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
Chris DiGiulio: Pennsylvania can’t accept oil and gas companies’ self-reporting
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania lawmakers debate immigration crackdowns after Minneapolis shooting
(WHTM) — Days after federal agents killed a U.S. citizen in Minneapolis, Pennsylvania State Sen. Tim Kearney (D-Delaware) stood outside an office for one of the Keystone State’s most prominent Democrats, arguing he’s not doing enough.
“It’s going to take people in the street really trying to make a difference, which is one of the reasons that I’m here today,” Kearney said Wednesday while protesting outside U.S. Sen. John Fetterman’s Philadelphia office. Fetterman did release a statement earlier in the day calling for President Donald Trump to fire Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
But State House and Senate Democrats have been pushing for several proposals that would limit what Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents can do in the state. One would ban them from wearing masks, another prohibits them from making arrests on state property, court houses, and schools, while a third would let residents sue the federal government if they violate constitutional rights.
“I would hope that my colleagues across the aisle would join us in calling for accountability and calling for common sense standards for these ICE operations that have clearly gone way out of hand,” said State Rep. Tarik Khan (D-Philadelphia).
Republicans in Harrisburg and Washington mostly reject such initiatives, and Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, pushed back against the measures in a statement.
“ICE officers are facing a 1300% increase in assaults because of dangerous, untrue smears by elected Democrats,” she said. “Just the other day, an officer had his finger bitten off by a [radical] left-wing rioter. ICE officers act heroically to enforce the law and protect American communities, and local officials should work with them, not against them. Anyone pointing the finger at law enforcement officers instead of the criminals is simply doing the bidding of criminal illegal aliens.”
State Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman said safety is a top priority for the Senate Republican Caucus.
“Under the tenure of the Biden Administration, state and local officials across this country sounded the alarm regarding the straining of their resources, the scourge of fentanyl deaths, the tragedy of human trafficking, including children smuggled across the border, and the flow of illegal firearms and dangerous gang members,” he said in a statement. “Collaboration between state and federal government is critical as we work to recover from the disastrous border policies of the Biden Administration and seek to protect lawful citizens.”
Meanwhile, Kearny warned Republicans that insisting on resisting bills to rein in ICE may face voters in November.
“If this stuff doesn’t move, which it hasn’t moved so far, then that’s something we can campaign on,” he said.
Pennsylvania
Western Pa. wine, cheesemakers take top honors at 2026 PA Farm Show
Couples planning for Valentine’s Day could have themselves quite a fancy evening dining solely on some local wine and cheese, which has been judged among the best in Pennsylvania.
Western Pennsylvania wine and cheesemakers once again came home with a good deal of accolades from the annual Pennsylvania Farm Show, held this month in Harrisburg.
“I brought eight wines, and they all ended up with medals,” said a happy Frank Mazzotta, owner of Mazzotta Winery in Richland.
Mazzotta’s boutique winery has made regular, multiple appearances on the farm show’s awards list the past few years.
“We do it the old-fashioned way, taking fruit, fermenting it and making it into wine,” he said. “There’s no additives, no flavor enhancers. It tastes like what it’s supposed to taste like — juice that’s alcoholic.”
Mazzotta’s 2024 peach wine earned not just a silver medal but a “best fruit wine” designation. He also brought home two silver and five bronze medals.
Just a few miles northeast of Mazzotta, La Vigneta Winery owner Francesca Howden is celebrating another good year at the farm show. Her wines came home with four silver medals and a bronze.
“We definitely take the competition very seriously,” she said. “My team works really hard to make sure our wines are produced to the highest standard.”
And if you’d care for some cheese to pair with those wines?
Look no further than Indiana Township’s Goat Rodeo Farm & Dairy, whose Wild Rosemary took the silver medal in the best of show category. It also earned a first-place finish in the mixed milk category, and the farm’s Cowboy Coffee cheese took third place in the same category. Finally, Goat Rodeo’s chevre cheese took first place in the goat’s milk category.
Mazzotta and Howden said they use feedback from the show in a variety of ways.
“We use those results to determine how much of these wines we want to produce,” Mazzotta said. “We use the awards to know which ones people will like when we go to an off-premise sale. It’s kind of guidance for a winemaker in terms of how much to make.”
