Pennsylvania
Mapping the Path Forward: Legislating the Next Stage of Reproductive Rights in Pennsylvania
by Kim Lyons, Pennsylvania Capital-Star
January 21, 2024
Monday is the 51st anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, the landmark abortion case the U.S. Supreme Court overturned in 2022. This year, abortion rights advocates and lawmakers say they are not looking back at what was lost, but are instead seeking the path forward.
For Pennsylvania state Reps. Liz Hanbidge (D-Mongtomery) and Danielle Friel Otten (D-Chester), that means a constitutional amendment. House Bill 1888 would create a “fundamental right to personal reproductive liberty,” in the state Constitution if approved by voters.
“As the mother to an 8-year-old girl who could be potentially affected by the outcome over the next decade, I want to see these rights enshrined in the Constitution because I do not want to have her rights at the mercy of a governor’s veto, or a one-seat majority on the Supreme Court or any of the many things we’ve done to to defend reproductive rights in Pennsylvania over the last generation,” Otten said in an interview with the Capital-Star. “I think we need to put this to bed once and for all.”
HB 1888 is similar to legislation introduced in the House in 2022 to put the Constitutional right to abortion on the ballot. That bill followed an attempt earlier in 2022 by GOP lawmakers — who controlled both chambers of the Legislature at the time — to advance an amendment that would have explicitly stated the Constitution provided no right to taxpayer-funded abortion or access to abortion.
“We were so close to having a proposed constitutional amendment historically, that was written in such a way that it would have tricked voters into thinking it was just about taxpayer funded abortion, but would have prohibited a constitutional right to abortion in Pennsylvania,” Hanbidge said.
An amendment to Pennsylvania’s Constitution has to pass both chambers of the legislature in two consecutive sessions before it goes before voters. Even if voters approve, a proposed amendment could still face legal challenges, but as long as it prevails in any court battles it would become part of the Constitution.
The bill had its first hearing in December before the House Judiciary Committee. During that hearing, minority chairman Rep. Rob Kauffman (R-Franklin) said in closing remarks he could “not imagine this legislation coming to pass. It would be horrible for Pennsylvania women, children, families, minorities who are desperately impacted by abortion.” He made his comments while holding a plastic doll meant to represent a 22-week-old fetus.
Hanbidge and Otten are realistic that the proposed amendment would be unlikely to pass the GOP-controlled state Senate. “But just because we can’t get it through both chambers right now doesn’t mean that we don’t try,” Otten said. The earliest HB 1888 could be on the ballot would be 2025.
In the past two elections, reproductive rights supporters in several states have won hard-fought battles to claw back some of the protections lost when Roe v. Wade was overturned by the Dobbs decision. California, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana and Vermont residents voted to support abortion access, or boost reproductive rights, when the issue was on their ballots in 2022.
In November, Ohio voters supported an amendment to that state’s constitution, which makes abortion a right and leaves the medical decisions up to doctors and patients. And in Pennsylvania, an expensive campaign by reproductive rights groups and their supporters to solidify Democrats’ majority on the state Supreme Court proved successful.
More than $19 million was spent on ads and messaging in the campaign, much of it portraying Republican Carolyn Carluccio as an anti-abortion candidate trying to hide her previous positions, claims that she disputed.
Democrat Dan McCaffery, beat Carluccio with more than 53% of the vote, as abortion rights advocates made clear that preserving Democrats’ majority on the court was key not just for the present, but the future as well: The court is weighing a case that challenges a ban on abortion for people on Pennsylvania’s Medicaid program, which it could rule on at any time.
Now is not the time to breathe a sigh of relief, however, abortion rights advocates agree, even in Pennsylvania, where abortion is legal up to 24 weeks and Gov. Josh Shapiro supports abortion rights.
“Sometimes people refer to Pennsylvania as an access state, because we’re not like the Southern states where there is an absolute or near absolute ban,” said Susan Frietsche, senior staff attorney at the Women’s Law Project, a Pennsylvania nonprofit public interest legal organization. “But the reality is, it is very difficult to get an abortion for many people even in Pennsylvania.”
She ticked off a list of regulations–many of which, she notes, are not evidence-based– “that serve only to make it more difficult to provide care,” like rules about the size of an elevator in a clinic where abortions are provided.
“We have a mandatory waiting period, as if adult women can’t figure out for themselves what to do with a pregnancy without the government making them stop and think some more,” Frietsche said. “It’s not just insulting, it actually operates as a true barrier to a lot of people.”
Keeping voters focused on the importance of local elections, as advocates did in the state Supreme Court race in November, is another key strategy for protecting reproductive rights.
