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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Cravens
DATE TYPED 3/2/05
HB
SHORT TITLE Parental Notification Act
SB 126/aSFl#1/aSFl#2
ANALYST Wilson
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
See Narrative See Narrative
Duplicates HB 251
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Attorney General’s Office (AGO)
Children, Youth & Families (CYFD)
Commission on the Status of Women (CSW)
Corrections Department (CD)
Department of Health (DOH)
Human Services Department (HSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFl#2 Amendment
The Senate Floor amendment #2 to Senate Bill 126 removes SF amendment #1.
Synopsis of SFl#1 Amendment
The Senate Floor amendment #1 to Senate Bill 126 changes the exemption for parental notifica-
tion for unemancipated minors from a situation when the procedure will prevent the pregnant
female’s death to a situation when the procedure will protect the health of the pregnant female.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 126/aSFl#1/aSFl#2-- Page 2
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 126 creates the Parental Notification Act, establishes procedures for imposing a 48-
hour waiting period when unemancipated minors age 16 years of age or less or females for
whom a guardian or conservator has been appointed, requests an abortion. This bill will require
written parental notification except in the event the procedure will prevent the pregnant female’s
death or the parent certifies he or she has already been notified.
This bill will provide for judicial hearing and prescribe penalties. This bill will also require the
DOH to prepare annually and distribute notification reporting forms to all licensed physicians in
the state, collect and compile data concerning abortions to unemancipated minors, and to prepare
a public report that includes information provided by the AOC.
Significant Issues
The CSW believes that the confidentiality of females will be violated, particularly in small towns
where everyone knows each other.
The DOH provided the following:
The Vital Statistics Act mandates that all abortions occurring in New Mexico be reported to the
State Registrar, and that these reports be statistical reports used only for medical and health pur-
poses and shall not be incorporated into the permanent statistical records of the system of vital
records and health statistics. Additionally, reports shall not include the name or address of the
patient and DOH shall not release the name or address of the physician involved in the abortion.
In 2001 there were 251 abortions performed in New Mexico on females age 16 and under ac-
cording to data provided by New Mexico Vital Records and Health Statistics. A large percentage
of impregnated children 15 and under is reported to have been impregnated due to incest or rape.
Abortion restrictions affect the timing of abortions, resulting in more late term abortions. Re-
stricting access to timely abortion service may increase the number of unintended and unwanted
live births or late term abortions. A study of adolescent pregnancies from 1974-1997 in states
with parental involvement laws revealed that parental notification laws increased the share of
later term abortions by lowering the first trimester abortion rate. A study in Mississippi before
and after the implementation of parental notification for abortion – showed an increase of 19% in
the ratio of minors to adults who obtained their abortion after 12 weeks gestation.
Clarification is indicated in the bill’s definition section regarding the definition of “fetus”, which
according to Webster’s Medical Desk Dictionary, refers to a developing human from three
months after conception. This bill defines “fetus” as “an individual human organism from fer-
tilization until birth”. This bill s reference to fertilization also runs counter to accepted medical
definition of pregnancy, which occurs with implantation of the embryo, not at fertilization. It is
possible that many widely utilized contraceptives may act after fertilization but before implanta-
tion.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The DOH will be required to provide administrative support for contacting physicians; follow up
to assure that reports are submitted to the DOH; the statistical compilation of physician reports,
pg_0003
Senate Bill 126/aSFl#1/aSFl#2-- Page 3
as well as coordination with the administrative offices of the courts in order to assemble an an-
nual public report on adolescent abortion services. This bill does not include any budget to sup-
port these provisions. DOH will need two more FTEs to support these functions at an estimated
cost of $93 thousand.
HSD states that the payment of abortion claims by the Medicaid Program will be affected so
minimally as to have a negligible fiscal impact.
The AGO will have to defend this bill in the event of a judicial challenge.
Additional costs are anticipated for the judicial branch in conducting judicial bypass proceed-
ings. The AOC states that giving an additional level of priority to specific types of cases in an
effort to reach an expedited adjudication will have a fiscal impact on the court’s operation since
other cases, perhaps of equal importance and severity of criminal charges, may be delayed result-
ing in an increase in caseloads in the courts, thus requiring additional resources to handle the in-
crease.
Further, the bill proposes that AOC provides reports to the DOH. The information is presently
not being collected and will require that a data system be established in order to provide the in-
formation to the DOH on an annual basis.
In addition, there will be a minimal administrative cost for statewide update, distribution, and
documentation of statutory changes. Any additional fiscal impact on the judiciary will be pro-
portional to the enforcement of this law and commenced prosecutions. New laws, amendments
to existing laws, and new hearings have the potential to increase caseloads in the courts, thus re-
quiring additional resources to handle the increase. AOC will also have to pay for court ap-
pointed guardians ad litem in cases where the pregnant female chooses not to consent to the noti-
fication of her parent or guardian and petitions the district court for an order for an abortion
without notification.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The administrative impact to DOH will be significant. This proposes yearly reporting of all phy-
sicians who perform abortions to DOH and the production of an annual report that includes sta-
tistics from the administrative offices of the court. Abortion statistics are presently reported
annually as required by statute.
