ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1997, Roanoke Times

DATE: Tuesday, February 18, 1997             TAG: 9702180126
SECTION: VIRGINIA                 PAGE: C-3  EDITION: NEW RIVER VALLEY 
DATELINE: RICHMOND
SOURCE: Associated Press


PANEL BROADENS PARENT-NOTIFICATION BILL ABORTION PLAN COULD BE REPORTED TO GRANDPARENTS, SIBLINGS

A pregnant teen-ager who wants an abortion could tell her grandparents or adult siblings rather than her parents under a bill approved Monday by a House of Delegates committee.

The decision by the House Courts of Justice Committee put Sen. Mark Earley's bill on a collision course with Gov. George Allen, who has said he doesn't want parental notification broadened to include other relatives.

Earley argued that the changes made by the committee gutted the intent of the legislation. ``If you adopt this amendment, you defeat the entire purpose of this bill,'' he told the panel before it voted 12-10 to amend the measure.

The committee then sent the bill to the House floor on a 20-2 vote.

Earley's original bill required that girls under 18 inform a parent or guardian before an abortion. In cases of abuse or neglect, the notification requirements would be waived but the doctor would have to inform Child Protective Services. The girl could also ask a judge to waive the notification.

Earley's bill passed the Senate 26-14 on Feb.3, and Allen said he would sign it into law.

The version approved Monday by the House committee conformed Earley's bill to one passed 81-18 by the House on Feb.4. Allen vetoed a similar watered-down bill in 1994 and has indicated he will do so again.

Committee members argued that even a weakened bill that allows minors to notify family members other than a parent is better than nothing.

``I think we're crazy to be fighting over this thing,'' said Del. David Brickley, D-Prince William.

``The important thing is that a young woman has an adult she can turn to for advice,'' said House Majority Leader Richard Cranwell, D-Vinton. ``I believe we have a statute that will probably work.''

The battle now moves to the House floor, where both supporters and opponents of the legislation predict a tough fight to remove the amendments tacked on by the committee.

``The votes to get the amendments off will be real close, but I think they'll fail,'' said Karen Raschke, a lobbyist for Planned Parenthood of Virginia.

When parental notification was moving through the House for the first time, floor amendments watering down the bill were approved by only a 52-48 vote.

If the House keeps the amendments and passes the bill, it goes back to the Senate. If the Senate rejects the House amendments, the legislation goes to a conference committee to reconcile the differences.

Twenty-eight states enforce laws requiring parental notification or consent for minors' abortions. Ten other states have such laws, but do not enforce them.


LENGTH: Medium:   58 lines
KEYWORDS: GENERAL ASSEMBLY 1997 







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