Lorie Chaiten, director of the reproductive rights project for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois answered frequently asked questions regarding parental notification laws in Illinois Feb. 5 on The Huffington Post.

mytubethumb play
%3Ciframe%20allowfullscreen%3D%22%22%20frameborder%3D%220%22%20height%3D%22315%22%20src%3D%22https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube-nocookie.com%2Fembed%2FOZ2nUoqx5-0%3Fautoplay%3D1%26version%3D3%26playsinline%3D1%22%20width%3D%22560%22%20allow%3D%22autoplay%22%3E%3C%2Fiframe%3E
Privacy statement. This embed will serve content from youtube-nocookie.com.

 

Sally Burgess, director of the Hope Clinic in Belleville, Ill. included a blog post about why it is imperative to put an end to the threat of parental notification laws in Illinois:

I have seen first hand the harms that forced parental involvement impose on young women. My first clinic position in this field was as a counselor in Colorado before the state adopted parental notification. Every weekend I would counsel young women from the neighboring state of Utah, who had lied to their parents, borrowed money and often unreliable transportation, and driven long hours on strange highways and interstates to get to our clinic. It was not unusual to arrive at the clinic and find the young woman and the person who had traveled with her sleeping in a car.

They certainly didn't have money for lodging and scarcely enough for food. However, they so feared for their safety and their future that they were willing to go to extreme measures to avoid being forced to involve their parents in their unintended pregnancy. These young women feared being beaten or thrown out of their homes if their parents learned they were pregnant.

Granted, there are young women who voluntarily tell their parents; in fact, many young women come to our clinic with their mothers. Unfortunately, however, not all teens live in this reality. For those who would not otherwise tell a parent, these laws can impose irreversible physical and psychological harms. The health and well being of these young women depends of putting an end to these dangerous laws.

Date

Monday, February 8, 2010 - 9:00pm

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Related issues

Women's and Reproductive Rights

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

28

Style

Standard with sidebar

Do you believe everyone should be allowed to make their own decisions about their reproductive health, and everyone should be guaranteed the ability to use or refuse contraception? If so, the ACLU of Illinois could use your support! Join us and our coalition partners in our commitment to protect reproductive health and access in Illinois.

Right now we are working to pass the Reproductive Health and Access Act (RHAA), which would include:

  • Responsible sex education health
  • Access to quality birth control
  • The ability to access prenatal care
  • The right to choose an abortion

What the RHAA will NOT do:

Myth- This bill mandates that comprehensive sex education be taught for every student in public schools, even kindergarteners.

Fact- Currently, Illinois schools are not required to teach comprehensive sexual health education. This bill protects young women and men and helps them make responsible decisions by requiring that public schools offer age appropriate, medically accurate, comprehensive sexual health education classes. In today's world that just makes sense.

Parents will, however, retain the right to remove their children from sexual health education classes if they do not want them to participate.

Myth: The Reproductive Health & Access Act will allow unrestricted access to abortion and will not allow any regulation of abortion, including late term abortions.

Fact: Current regulations of abortion later in pregnancy will still apply, and all abortions will continue to be regulated like any other medical procedure.

Show your commitment of the rights of women and all Illinoisans at the Reproductive Health and Access Lobby Day on Wednesday, February 10 in Springfield, Ill.

Can't make it? Commit to call your legislator on Thursday, February 11.

Spread the news on Facebook!

Date

Wednesday, January 27, 2010 - 9:02pm

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Related issues

Women's and Reproductive Rights

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

28

Style

Standard with sidebar

By Ellyn Fortino, Communications Intern

Ben Wolf, assistant legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, spoke to the Chicago Tribune in an article Sunday about the difficulty for troubled youths to return to school after they have been incarcerated:

 

In some cases, officials refuse to re-admit students for fear they will disrupt classes or be violent but do not move to formally transfer or expel students as school rules and the law requires. In other cases, parents cannot navigate the school district's bureaucracy to re-enroll their children after they have been in custody or suspended.

 

While these troubled students are away from school, they lose more ground in an education system that already has proved difficult for them. Without an education, they are more likely to break the law, with increasingly serious ramifications, or become victims of violence.

 

....Critics, though, fear that schools, in refusing to readmit some students, are shirking their legal obligation to provide an education.

 

"The assumption ought to be that a kid is going back to a regular school," said Benjamin Wolf, assistant legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois. "We think it's almost always illegal to refuse to take a child."

 

Date

Monday, January 25, 2010 - 9:00pm

Show featured image

Hide banner image

Tweet Text

[node:title]

Related issues

Criminal Justice Reform

Show related content

Menu parent dynamic listing

28

Show PDF in viewer on page

Style

Standard with sidebar

Show list numbers

Pages

Subscribe to ACLU of Illinois RSS