This bill requires DOH to ensure that all currently licensed physicians be informed of these new
requirements by October 1, 2005 and all physicians who subsequently become licensed in this
state would be so informed at the same time as they receive their license. This bill also proposes
that the DOH will bring court action against individual physicians who have not submitted
timely reports. A minimum of one FTE would be necessary for collection, tracking and reporting
of data and another FTE financial analyst to track non-reporting and associated fines, plus
substantially increased postage and printing.
Medicaid Program regulations will need to be changed.
CYFD’s Protective Services and Juvenile Justice Services staff will be required to engage in case
management and treatment planning for clients consistent with the intent of this legislation.
pg_0004
Senate Bill 126/aSFl#1/aSFl#2-- Page 4
The AGO personnel will have to defend this bill in the event of a judicial challenge. Additional
costs are anticipated for the judicial branch in conducting judicial bypass proceedings.
Administrative impact on the courts, both as to adopting rules regarding judicial bypass proceed-
ings and actually conducting those proceedings may be anticipated.
In order to provide 24-hour access, the Court of Appeals will have to set up an emergency tele-
phone number and a workable procedure for contacting three judges for a three-judge panel on
short notice. This procedure may require acquisition and maintenance of pagers or mobile tele-
phones for the judges and appropriate staff. It will also require staff time to monitor the emer-
gency telephones and possible overtime compensation for clerical and legal staff if they were
required to open the court and its offices for filings or emergency hearings. The impact on the
district courts will be similar but will only involve one judge and a court monitor.
DUPLICATION
SB 126 duplicates HB 251.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The AGO supplied the following:
The “medical emergency” exception dispensing with notice when the life of the patient is in
danger is too narrowly drawn and will render the act unconstitutional. In this bill the notification
requirements do not apply upon a physician’s certification that an immediate abortion is neces-
sary to prevent the death of the unemancipated or incompetent. In 1973, the United States Su-
preme Court determined that statutes regulating abortions must allow, based on medical judg-
ment, abortions not only when a woman’s life is at risk, but also when her health is at risk. The
courts have affirmed that minors as adults are entitled to the protections afforded by the constitu-
tion.
The term “incompetent” in the bill is not defined. Under the New Mexico Probate Code, which
contains the statutory mechanism for appointing conservators and guardians for individuals who
are determined to be incapacitated, such a person retains all legal and civil rights except those
expressly limited by the court order or which are specifically granted to the guardian in a court
order. Thus, to the extent this bill requires notification to a guardian or conservator in a situation
where the “incompetent” individual retains the right to make this decision, the bill conflicts with
that statute and may also violate that person’s rights under both the federal and state constitu-
tions.
The judicial bypass procedures may not be specific enough to guarantee the expedited
proceeding to which the unemancipated minor or incompetent is entitled, which will render the
Act unconstitutional. Although the bill requires cases brought by unemancipated minors or in-
competents seeking to bypass the notice requirements be “given precedence” at the trial court
level, that the decision be issued “promptly and without delay”
and that an “expedited” appeal be available, the absence of any timetables or deadlines for trial
court hearing, decision or appellate ruling has rendered similar provisions in other states uncon-
stitutional.
pg_0005
Senate Bill 126/aSFl#1/aSFl#2-- Page 5
In addition to the mandates of the federal constitution, the New Mexico constitution may afford
greater protections. Our supreme court so held in ruling that the Medicaid regulation restricting
state funding of abortions for Medicaid-eligible women violated the Equal Rights Amendment of
our state constitution. Although our courts have not been faced with analyzing the issues that
arise in parental notice or consent statutes, courts in other states have. The Supreme Court of
New Jersey recently found that the State’s interest in enforcing its parental notification statute,
which is substantially similar to the Act contained in this bill, failed to override the substantial
intrusion it imposed on a young woman's fundamental right to abortion and was unconstitutional
under the equal protection guarantee contained in its state constitution because it imposed no cor-
responding limitation on a minor who seeks medical and surgical care otherwise related to her
pregnancy. Other jurisdictions have recognized a minor’s right to privacy is fundamental, and
because it is implicated in parental consent statutes, the state must be able to satisfy a strict scru-
tiny review by demonstrating a compelling state interest that imposes the least restrictive means
available. Consent statutes containing provisions similar to the Act have not withstood judicial
scrutiny of this nature. Most recently, the Alaska Supreme Court directed the lower court to con-
duct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether, under the Alaska Constitution’s guarantee of
privacy, the state has a compelling interest in enforcing its parental consent statute, and, if so,
whether that statute contains the least restrictive means necessary to promote such an interest.
Similarly, this bill, if enacted, may be found unconstitutional under the right to privacy, equal
protection, due process or equal rights guarantees contained in the New Mexico Constitution.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
HSD asks the following:
Does this bill apply to the termination of ectopic pregnancies because it could result in death of
the mother.
Does this bill apply to “morning after pills” administered by either a physician or by a pharma-
cist without physician involvement because in most cases it will not be known for certain if the
patient were pregnant.
DW/njw:yr