Samantha Paisley, national press secretary for the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee, told the Capital-Star her organization recognized the significance of the state Supreme Court race early on, “and how it would be an important determinant of the landscape for reproductive rights in Pennsylvania.”
The DLCC made a historic six-figure investment in that race, she noted, “but we know the landscape for abortion rights in Pennsylvania is still very much in jeopardy.”
That’s why the DLCC identified the Pennsylvania House as a top target for support in 2024. The House currently sits at a 101-101 tie between Republicans and Democrats, pending the outcome of a Feb. 13 special election to replace longtime Democratic Rep. John Galloway of Bucks County, who resigned after being elected district judge in November.
“We know that that race does not only determine what the majority of power looks like in the House, but it also will determine the future of abortion rights in Pennsylvania,” Paisley said. “We know that building democratic power in the states, particularly in the post-Roe environment, is the only way to secure reproductive freedoms.”
And Pennsylvania Democratic elected officials will be out in full force on Monday to mark the Roe anniversary and keep abortion rights and access top of mind for voters. U.S. Rep. Summer Lee (D-12) will lead a press conference in Pittsburgh with the Pennsylvania Democratic Party.
“Our control over our bodies, our futures — and our children’s control over their bodies and futures — all comes down to stopping Trump’s abortion ban this election,” Lee told the Capital-Star. “Western PA is the frontline of this fight because the reality is that the same PA Republicans working to criminalize abortion have kept care from Black, brown, poor, working class, and rural folks long before Trump’s SCOTUS overturned Roe. 2024 has barely begun, but we’re already organizing up and down the ballot to stop Trump’s ban and make access to reproductive health care reality for all.”
State Rep. Tarik Khan (D-Philadelphia), will host a news conference in Harrisburg with Democratic colleagues, including Hanbidge and Otter, to introduce legislation aimed at making safe abortion access easier in Pennsylvania.
U.S. Reps. Madeleine Dean (D-4), and Mary Gay Scanlon (D-5) will join state Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta (D-Philadelphia) in Philadelphia for a press event where they will highlight “how Donald Trump and MAGA Republicans worked to overturn Roe, Trump’s plans to ban abortion nationwide,” according to a release.
That level of vocal support by politicians for abortion rights is something that would not have been as widespread just a few years ago. Frietsche said seeing the support from voters for a constitutional amendment in neighboring Ohio is the latest example that disproves the long-held analysis that talking about abortion is a toxic political issue.
Continuing to beat the drum and remind voters of what is at stake was also part of the November strategy, and Freitsche said it worked remarkably well.
“I think that people who support abortion rights and reproductive liberty have really stepped up since Dobbs and have done a phenomenal, shockingly wonderful job of overcoming really terrible barriers,” she said, referencing the Supreme Court case that led to Roe being overturned. “Sometimes people say that there are more pro-choice people than anti- abortion people but that the anti-abortion people have all the passion. That is not true. Maybe it used to be, but it is not true anymore.”
Pennsylvania Capital-Star is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Pennsylvania Capital-Star maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kim Lyons for questions: info@penncapital-star.com. Follow Pennsylvania Capital-Star on Facebook and Twitter.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania couple accused of living with dead relative for months to cash his Social Security checks
A Pennsylvania couple is accused of living with their dead relative for months to reap the benefits of his Social Security checks.
The Greene Washington Regional Police Department said James and Debbie Bebout of Canton Township were arrested in the death of James Bebout’s brother, Michael Bebout.
Police paperwork details allegations
According to police paperwork, authorities received a call on Jan. 16 from James Bebout, who said he went to serve his brother breakfast when he found him “stiff as a board.” When officers arrived at the home on Hayes Avenue for a welfare check, DeForte said several red flags were raised.
“Instead of finding the decedent that would have passed away within the last 24 hours, we found the decedent in a state of severe decomposition,” DeForte said.
DeForte said an investigation revealed Michael Bebout had been dead for about six months.
“You have two defendants that we believe knew the decedent had passed that were more interested in reaping the benefits of a governmental check and access to a warm home than they were providing some type of moral and ethical solution to their relative passing,” DeForte said.
During an interview with Debbie Bebout, investigators said she allegedly admitted to knowing Michael Bebout had been dead since around October but did not contact anybody.
“Debbie stated she cashed several of Michael’s $1,200/month Social Security checks in order to pay for food. Debbie stated she was concerned about getting kicked out of the house if Michael was known to have died,” police paperwork stated.
“What we found throughout the investigation was roughly a half a dozen Social Security checks that were cashed by the defendants,” DeForte said.
