of any age who has been declared incompetent and
has had a guardian or conservator appointed. The only exception to the notification requirement
is when the procedure is necessary to save the life of the patient and there is insufficient time to
provide the required notice. The bill contains a judicial bypass procedure which allows a court
to direct that notification is not required upon a finding that the minor or incompetent woman is
mature enough to make the decision, or that an abortion is in the patient’s best interests. This
bypass procedure must be confidential and expedited, but no time limits are set. The bill also
contains reporting requirements, both on the doctor who performs the procedure and on the
Department of Health to publish statistics on an annual basis. The bill also makes the
performance of an abortion in knowing or reckless disregard of the Act a misdemeanor.
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House Bill 239 – Page
2
Finally, it creates a civil cause of action that allows a parent or guardian wrongfully denies notice
to sue a physician who performs an abortion without the requisite notice, and awards attorney
fees to the prevailing party in certain circumstances.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
According to DOH, HB239 could require DOH to provide administrative support for contacting
physicians; follow up to assure that reports are submitted to the DOH; the statistical compilation
of physician reports, as well as coordination with the administrative offices of the courts in order
to assemble an annual public report on adolescent abortion services. HB239 does not include any
budget to support the above-mentioned functions. The cost for two FTE to support these
functions is $93,000.
Fiscal impacts to the AOC are listed below.
Giving an additional level of priority to specific types of cases in an effort to reach an expedited
adjudication will have a fiscal impact on the court’s operation because other cases, perhaps of
equal importance and severity of criminal charges, may be delayed resulting in an increase in
caseloads in the courts, thus requiring additional resources to handle the increase.
Further, the bill proposes that the administrative office of the courts provide reports to DOH
under the Act. The information is presently not being collected and would require that a data
system be established in order to provide the information to the department of health on an
annual basis.
In addition, there will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution, and
documentation of statutory changes. Any additional fiscal impact on the judiciary would be
proportional to the enforcement of this law and commenced prosecutions. New laws,
amendments to existing laws, and new hearings have the potential to increase caseloads in the
courts, thus requiring additional resources to handle the increase.
In order to provide 24-hour access, the court of appeals would have to set up an emergency
telephone number and a workable procedure for contacting three judges (for a three-judge panel)
on short notice. This procedure may require acquisition and maintenance of pagers and/or
mobile telephones for the judges and appropriate staff. It would also require staff time to
monitor the emergency telephones and possible overtime compensation for clerical and legal
staff if they were required to open the court and its offices for filings or emergency hearings.
The fiscal impact on the district courts would be similar but would only involve one judge and a
court monitor.
Additional fiscal impact would be incurred by AOC, which would pay for court appointed
guardians ad litem in cases where the pregnant female chose not to consent to the notification of
her parent or guardian and she petitioned the district court for an order for an abortion without
notification.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Attorney General’s Office notes the following:
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House Bill 239 – Page
3
1.
The “medical emergency" exception dispensing with notice when the life of the patient is in
danger is too narrowly drawn, and would render the Act unconstitutional. (See discussion
below under Other Substantive Issues.
2.
The provision regarding notice to a guardian or conservator of an incompetent may be
overbroad, and thus unconstitutional. (See discussion below under Other Substantive Issues).
3.
The judicial bypass procedure may not be specific enough to guarantee the expedited
proceeding to which the unemancipated minor or incompetent is entitled, which would
render the Act unconstitutional.)
4.
Under independent state grounds, the Act may be unconstitutional. (See discussion below
under Other Substantive Issues.)
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
HB239 relates to the DOH Strategic Plan, Program Area 1, Objective 2: Prevent Teen
Pregnancy.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
According to DOH administrative impact to could be significant. HB239 proposes yearly
reporting of all physicians who perform abortions to DOH and the production of an annual report
that includes statistics from the administrative offices of the court. Abortion statistics are
presently reported annually in “Selected Health Statistics", as required by statute.
HB239 proposes that DOH would ensure that all currently licensed physicians be informed of
these new requirements by October 1, 2007 and all physicians who subsequently become
licensed in this state would be so informed at the same time as they receive their license. There
are over 6,000 licensed physicians in the State although the number of physicians who actually
perform abortions is very small.
HB239 also proposes that the DOH would bring court action against individual physicians who
have not submitted timely reports. A minimum of one FTE would be necessary for collection,
tracking and reporting of data and another FTE financial analyst to track non-reporting and
associated fines, plus substantially increased postage and printing.
