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Hot Topics 2006 | Proposition 85 UC Berkeley | Institute of Governmental Studies Library | Parents' Right to Know and Child Protection Initiative |
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Election Results Update [8 November 2006] For updated results on all propositions, see the Secretary of State website.
Background In 1953, state law was amended to allow minors to receive, without parental consent or notification, the same types of prenatal medical care available to an adult. Based on this law and later developments, minors were able to obtain abortions in California without parental consent or notification." In 1987, the state legislature amended the law to require that minors obtain parental consent before getting an abortion, but the amendment was challenged in court. Ten years later, in 1997, the California Supreme Court struck down the law on grounds that it violated the minor's constitutional right to privacy. Proposition 85 would:
Proposition 85 eliminates the language in Proposition 73 which refers to "the death of an unborn child, a child conceived but not yet born." Campaign Finance The campaign in favor of Proposition 85 was financed primarily with $2.1 million in donations from Jim Holman, the publisher of the San Diego Reader, one of the largest-circulation alternative weeklies in the United States (he is also the publisher of four Catholic lay newspapers). Holman is a long-time anti-abortion activist who has a history of financing anti-abortion measures and campaigns to unseat judges with ostensibly pro-abortion leanings. Holman also contributed the lion's share of the funding for Proposition 73. The proponents of Proposition 85 also received $600,000 from the Sonoma-based winemaker Don Sebastiani & Sons; $186,000 from Paul Griffin, a homebuilding firm executive and member of the board of directors of Santa Paula-based Thomas Aquinas College, and his spouse Martha Griffin; $137,000 from Robin Arkley, the founder of real estate asset acquisition firm Security National Holding Company LLC; $50,000 from the Christian Community Theater in El Cajon; $50,000 from Serving Hands International, a San Diego-based anti-poverty organization; $25,000 from James Bisenius, an Oregon money manager; and $16,000 from the Napa-based Life Legal Defense Foundation, a foundation with the stated mission "to give innocent and helpless human beings of any age, particularly unborn children, a trained and committed defense against the threat of death, and to support their advocates in the nation's courtrooms." The campaign opposing Proposition 85 raised around $2.7 million, much of that money coming from various Planned Parenthood affiliates in such locations as San Bernardino County, Orange County, Los Angeles County, San Jose, San Mateo, and Pasadena. Other money for the No on 85 campaign, which calls itself Campaign for Teen Safety, comes from Andrew Grove, a senior advisor to Intel Corporation, and his spouse Eva ($101,000); Leaders for an Effective Government, an independent expenditure committee originally founded by the former State Senator John Burton and whose chief consultant is Democratic Party activist Gale Kaufman, who has ties to Assembly Speaker Fabian Núñez ($100,000); Quinn Delaney, the president of the Akonadi Foundation, and Oakland-based organization whose stated mission is " to work with others to eliminate racism, with a particular focus on strategies that address structural and institutional racism" ($50,000); Franklin Johnson, a Palo Alto asset management company owner ($49,500); and the actress Candice Bergen ($2,500). Browse our webpage listing major contributors to all of the campaigns supporting and opposing the ballot measures here.
Proponents of the initiative claim that their main concern is the safety of girls, not eliminating abortion. They argue that minors need help to make important health decisions. They state that the 48-hour waiting period would ensure that parents or guardians have a realistic opportunity to consult with their child and explore her options before she makes an irrevocable decision. Opponents argue that parental notification laws do nothing to keep teens safe or promote family communication. They hold that the real outcome of these laws is delayed medical care for the most vulnerable teens, putting them at risk for health complications.
Waiting Period and Parental Notification Before Termination of Minor's Pregnancy Individual Campaign Committees League of Women Voters of Education Fund non-partisan analysis
Yes on 85 Parents' Right to Know No on 85: For Real Teen Safety
Voters closely divided on Props. 87, 86 and 85 one week before the election. Field Poll, Release 2215, Nov. 2, 2006. Big early leads for Prop. 86 (cigarette taxes), Prop. 87 (alternative energy/oil tax) and especially Prop. 83 (sex offenders).
Adolescents & Parental Notification for Abortion: What can California Learn from the Experience of Other States?
The following citations include links to full-text articles online, when they are available. Some restrictions on use apply, due to licensing requirements. For more information, see Tips for Finding Full-Text Articles. Gordon, Rachel. Hecht, Peter. Dolbee, Sandi. Lelchuk, Ilene. Mitchell, Claire; Stokols, Andy. Hecht, Peter. Cohen, Harvey; Berek, Jonathan S.[Opinion]. [Opinion]. Myers, Randy.
"Prop. 85 — Abortion waiting period ," Contra Costa Times, October 8, 2006. Access World News (UCB) [Opinion] "An assault on abortion rights," San Francisco Chronicle, Oct. 2, 2006. San Francisco Chronicle Ainsworth, Bill. "Prop. 85 has abortion debate back in spotlight," San Diego Union-Tribune, Oct. 2, 2006. Access World News (UCB) Saunders, Debra J. [Opinion] "A parent's right to know," San Francisco Chronicle, Oct. 1, 2006. San Francisco Chronicle "Two taxes top the November initiatives," Porterville Recorder, Aug. 9, 2006. Access World News (UCB) [Opinion] Hecht, Peter. "Hot-button issues on ballot: Voters will revisit abortion notification, weigh new tobacoo tax," San Jose Mercury News, June 21, 2006. Access World News (UCB) Wildermuth, John. "Eminent Domain, Teen Pregnancy Ballot Issues," |
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