During an interview with police, Debbie Bebout later admitted to officers that she “actually noticed that her brother-in-law, Michael Bebout, dead around Labor Day 2024.”
She also allegedly told officers that she pretended to take care of Michael Bebout every day so her husband would not find out.
Neighbors say it smelled “awful” outside the home
“We believe, through our investigation, that both defendants were well aware that the decedent was decomposing in the house with them. The smell was so pungent that you could smell it outside of the home prior to entry,” DeForte.
Neighbors described the couple as “bad news” and said that they knew something was wrong when it began to smell outside.
“We smelled an awful smell. We called the gas company, thinking it was a gas leak. Here, it wasn’t a gas leak. It was him. They always had a window cracked, to let the smell out, apparently,” Samuel Burgess said.
Burgess said he was friends with Michael Bebout and knew he had been sick before his death.
“He was a sweetheart. He would do anything for anyone. He would give you his last dollar, his shoes, his shirt, anything. He was a perfect gentleman,” Burgess said.
Dead animals found inside home
Burgess said Michael Bebout had a dog that he loved that also lived in the home.
“There was a little dog. I don’t know what happened to the little dog. He might be in there dead also, yeah, because Michael had a little black puppy dog,” Burgess said.
DeForte said that several dead animals were found inside the home.
“When we conducted the welfare check, we had noticed dead animals that were also severely decomposed throughout the house, that would also have been accompanied by a lot of garbage. A lot of clutter,” DeForte said.
“To have something like this happen in society today is an absolute violation of the human construct. This is both morally and ethically reprehensible,” DeForte said. “In over three decades of my law enforcement career, I have never witnessed something as macabre as what we saw inside of that residence.”
Pennsylvania
Police officer rescues 8 people from inside burning duplex in Bucks County, officials say
Thursday, December 11, 2025 1:21PM
Firefighters in Bucks County battled a fire inside a duplex Penndel, Pennsylvania, on Thursday morning.
PENNDEL, Pa. (WPVI) — A police officer’s quick actions helped save eight people from inside a burning duplex in Bucks County.
The fire broke out at 4:40 a.m. Thursday on the unit block of West Woodland Drive in Penndel Borough.
Officials say Officer Sean Peck observed the active fire and immediately jumped into action.
Officer Peck ran into the home, which was filled with fire and heavy smoke, and rescued eight people from inside.
Fire crews that were called to the scene reported heavy hoarding conditions inside, making it difficult to enter the property.
There are no reports of any injuries.
The cause of the fire remains under investigation.
Copyright © 2025 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Pennsylvania
Flu, COVID cases surge as holiday shopping, gatherings fuel spread in New Jersey and Pennsylvania
With respiratory infections increasing, lots of people are getting sick, according to health officials. Health experts say the holiday season is prime for contagious illnesses to spread in crowded locations like malls, airports and holiday parties.
Cases of influenza have closed in on 2 million cases nationwide already, and more than 700 deaths.
South Jersey native, Jayme Bundy, is back to wrapping holiday gifts after recovering from a bout with COVID.
“It was almost like I was having an out-of-body experience. Like I didn’t feel myself at all,” Bundy said.
Bundy got sick with a fever and congestion right after Thanksgiving when she was around hundreds of people while working at the Cherry Hill Mall.
Maps from the CDC show a growing number of people are getting the flu, COVID and RSV in Pennsylvania, Delaware and especially in New Jersey.
“Everybody’s sick right now. Five of my coworkers are sick. Head colds, congestion, can’t talk, just feel terrible,” Bundy said.
New Jersey had a big spike in flu cases.
According to the health department, November recorded more than 2,000 cases — 542 cases were reported the same time last year, and in 2023, 1,086 cases.
“We are seeing patients with flu being hospitalized at this point, and we do have concerns about that,” Dr. Martin Topiel, with Virtua Health, said.
Topiel said it’s the season for contagious infections.
“We’ve had recent Thanksgiving holidays, holiday parties, change in the temperature outside. And so there’s been a lot of interaction,” Topiel said.
Topiel says the spike in flu cases could also be because fewer people are getting vaccinated — and this year’s influenza vaccine isn’t as protective as years past, but it’s still recommended.
“The vaccine should still be effective, reducing hospitalization incidents, reducing the seriousness of the infection,” Topiel said.
Now that she’s recovered, Bundy’s house is ready for more holiday festivities. She’s hoping to avoid more illnesses. Topiel got a flu shot and says she should have included the COVID vaccine.
Doctors say it’s not too late to get the flu or COVID vaccine. People in high risk groups are being advised to take precautions when in crowded indoor locations.
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