According to AOC, requiring the New Mexico court of appeals and the state district courts to be
accessible 24 hours a day, seven days a week, would have a great administrative impact.
Currently, the court of appeals accepts cases for filing from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon and from
1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. on normal workdays, not including state holidays or weekends. The Court
of Appeals now accepts filings in Santa Fe and Albuquerque. In order to provide 24-hour access,
the court would have to set up an emergency telephone number and a workable procedure for
contacting three judges (for a three-judge panel) on short notice. This procedure may require
acquisition and maintenance of pagers and/or mobile telephones for the judges and appropriate
staff. It would also require staff time to monitor the emergency telephones and possible overtime
compensation for clerical and legal staff if they were required to open the court and its offices for
filings or emergency hearings.
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House Bill 239 – Page
4
The impact on the district courts would be similar to the court of appeals. If the unemancipated
minor or incapacitated person chose not to consent to the notification of her parent or guardian
and she petitioned the district court for an order for an abortion without notice, the district court
would need to have a judge and court monitor available to process and hear the case.
If proceedings identified in this bill shall be given precedence over other pending matters before
the court so that the court may reach an expedited decision without delay, there would be an
administrative impact on the courts as a result of additional case priority given to these cases and
an increase in caseload and/or in the amount of time necessary to dispose of this case type.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The AGO and AOC note the following:
1.
Section 3(A) might contain language concerning the exceptions set forth in Section 4.
2.
Section 3(B) and (C) refer only to the parent, but should include guardians and conservators
of incompetent females (as in 3(A)).
3.
Section 6(A) (2) (page 6, line 6) “of" should be “for".
4.
Section 3.C.: Rather than add language explaining what “restricted delivery to the addressee"
means, amend the language to make its meaning clear, if necessary.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Department of Health notes that HB239 conflicts with the Vital Statistics Act, 24-14-18
NMSA 1978, which mandates that all abortions occurring in New Mexico be reported to the
State Registrar, and that these reports be statistical reports used only for medical and health
purposes and shall not be incorporated into the permanent statistical records of the system of
vital records and health statistics. The Act mandates that the reports shall not include the name
or address of the patient and that DOH shall not release the name or address of the physician
involved in the abortion.
In addition, HB239 also conflicts with the following statutes:
24-8-5 NMSA 1978, which states that “Neither the state, its local governmental units nor any
health facility furnishing family planning services shall subject any person to any standard or
requirement as a prerequisite to the receipt of any requested family planning service…."
24-1-13.1 NMSA 1978 which states that “A health care provider shall have the authority, within
the limits of his license, to provide prenatal, delivery and postnatal care to a female minor. A
female minor shall have the capacity to consent to prenatal, delivery and postnatal care by a
licensed health care provider."
The Attorney General’s Office notes the following:
1.
Medical emergency exception.
As drafted, the notification requirements in HB 239 do not
apply upon a physician’s certification that an immediate abortion is necessary to prevent the
death of the unemancipated or incompetent female. In 1973, the United States Supreme
Court determined that statutes regulating abortions must allow, based on medical judgment,
abortions not only when a woman’s life is at risk, but also when her health is at risk. Roe v.
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House Bill 239 – Page
5
Wade
, 410 U.S. 113 (1973); reaffirmed in the context of parental consent and notification
acts in Planned Parenthood v. Casey
, 505 U.S. 833, 880 (1992); see too Ayottev. Planned
Parenthood of New England
, 546 U.S. 320, 126 S.Ct. 961 at 967, reaffirming that State’s
cannot restrict access to abortions that are “necessary, in appropriate medical judgment, for
preservation of the life or health" of the female patient. Minors as well as adults are entitled
to the protections afforded by the U.S. Constitution. Planned Parenthood v. Danforth
, 428
U.S. 52, 74 (1967); Belotti v. Baird
, 443 U.S. 622 (1979); see also Hodgson v. Minnesota
,
497 U.S. 417 (1990) (declaring unconstitutional a two-parent notification requirement for a
minor’s abortion without judicial bypass). The Act’s limitation to life-threatening conditions
is unconstitutional. See
Planned Parenthood v. Neely
, 804 F.Supp. 1210 (D.C. Ariz. 1992),
declaring unconstitutional a consent statute that did not contain an exception when health
was threatened; see
also
Planned Parenthood of Blue Ridge v. Camblos
, 155 F.3d 352 (4
th
CA 1998), upholding a notification statute that allowed abortions on minors without
notification when to wait for notification would pose a serious health risk; and see
also
Planned Parenthood of Rock Mountain Serv. v. Owens
, 287 F.3d 910 (10
th
Cir. (Colo.)
