SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares as follows:(a) Nearly one in four women in the United States are expected to get an abortion at some point in their lives, according to a 2017 study.
(b) Fifty-eight percent of women of reproductive age, approximately 40 million women, live in states that are hostile to abortion.
(c) When Texas enacted its six-week ban on abortion last year, some residents began to get abortions out of state, and in the final four months of last year, Planned Parenthood clinics in states near Texas reported a nearly 800 percent increase in abortion patients from Texas compared to the same
period in the prior year.
(d) If our state’s abortion provider network is to provide timely care to California patients and absorb any significant portion of the increase in out-of-state patients projected now that the United States Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade, California must take steps now to ensure the growth of a network of clinicians trained in abortion and sexual and reproductive health care. These clinicians must reflect California’s diverse racial, ethnic, and linguistic communities and patients and be equipped to meet the reproductive health needs of all people in California.
(e) The Guttmacher Institute estimates that 46,000 women between the ages of 15 and 49 drive to California for abortion care, and has determined that 26 states are certain or likely to ban abortion if Roe v. Wade is overturned. If all 26 of those states prohibit abortion at any point
during pregnancy, the number of women of reproductive age who drive to California for abortion care may increase to 1.4 million women, a potential increase of 2,923 percent.
(f) Even in the state with the best abortion protections in the country, abortions have long been inaccessible for many, especially those living in rural, conservative areas. Forty percent of California counties have no clinics providing abortions. Many people still have to travel far to get the appropriate care, or struggle to afford abortions, and language barriers and a lack of up-to-date information can make it difficult to find help.