Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman
and members of the committee. Thank
you for providing me this opportunity to testify and express my support for
protecting health care providers from forced involvement in abortion.
I serve as a director of the
association board of Valley Hospital, a nonprofit nonsectarian community-based
hospital. The hospital lies in an
amazingly beautifully valley, surrounded on three sides by majestic mountains,
with rivers and streams of crystalline blue in Palmer, Alaska.
Palmer is located about 50 miles east of Anchorage. There's another
town, Wasilla, that's 10 miles from Palmer.
These two towns and the outlying areas are known as "the valley."
Valley Hospital is truly a
community hospital in that it is governed by the members of the community.
Membership in the hospital is open to all residents of our community
without regard to citizenship, race, sex or religious preference. The members elect the association board on which I serve.
The association board is responsible for raising funds, acquiring land,
property and equipment for the hospital and for selecting the members of the
hospital's operating board. This
board sets the policy of the hospital. And
because the members of the operating board are ultimately selected from our
community, the board truly represents the community.
Among the operating board's current members, for example, are a pastor,
a realtor, an attorney, a teacher, and a physician.
The community both serves and
is served by the hospital. The mission of the hospital is "to enhance the health of
those we serve" guided by the values of honoring the dignity of all people,
representing the interests of the community, and providing the highest level of
care within the bounds of ethics.
Our small town has an OB/GYN
who performs elective abortions. She
uses Valley Hospital for her later-term, second trimester abortions.
For the most part, our community wants abortion to stop at Valley
Hospital. So, in the early 1990's the
members elected people to the association board who believe in respect for human
life and who hold the philosophy that hospitals are for healing, and not
killing. The association board
selected the operating board, which passed a resolution reflecting this policy.
The resolution ended abortion at Valley Hospital except in the cases of
rape, incest and danger to the life of the mother---exactly the same policy the
federal government has had in Medicaid and its other health programs for many
years.
When the abortionist was told
she could no longer perform abortions at Valley Hospital, she was overheard
complaining that abortions were a good portion of her income.
She sued. The trial judge,
Judge Dana Fabe, ruled in her favor, stating that because Valley Hospital
received some federal and state money, it was a quasi-public entity, and
therefore has to provide abortions.
The judge's reasoning was strange, to say the
least. How can our receipt of
federal funds be used to forbid us to have the same abortion policy that
the federal government requires in all its own health facilities?
I believe, however, that Judge Fabe's opinion was colored by her
personal views on abortion. In 1993
she made the statement that "if a high school student in this state has a
fundamental right to choose his or her hairstyle,
an Alaskan woman must certainly have a fundamental right to choose whether or
not to terminate a pregnancy."
Of course, Valley Hospital
challenged the decision, and it went before the Alaska Supreme Court. This five
member court is one of a handful of state supreme courts to rule that state
funds must be used for elective abortions despite the contrary decision of the
state legislature. One member,
Justice Bryner, declared that "pregnancy is a disease" during oral arguments
on the funding issue. It was
no surprise that the court upheld Judge Fabe's original decision.
The Alaska Supreme Court held that Valley Hospital was "quasi-public"
because of its receipt of public monies. In addition, the court struck down a
state law protecting hospitals that refuse to participate in abortions, denying
the right of our board to exercise its rights of moral conscience.
The court even suggested that it would not respect the religious beliefs
of those who decline involvement in abortion, saying, "recognizing such a
policy as 'compelling' could violate the Establishment Clause of the First
Amendment." Valley
Hospital Ass'n. v. Mat-Su Coalition for Choice, 948 P.2d 963 (Alaska 1997).
In response, the legislature
sought to reverse the decision by constitutional amendment, which requires a
two-thirds vote of our legislators. Sadly,
the amendment failed to garner that two-thirds majority by just one vote.
This court decision potentially places all hospitals in
our state in a "Catch-22" situation. If you are a non-religious hospital you have no First
Amendment claim of religious freedom, so you must provide abortions.
If you are a religious hospital with a "free exercise" claim, respect
for your right of conscience may be seen as showing favoritism to religion, so
you may still have to provide abortions.
At a time when he was not a
member of any religion, former abortionist Bernard Nathanson once said: "It is
clear that permissive abortion is purposeful destruction of what is undeniably
human life. It is an impermissible
act of deadly violence." For
those of us who share this view - that abortion is a form of violence, not a
form of health care - being required to provide and support it is a grave
injustice.
I ask for myself and my
community, and for any other hospital or health care provider that does not want
to be forced to be involved in killing innocent human life. Please pass
Congressman Bilirakis's bill, the Abortion Non-Discrimination Act (H.R. 4691).
We, too, have a right to choose -- a right to choose not to be involved
in destroying life.
Thank you for considering my
views.