2002), declaring unconstitutional requirement of parental notification before performing
abortion on minor except when imminent death of minor, finding statute did not take into
account instances when there is a health risk.
2.
Incompetents
. The term “incompetent" in HB 239 is not defined. Under the New Mexico
Probate Code, which contains the statutory mechanism for appointing conservators and
guardians for individuals who are determined to be incapacitated, such a person retains all
legal and civil rights except those expressly limited by the court order or which are
specifically granted to the guardian in a court order. See NMSA 1978, § 45-35-301.1
(1989); see too § 45-5-209(E) re guardians of minors. Thus, to the extent this bill requires
notification to a guardian or conservator in a situation where an “incompetent" individual
retains the right to make this decision, the bill conflicts with that statute, and may also violate
that person’s rights under both the federal and state constitutions.
3.
Lack of deadlines re judicial proceedings
. Although the bill requires cases brought by
unemancipated minors or incompetents seeking to bypass the notice requirements by “given
precedence" at the trial court level, that the decision be issued “promptly and without delay"
and that an “expedited" appeal be available, the absence of any timetables or deadlines for
trial court hearing, decision or appellate ruling has rendered similar provisions in other states
unconstitutional under Belotti
. Glick v.McKay,
937 F.2d 434, 440-441 (9
th
CA 1991),
overruled on other grounds sub
nom
Lambert v. Wicklund
, 520 U.S. 292 (1997); Planned
Parenthood v. Lawall
, 180 F.3d 1022 and 193 F.3d 1042(9
th
CA 1999); compare Memphis
Planned Parenthood v. Sundquist
, 175 F.3d 456 (6
th
CA 1999) (upholding Tennessee
notification statute containing deadlines for hearings and appeals).
4.
Independent State Grounds
. In addition to the mandates of the federal constitution, the New
Mexico constitution may afford greater protections. Our Supreme Court so held in New
Mexico Right to Choose/NARAL v. Johnson
, 126 N.M. 788 (1998), in ruling that the
Medicaid regulation restricting state funding of abortions for Medicaid-eligible women
violated the Equal Rights Amendment of our state constitution. Although our courts have
not been faced with analyzing the issues that arise in parental notice or consent statutes,
courts in other states have. In 2000, the New Jersey Supreme Court found that the State’s
interest in enforcing its parental notification statute, which is substantially similar to HB 239,
failed to override the substantial intrusion it imposed on a young woman’s fundamental right
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House Bill 239 – Page
6
to abortion and was unconstitutional under the equal protection guarantee contained in its
state constitution (because it imposed no corresponding limitation on a minor who seeks
medical and surgical care otherwise related to her pregnancy). Planned Parenthood of
Central New Jersey v. Farmer
, 762 A.2d 620 (2000). Other jurisdictions have recognized a
minor’s right to privacy is fundamental, and because it is implicated in parental consent
statutes, the state must be able to satisfy a strict scrutiny review by demonstrating a
compelling state interest that imposes the least restrictive means available. Consent statutes
containing provisions similar to HB 239 have not withstood judicial scrutiny of this nature.
See
In re T.W.
, 551 So. 2d 1186, 1195, 1196 (Fla. 1989); see
too
American Pediatrics v.
Lungren
, 940 P.2d 797 (1997) (declaring California’s consent with judicial bypass statute
unconstitutional solely on privacy grounds). Lastly, the Alaska Supreme Court directed the
lower court to conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether, under the Alaska
Constitution’s guarantee of privacy, the state has a compelling interest in enforcing its
parental consent statute, and, if so, whether that statute contains the least restrictive means
necessary to promote such an interest. State v. Planned Parenthood of Alaska
, 35 P.3d 30
(2001). Similarly, HB 239, if enacted, may be found unconstitutional under the right to
privacy, equal protection, due process or equal rights guarantees contained in the New
Mexico Constitution.
The judiciary has concerns with unemancipated minors and incapacitated persons entering into
court hearings without representation by legal counsel.
ALTERNATIVES
Ensure through appropriate funding, an inter-agency and community-based collaboration to
provide adequate counseling for teens with unplanned pregnancies.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
Courts already take reasonable action to see that cases are adjudicated in the most expedited
manner possible. Section 4(D) requires that the court assign some level of additional priority to
this type of case to assure that a decision is reached as quickly as possible. Would adding an
additional level of priority for these cases jeopardize the six-month rule for cases already on the
court’s docket.
EO/mt