Howden said La Vigneta also makes some of its plans for the coming year based on feedback from the farm show.
“For example, when we won the Governor’s Cup in 2023 for our blush, that let us know we needed to produce more of that particular wine,” she said. “But we also get feedback throughout the year on what customers like and what’s popular. That really helps us tweak and refine our wines. The farm show just validates a lot of that and shows whether you’ve produced wine that the public likes and the judges can recognize.”
Howden said she also uses the results to do some research.
“I want to see and taste the wine that won this year’s Governor’s Cup,” she said. “We look at the awards other wineries win, taste each other’s wines and that’s helpful as well, to see what struck the judges’ interest this year.”
Brewers
Western Pennsylvania beer breweries had some stiff competition from their counterparts out east, but Vandergrift-based Allusion Brewing Company, which also has a taproom in Hampton, brought home three third-place finishes.
“We brought back ribbons for our Baker Street Brown Ale, a London-style brown, our Abby Normal, a Munich-style dunkel, and our Christmas ale called Jolly Old Elf,” said co-owner and head brewer John Bieranoski. “We’ve been competing since 2022, and we’ve medaled at least once every year.”
With the farm show taking place in January, Bieranoski said he treats the judges’ feedback as a way to help refine his products for future competitions.
Judges at the farm show have come through the Beer Judge Certification Program, a nonprofit that offers education and certification for competition judges. Those same judges tally the scores at most of the major competitions Allusion enters.
“We do several each year,” he said. “Last year, we brought home a first- and third-place from the farm show, for our traditional Polish ale. And after that, we brought home two national competition wins with it. We used feedback from the judges to bring our product to the next level.”
In addition to Allusion, Mars brewery Stick City earned a third-place finish in the Pale Bitter European Lager category for its Arctos 12 beer. And farther north, the Clarion River Brewing Co. finished first in the same category with its Golden Eagle; second among Strong Belgian Ales (Cacao Cupidon) and British Beer (Premature Burial); and third in the Amber European Lager category (Autumn Leaf Fiest).
Grains
In the grains division, Westmoreland County farmers brought home hardware of their own.
As a matter of fact, New Alexandria farmer Fred Slezak is Pennsylvania’s Grand Champion of Grains for 2026. He took first place for his barley and fourth place for his wheat — not a bad showing for his first time competing at the show.
“It’s a real honor,” said Slezak, who beat out Crabtree’s Vince Mangini in the barley category. Mangini took second place.
Both men grow grains for Allegheny Mountain Malt, which has partnered with local brewers to supply locally grown grains in an effort to shorten the supply chain. In addition, Hempfield farmer Alquin Heinnickel took third place in the oats category.
“We didn’t have things as bad, weatherwise, as the rest of the state,” Mangini said. “We got the right amount of rain at the right time.”
Slezak said growing barley specifically bred for malting probably helped him with the judges.
“It’s got a larger kernel than most other barleys,” Slezak said. “I credit Vince for encouraging me to enter, and my partner Brandon Yeo prepared the barley and did a lot of the planting. Without him, I probably wouldn’t have gotten it entered.”
Mangini said the grains division is also somewhat of a beauty contest.
“Fred did a really good job cleaning his grain, using some special screens to process his barley,” he said. “I told him it’s on now — I’m coming after him now that he beat me.”
-
Illinois6 days agoIllinois school closings tomorrow: How to check if your school is closed due to extreme cold
-
Sports1 week agoMiami’s Carson Beck turns heads with stunning admission about attending classes as college athlete
-
Pittsburg, PA1 week agoSean McDermott Should Be Steelers Next Head Coach
-
Lifestyle1 week agoNick Fuentes & Andrew Tate Party to Kanye’s Banned ‘Heil Hitler’
-
Pennsylvania2 days agoRare ‘avalanche’ blocks Pennsylvania road during major snowstorm
-
Sports1 week agoMiami star throws punch at Indiana player after national championship loss
-
Cleveland, OH1 week agoNortheast Ohio cities dealing with rock salt shortage during peak of winter season
-
Technology6 days agoRing claims it’s not giving ICE access to its cameras